In the Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review for August 2025, inflation remained stable at 3.3% in July 2025, within the 3-5% target, while national debt exhibited modest growth (1% increase to USD 46,586.6 million in June 2025), driven by balanced inflows and prudent management. These factors have collectively supported the stability and recent appreciation of the Tanzanian Shilling (TZS) against the US Dollar (USD). Stable inflation preserves purchasing power and enables accommodative monetary policy, reducing depreciation pressures, while controlled debt enhances fiscal credibility, attracting foreign inflows and bolstering reserves (USD 6,194.4 million in July 2025, covering 5 months of imports). This has contributed to a narrowed current account deficit (USD 2,079.2 million in the year to July 2025, down 23.4%), easing external vulnerabilities. However, broader pressures like import demands and global USD strength have led to a net annual depreciation, though recent data shows stabilization and mild appreciation by September 2025 (around TZS 2,488 per USD).
Key Impacts on TZS Value
1. Stable Inflation's Positive Influence
Low and predictable inflation (3.3%) anchors expectations, supporting the TZS by maintaining relative purchasing power parity with trading partners. This stability allowed the Bank of Tanzania to lower the Central Bank Rate (CBR) to 5.75% in July 2025, stimulating credit growth (15.9%) and economic activity without fueling inflationary pressures that could erode currency value.
Decelerating energy inflation (1.0% from 2.1%) and core inflation (1.9%), amid global commodity moderation (e.g., crude oil at USD 69.2 per barrel), reduced import costs, alleviating downward pressure on the TZS. This contributed to the shilling's monthly depreciation slowing to 0.11% annually in July 2025 (from 0.21% in June).
Overall, stable inflation has fostered investor confidence, with foreign exchange reserves rising to support interventions (e.g., USD 17.5 million sold in July 2025), helping stabilize the TZS at an average of TZS 2,666.79 per USD in July.
2. Debt Developments' Stabilizing Role
The modest debt increase (external: +0.1% to USD 32,955.5 million; domestic: -0.4% to TZS 35,351.4 billion) reflects fiscal discipline, with disbursements (USD 868.4 million) outpacing services (USD 234.4 million). This sustainability reduces risk premiums, making Tanzania more attractive for foreign investment and remittances, which bolster TZS inflows.
A shift toward domestic financing (79.7% Treasury bonds) and concessional multilateral debt (58.7% of external) minimizes forex exposure, mitigating depreciation from debt servicing. Strong revenue (TZS 3,753.4 billion in June, +5.1% above target) further supports this, narrowing borrowing needs.
Combined with export growth (goods and services up 14.4% to USD 16,655 million), stable debt has narrowed the current account deficit, reducing TZS sell-off pressures. However, high external debt (70.7% of total) remains a vulnerability if global rates rise.
3. Net Impact on TZS Value
The TZS depreciated annually by about 9.6% through mid-2025 due to import surges and debt-financed infrastructure, but inflation and debt stability have driven recent appreciation (e.g., from TZS 2,666.79/USD in July to ~TZS 2,488/USD by September 6, 2025). This reflects improved external balances and policy credibility.
Projections indicate moderate depreciation (3.7% for 2025 overall), but sustained low inflation could further strengthen the TZS if debt remains manageable. Risks include global uncertainties (e.g., trade policy index spikes) potentially reversing gains.
Key Figures
Indicator
Value (July 2025)
Change/Comparison
Headline Inflation
3.3%
Stable from June; within 3-5% target
External Debt Stock
USD 32,955.5 million
+0.1% from May 2025
National Debt Stock
USD 46,586.6 million
+1% from May 2025
Current Account Deficit (Year to July)
USD 2,079.2 million
-23.4% from 2024
Foreign Reserves
USD 6,194.4 million
Covers 5 months of imports
TZS/USD Average Rate
TZS 2,666.79
Depreciated 0.11% annually
TZS/USD (September 6, 2025)
TZS 2,488
Appreciated from July
The Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review for August 2025 highlights a stable national debt profile, with the total debt stock at USD 46,586.6 million as of the end of June 2025, marking a modest 1% increase from the previous month. This stability is evidenced by minimal fluctuations in both external and domestic components: external debt rose by just 0.1% to USD 32,955.5 million (70.7% of total debt), while domestic debt decreased by 0.4% to TZS 35,351.4 billion as of July 2025. The review attributes this equilibrium to prudent fiscal management, balanced debt inflows and outflows, and a focus on long-term instruments, which mitigate volatility. Supplementing this, external analyses from sources like the IMF and World Bank emphasize broader factors such as fiscal discipline and economic diversification, projecting a downward trend in public debt over the medium term.
Key Factors Contributing to Debt Stability
Several interconnected factors contribute to the stability of Tanzania's national debt, as outlined in the review and corroborated by recent economic assessments. These include controlled debt accumulation, effective revenue and expenditure management, and a strategic shift toward domestic financing, which reduces exposure to external risks like currency fluctuations.
1. Balanced Debt Inflows and Outflows
External debt disbursements significantly outpaced service payments, supporting liquidity without excessive accumulation. In June 2025, disbursements totaled USD 868.4 million, compared to debt service payments of USD 234.4 million (including USD 173.6 million in principal repayments). This net positive inflow (USD 634.0 million in net transfers) helped maintain stability while funding development needs.
The composition of external debt remained largely unchanged, with multilateral institutions holding 58.7% (USD 19,328.5 million), providing concessional terms that lower servicing costs and enhance sustainability.
Domestic borrowing was managed conservatively: The government raised TZS 514.4 billion (TZS 356.8 billion via Treasury bonds and TZS 157.6 billion via bills) but serviced TZS 670.8 billion, resulting in a net reduction. This reflects a deliberate strategy to align borrowing with repayment capacity.
2. Strong Fiscal Performance and Revenue Mobilization
Government revenue in June 2025 exceeded targets by 5.1%, reaching TZS 3,753.4 billion, driven by tax collections of TZS 3,108.7 billion (7.8% above target). This surplus enabled expenditures to stay within available resources at TZS 3,350.0 billion, reducing the need for additional borrowing.
Non-tax revenue, while below target at TZS 470.5 billion, was offset by robust tax administration improvements, contributing to fiscal space for debt management.
Broader fiscal discipline, including setting debt ceilings and coordinating monetary-fiscal policies, has been highlighted as a key stabilizer, preventing rapid debt growth amid spending pressures.
3. Shift Toward Domestic and Long-Term Financing
Domestic debt's slight decline (0.4%) was primarily due to reduced overdraft usage (from TZS 5,314.0 billion in June to TZS 4,990.5 billion in July), signaling improved liquidity management. Long-term instruments like Treasury bonds dominated at 79.7% (TZS 28,189.8 billion), offering predictable servicing and reducing rollover risks.
This domestic focus minimizes reliance on volatile external funds, as noted in analyses, where forex fluctuations (e.g., shilling depreciation) have historically driven debt increases. Commercial banks and pension funds held 28.8% and 26.4% of domestic debt, respectively, providing stable local creditor bases.
4. Economic Resilience and External Support
Stable inflation (3.3% in July 2025) and strong GDP growth projections (around 6% for 2025) underpin debt sustainability by boosting revenue and export performance. The current account deficit narrowed to USD 2,079.2 million in the year ending July 2025 (from USD 2,713.5 million), driven by export growth, reducing external borrowing needs.
Multilateral support and economic diversification (e.g., in mining and agriculture) further bolster stability, with Fitch affirming a 'B+' rating and stable outlook in June 2025, citing prudent policies despite wider deficits.
These figures demonstrate controlled growth and effective management, ensuring debt remains sustainable at around 60-65% of GDP based on recent estimates. However, risks like shilling depreciation and global uncertainties persist, underscoring the need for continued reforms.
The Tanzania Shilling (TZS) remained broadly stable in July 2025 despite mild depreciation pressures. The currency averaged TZS 2,666.79 per USD, a 1.34% monthly decline from June, while annual depreciation slowed to 0.11%, reflecting resilience compared to 0.21% in June. Stability was supported by higher foreign exchange market activity, with IFEM turnover rising 33.7% to USD 162.5 million, boosted by export inflows, while the Bank of Tanzania intervened by selling USD 17.5 million. Importantly, reserves strengthened to USD 6,194.4 million, covering about 5 months of imports, well above EAC (4.5 months) and SADC (3 months) benchmarks, cushioning the currency against external shocks.
Exchange Rate Movement
The Shilling traded at an average of TZS 2,666.79 per USD in July 2025, compared to TZS 2,631.56 per USD in June 2025.
This represents a monthly depreciation of about 1.34%.
On an annual basis, the Shilling depreciated at a rate of 0.11%, slightly better than the 0.21% annual depreciation recorded in June 2025.
Market Liquidity & Central Bank Intervention
Interbank Foreign Exchange Market (IFEM) turnover increased to USD 162.5 million in July 2025, up from USD 121.5 million in June 2025.
The Bank of Tanzania intervened by selling USD 17.5 million, compared to USD 6.3 million in the previous month.
Seasonal inflows from cash crops and gold exports supported liquidity and moderated depreciation pressure.
Reserves Buffer
Gross foreign exchange reserves stood at USD 6,194.4 million at the end of July 2025, compared to USD 5,292.2 million in July 2024.
This covers about 5 months of imports of goods and services, above both the EAC and SADC benchmarks.
Strong reserves have helped cushion the Shilling from sharper depreciation.
Table: Tanzania Shilling Stability (July 2025)
Indicator
June 2025
July 2025
Annual Comparison
Exchange Rate (TZS per USD, average)
2,631.56
2,666.79
Depreciation 0.11%
Monthly Change (%)
—
-1.34%
—
IFEM Turnover (USD Million)
121.5
162.5
+33.7%
BOT Intervention (USD Million sold)
6.3
17.5
—
Gross Reserves (USD Million)
—
6,194.4
5,292.2 (Jul 2024)
Import Cover (months)
—
5.0
>EAC: 4.5; >SADC: 3
Economic Implications of Tanzania Shilling Stability – July 2025
1. Exchange Rate Movement
Marginal Depreciation and Resilience: The TZS's 1.34% monthly depreciation to 2,666.79 per USD from June 2025 indicates mild pressure from import demand, yet the annual depreciation slowed to 0.11% from 0.21% in June, highlighting improved stability compared to prior periods. Economically, this controlled weakening helps maintain export competitiveness, particularly for key commodities like gold (exports up to USD 3,977.6 million annually) and cash crops, boosting foreign earnings without triggering inflationary spirals. It reflects a narrowing current account deficit to USD 2,079.2 million in the year to July 2025 (down 23.4% from 2024), driven by a 19.7% rise in goods exports to USD 9,479.4 million, as per the report's external sector data.
Broader Implications: A stable yet slightly depreciating currency reduces the risk of capital outflows, supporting domestic investment and aligning with BOT's accommodative policy (CBR at 5.75%). However, persistent depreciation could elevate debt servicing costs for USD-denominated external debt (USD 32,955.5 million as of June 2025), though strong reserves mitigate this.
2. Market Liquidity & Central Bank Intervention
Increased Turnover and Supportive Inflows: The Interbank Foreign Exchange Market (IFEM) turnover surged 33.7% to USD 162.5 million from USD 121.5 million in June 2025, signaling enhanced market liquidity bolstered by seasonal inflows from cash crops (e.g., cashew nuts up significantly) and gold exports. BOT's increased intervention—selling USD 17.5 million versus USD 6.3 million—helped moderate depreciation pressures, ensuring orderly market conditions.
Economic Meaning: This liquidity boost enhances forex availability for importers, stabilizing supply chains in import-dependent sectors like manufacturing and energy (imports at USD 14,720.3 million annually). It underscores BOT's role in smoothing volatility, fostering business confidence and credit growth (15.9% annually), while aligning with global easing of trade tensions that could further support export-driven liquidity. Overall, it contributes to macroeconomic stability, potentially lowering transaction costs and encouraging foreign direct investment.
3. Reserves Buffer
Robust Accumulation and Coverage: Gross foreign reserves rose to USD 6,194.4 million by end-July 2025, up 17% from USD 5,292.2 million in July 2024, covering 5 months of imports—exceeding EAC (4.5 months) and SADC (3 months) benchmarks. This buildup, fueled by export growth (e.g., tourism receipts up 3.8% to USD 3,871.9 million), provides a strong buffer against external shocks.
Economic Significance: High reserves enhance currency credibility, reducing vulnerability to global risks like oil price stability (at USD 69.2 per barrel) and enabling BOT to intervene effectively. It supports fiscal flexibility for development spending (TZS 909.4 billion in June) and debt management (national debt at USD 46,586.6 million), promoting sustainable growth. In a regional context, this positions Tanzania favorably for credit ratings and inflows, aiding long-term projections of 6% GDP growth amid subdued global uncertainties.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
The TZS's stability in July 2025 reflects a positive interplay of export strength, reserve adequacy, and policy vigilance, mitigating depreciation risks while supporting economic expansion. This fosters a conducive environment for private sector activity, with potential upsides in tourism and agriculture, though monitoring import pressures remains key to avoid imbalances. Compared to earlier depreciations (e.g., 6.1% in 2023), current trends indicate improved resilience, aligning with IMF and World Bank views on Tanzania's stable outlook.
As of June/July 2025, Tanzania’s national debt reached approximately TZS 115.0 trillion, up 1% from the previous month, with external debt (TZS 81.0 trillion, 70.7%) dominating over domestic debt (TZS 34.0 trillion, 29.3%). The bulk of external borrowing is owed by the central government (85.4%), largely to multilateral institutions (58.7%) and commercial lenders (34.8%), while domestic debt remains concentrated in Treasury bonds (79.7%) held mainly by commercial banks and pension funds. Despite rising obligations, debt levels remain manageable, supported by strong tax performance and a June fiscal surplus. On the currency front, the Tanzania Shilling averaged TZS 2,666.79 per USD in July 2025, a 1.3% monthly depreciation but only a 0.11% annual decline, underscoring relative stability. This resilience is underpinned by robust foreign reserves (USD 6.2 billion, equivalent to ~TZS 16.5 trillion, covering five months of imports), strong export inflows (gold and tourism), and timely BoT interventions, which together cushion external risks while sustaining investor confidence.
Other creditors (public institutions, companies, individuals): 18.3%
Insurance Companies: 5.1%
BoT Special Funds: 2.2%
Table: Tanzania National Debt (June/July 2025)
Category
Amount (USD Million / TZS Billion)
Share (%)
Total National Debt
USD 46,586.6m
100
External Debt
USD 32,955.5m
70.7
├─ Central Government
USD 28,133.7m
85.4*
├─ Private Sector
USD 4,820.6m
14.6*
└─ Public Corporations
USD 1.3m
0.0*
Domestic Debt
TZS 35,351.4b (~USD 13,631m)
29.3
├─ Treasury Bonds
TZS 28,189.8b (79.7%)
—
├─ Treasury Bills
TZS 2,016.9b (5.7%)
—
├─ Other (Overdraft, etc.)
TZS 5,008.9b (14.2%)
—
*Percentages within external debt.
2. Tanzania Shilling (TZS) – Stability and Performance
Exchange Rate (July 2025):
Averaged TZS 2,666.79 per USD, compared to TZS 2,631.56 per USD in June 2025.
This is a monthly depreciation of about 1.3%.
Annual Movement:
Shilling depreciated at an annual rate of 0.11%, compared to 0.21% in June 2025.
Shows relative stability year-on-year.
Reserves:
FX reserves stood at USD 6,194.4m at end-July 2025, enough to cover 5 months of imports, meeting EAC and SADC benchmarks.
Drivers of Stability:
Export inflows (gold, cashew, cereals, tourism).
BoT interventions (USD 17.5m sold in July 2025).
High reserves acting as a buffer against shocks.
Economic Implications of Tanzania’s National Debt and Shilling Performance – June/July 2025
1. Tanzania National Debt (June/July 2025)
Total National Debt: Reached USD 46,586.6 million by June 2025, up 1% from the previous month, with 70.7% (USD 32,955.5 million) as external debt and 29.3% (TZS 35,351.4 billion, ~USD 13,631 million) as domestic debt.
External Debt:
Stock at USD 32,955.5 million, with 85.4% owed by the central government (USD 28,133.7 million), 14.6% by the private sector (USD 4,820.6 million), and a negligible 0.0% by public corporations (USD 1.3 million).
Domestic Debt: TZS 35,351.4 billion, with 79.7% in Treasury bonds, 5.7% in Treasury bills, 0.4% in government stocks, and 14.2% in non-securitized debt (e.g., overdrafts). Creditors are led by commercial banks (28.8%), pension funds (26.4%), Bank of Tanzania (19.2%), other creditors (18.3%), insurance companies (5.1%), and BoT special funds (2.2%).
Economic Implications:
The 1% debt increase reflects ongoing financing needs, with external debt’s 70.7% share (USD 32,955.5 million) highlighting reliance on foreign capital, manageable at ~40% of GDP per IMF estimates. Multilateral loans (58.7%) offer concessional terms, reducing interest burdens, but commercial debt’s 34.8% share (USD 11,458.3 million) exposes Tanzania to market volatility and higher costs (e.g., global rates at 2.8% per IMF 2025 forecast).
Domestic debt’s stability (TZS 35,351.4 billion, down 0.4% from June) and bond dominance (79.7%) indicate strong local absorption by banks and pension funds (55.2% combined), supporting fiscal operations (TZS 403.4 billion surplus in June). However, the 14.2% non-securitized portion (overdrafts) suggests short-term liquidity pressures.
Risks include a moderate debt distress risk (World Bank), with 68.9% of external debt USD-denominated, amplifying costs if the shilling weakens further. Opportunities lie in leveraging multilateral support for infrastructure (e.g., SGR, USD 7.6 billion) to boost 6% GDP growth.
2. Tanzania Shilling (TZS) – Stability and Performance
Exchange Rate: Averaged TZS 2,666.79 per USD in July 2025, a 1.3% monthly depreciation from TZS 2,631.56 in June, but an annual depreciation of just 0.11% (down from 0.21% in June), indicating year-on-year stability.
Reserves: Foreign exchange reserves hit USD 6,194.4 million, covering 5 months of imports, exceeding EAC/SADC benchmarks (4 months).
Drivers: Stability is fueled by export inflows (gold USD 3,977.6 million, tourism USD 3,871.9 million), BoT interventions (USD 17.5 million sold in July), and robust reserves.
Economic Meaning:
The 1.3% monthly depreciation reflects seasonal import pressures (USD 17,603.1 million) and USD demand for debt servicing (USD 234.4 million in June), yet the 0.11% annual rate underscores stability, supported by a 17.7% export rise (gold +21.9%, cereals tripled). Reserves (USD 6,194.4 million) provide a strong buffer, enhancing investor confidence (Fitch B+ rating).
BoT’s active management (e.g., USD 62.3 million sold in March) and export growth (USD 9,479.4 million) counter depreciation, aligning with a 6% GDP projection. However, 70% USD-denominated external debt poses a risk if depreciation accelerates, potentially raising debt servicing costs by TZS 1-2 trillion annually.
Compared to 2023’s 8% depreciation, the current stability (0.11% annual) reflects policy success (CBR 5.75%), though import reliance and global rate hikes could challenge this if export growth slows.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
Debt Dynamics: The USD 46,586.6 million debt, with a balanced external-domestic mix, supports growth (6%) but requires cautious management to avoid distress, especially with commercial debt exposure (34.8%).
Shilling Resilience: The shilling’s stability (0.11% annual depreciation) and reserves (5 months cover) bolster trade and investment, though USD debt sensitivity remains a vulnerability.
Outlook: Sustained export growth and reserve strength could mitigate risks, but fiscal discipline and import control are key to maintaining this trajectory amid global uncertainties (e.g., oil at USD 69.2/barrel).
In July 2025, Tanzania's headline inflation rate remained stable at 3.3%, unchanged from June 2025 and well within the Bank of Tanzania's medium-term target range of 3-5%. This stability was driven by offsetting dynamics in the inflation basket: a slight rise in food inflation was counterbalanced by decelerations in non-food components, particularly energy, fuel, and utilities. According to the National Bureau of Statistics and Bank of Tanzania computations, this outcome aligned with regional convergence benchmarks in the East African Community (EAC) and Southern African Development Community (SADC), where inflation trends were mixed but generally moderate.
Key Figures from the Bank of Tanzania Monthly Economic Review (August 2025):
Headline Inflation: 3.3% (annual rate), stable from the previous month (Headline inflation consistently within the 3-5% target band over recent periods).
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages Inflation: Rose to 7.6% from 7.3% in June 2025, driven by increases in staple prices like rice and finger millet (Annual wholesale price changes, with rice showing upward trends).
Core Inflation: Unchanged at 1.9%, down from 3.6% in July 2024, reflecting limited pressures in non-volatile categories (Depicts twelve-month inflation trends, with core remaining low).
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities Inflation: Decelerated to 1.0% from 2.1% in June 2025, attributed to declining wood charcoal and petroleum product prices (Domestic petroleum prices trending downward in line with global oil markets, with petrol, diesel, and kerosene averaging below TZS 3,200 per liter).
This stability contributed to a subdued inflation outlook, enabling supportive monetary policy adjustments.
Influence on Economic Development
Stable inflation fosters economic development by preserving purchasing power, reducing uncertainty for investors and consumers, and allowing central banks to ease monetary policy without risking price spirals. In Tanzania's case, the July 2025 inflation stability directly influenced development through enhanced credit availability, boosted economic activity, and sustained growth momentum. Low and predictable inflation encourages household consumption, business investment, and foreign direct investment, which are critical for Tanzania's transition toward middle-income status.
Direct Impacts from Monetary Policy Adjustments:
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) cited the stable inflation environment as a key factor in lowering the Central Bank Rate (CBR) to 5.75% from 6.00% for the quarter ending September 2025. This decision aimed to stimulate credit growth amid strengthening domestic conditions and diminishing global risks. As a result:
Extended Broad Money Supply (M3) Growth: Accelerated to 19.9% annually in July 2025, up from 18.7% in June 2025 (M3 stock reaching around TZS 50,000 billion, with growth rates climbing steadily).
Private Sector Credit Growth: Remained strong at 15.9%, consistent with prior months (Though not fully detailed in the provided excerpts, indicates sustained expansion supporting sectors like agriculture and manufacturing).
These figures reflect how inflation stability enabled liquidity injections—such as TZS 758.8 billion in reverse repo operations—to steer interbank rates within the 3.75-7.75% corridor, facilitating cheaper borrowing and investment.
Broader Economic Growth Context:
Tanzania's overall economic growth has benefited from this inflation stability, with real GDP expanding robustly in 2025. Projections indicate GDP growth of approximately 6% for the year, up from an estimated 5.4% in 2024, supported by low inflation that mitigates cost-of-living pressures and enhances fiscal space. Stable inflation has also helped maintain a manageable fiscal balance and improved the current account, as noted by the IMF, contributing to foreign exchange reserve buildup and reduced external vulnerabilities.
In the agricultural sector—a key driver of Tanzania's economy—inflation stability intersected with food security measures. The National Food Reserve Agency maintained stocks at 485,930 tonnes in July 2025, up significantly from 368,855 tonnes in July 2024, buffering against food price volatility and supporting rural livelihoods.
Challenges and Long-Term Implications:
While positive, food inflation's uptick (7.6%) highlights vulnerabilities to supply-side shocks, such as weather or global commodity trends (Mixed world commodity prices, with declines in maize and rice aiding stability). Overall, stable inflation has reinforced Tanzania's resilience, with the World Bank noting robust growth amid single-digit inflation. This environment positions Tanzania for sustained development, potentially accelerating poverty reduction and infrastructure investment, though external factors like global trade uncertainties could pose risks if inflation deviates.
Tanzania Monthly Economic Review - August 2025," a table of key figures relevant to Tanzania's economic performance, inflation, monetary policy, and related indicators:
Category
Indicator
Value (July 2025)
Previous Month (Jun 2025)
Inflation
Headline Inflation Rate
3.3%
3.3%
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages
7.6%
7.3%
Core Inflation
1.9%
1.9%
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities
1.0%
2.1%
Monetary Policy
Central Bank Rate (CBR)
5.75%
6.00%
7-Day Interbank Cash Market (IBCM) Rate
3.75% - 7.75% (corridor)
N/A
Reverse Repo Transactions
TZS 758.8 billion
N/A
Money Supply
Extended Broad Money Supply (M3) Growth
19.9%
18.7%
Private Sector Credit Growth
15.9%
15.9%
Food Stocks
National Food Reserve Agency Stock
485,930 tonnes
477,923 tonnes
Maize Released
1,855.3 tonnes
N/A
Petroleum Prices
Petrol (TZS per liter)
~TZS 3,200
Slight decline
Diesel (TZS per liter)
~TZS 3,200
Slight decline
Kerosene (TZS per liter)
~TZS 3,200
Slight decline
Notes:
Inflation rates are annual percentages based on the 2020 = 100 index.
Monetary policy figures reflect decisions from the 237th MPC meeting in July 2025.
Petroleum prices are approximate, based on trends, with values in Tanzanian Shillings (TZS) per liter.
"N/A" indicates data not available or not directly comparable in the provided excerpts for the previous month.
This table summarizes key economic indicators that reflect Tanzania's economic stability and policy responses as of July 2025, providing a snapshot for further analysis.
The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 review shows that government domestic debt stood at TZS 35,351.4 billion in July 2025, a slight decline of 0.4% from June’s TZS 35,502.8 billion, mainly due to reduced overdraft use. The debt structure remains dominated by Treasury bonds (79.7%), reflecting a preference for long-term financing. By creditor category, commercial banks (28.8%) and pension funds (26.4%) together held more than half of the stock, while the Bank of Tanzania accounted for 19.2%. Other contributors included public institutions, firms, and individuals (18.3%), insurance companies (5.1%), and BoT’s special funds (2.2%). This composition highlights the critical role of institutional investors in supporting government financing while aligning with fiscal consolidation efforts that produced a budget surplus of TZS 403.4 billion in June 2025.
1. Government Domestic Debt Stock (July 2025)
Total stock: TZS 35,351.4 billion.
Slight decline from TZS 35,502.8 billion in June 2025 (–0.4%), mainly due to reduced overdraft use.
Debt remains dominated by Treasury bonds (79.7%) and commercial banks/pension funds as key creditors.
2. Government Domestic Debt by Creditor (July 2025)
Commercial Banks:TZS 10,176.3 billion (28.8% of total).
Pension Funds:TZS 9,328.8 billion (26.4%).
Bank of Tanzania (BoT):TZS 6,799.3 billion (19.2%).
Other Creditors (public institutions, private companies, individuals):TZS 6,461.3 billion (18.3%).
Insurance Companies:TZS 1,808.4 billion (5.1%).
BoT’s Special Funds:TZS 777.3 billion (2.2%).
Table: Government Domestic Debt by Creditor Category (July 2025)
Creditor Category
Amount (TZS Billion)
Share (%)
Commercial Banks
10,176.3
28.8
Pension Funds
9,328.8
26.4
Bank of Tanzania (BoT)
6,799.3
19.2
Other Creditors
6,461.3
18.3
Insurance Companies
1,808.4
5.1
BoT’s Special Funds
777.3
2.2
Total
35,351.4
100
Economic Implications of Government Domestic Debt – July 2025
1. Government Domestic Debt Stock (July 2025)
Slight Decline: The total domestic debt stock fell to TZS 35,351.4 billion from TZS 35,502.8 billion in June 2025 (–0.4%), primarily due to reduced overdraft use.
Economic Meaning: The modest decline suggests improved fiscal management, supported by the June 2025 budget surplus (TZS 403.4 billion), reducing reliance on short-term borrowing like overdrafts. The dominance of Treasury bonds (79.7%) indicates a shift toward longer-term financing, aligning with lower yields (e.g., 10-year bond yield at 13.74%) and investor preference for stability. This supports the BOT’s liquidity management (TZS 758.8 billion in reverse repos) and the government’s ability to fund development (TZS 909.4 billion) without crowding out private credit. However, the high stock (TZS 35,351.4 billion, or ~25% of GDP per IMF estimates) signals ongoing debt dependency, necessitating sustained revenue growth (tax revenue at TZS 3,108.7 billion).
2. Government Domestic Debt by Creditor (July 2025)
Creditor Breakdown: Commercial banks hold TZS 10,176.3 billion (28.8%), pension funds TZS 9,328.8 billion (26.4%), BOT TZS 6,799.3 billion (19.2%), other creditors TZS 6,461.3 billion (18.3%), insurance companies TZS 1,808.4 billion (5.1%), and BOT’s special funds TZS 777.3 billion (2.2%).
Economic Implications:
Commercial Banks and Pension Funds (55.2%): The combined 55.2% share reflects strong institutional support, providing stable, long-term funding via Treasury bonds. This supports government spending (e.g., transport at 28.6% of external debt use) but ties bank liquidity to public debt, potentially limiting private lending unless offset by BOT’s accommodative stance (CBR 5.75%).
BOT’s Role (19.2%): The BOT’s significant holding indicates its role in monetary financing, stabilizing markets during liquidity shortages (e.g., interbank turnover at TZS 3,746 billion). This aligns with reverse repo operations but risks inflation if overextended, though current stability (3.3%) mitigates this.
Other Creditors (18.3%): Growing participation from public institutions, firms, and individuals diversifies the creditor base, reducing banking sector concentration risk. This broadens domestic investment, supporting the shilling’s stability (TZS 2,666.79/USD).
Insurance and Special Funds (7.3%): Smaller shares suggest limited alternative funding, highlighting reliance on traditional creditors, though this could grow with financial sector deepening.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
Fiscal and Monetary Alignment: The slight debt reduction and surplus (TZS 403.4 billion) reflect effective fiscal consolidation, complemented by monetary easing (CBR cut), reducing domestic borrowing pressure and supporting growth (6% GDP projection). The bond dominance (79.7%) ensures predictable debt servicing, aided by stable yields (e.g., 8.13% for Treasury bills).
Liquidity and Stability: BOT’s 19.2% holding and reverse repos (TZS 758.8 billion) enhance liquidity, while the 55.2% bank-pension share provides a stable funding base. This supports private credit expansion (15.9%) and export resilience (USD 9,479.4 million).
Risks and Opportunities: Concentration in banks and pension funds (55.2%) poses risks if these sectors face shocks (e.g., global trade uncertainties), but diversification via other creditors (18.3%) mitigates this. The high debt stock (TZS 35,351.4 billion) requires sustained tax performance (107.8% of target) to avoid crowding out effects.
Comparative Context: Compared to 2024 (TZS 34,890 billion), the slight decline aligns with regional trends (e.g., Kenya’s domestic debt stabilization), positioning Tanzania favorably amid global commodity stability (oil at USD 69.2/barrel).
The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 review shows that Tanzania’s external debt stock stood at USD 32,955.5 million in June 2025, with the central government accounting for 85.4% (USD 28,133.7 million) and the private sector holding 14.6% (USD 4,820.6 million). By sectoral use, debt was mainly channeled into transport and telecommunications (28.6%), social welfare and education (18.5%), and energy and mining (16.7%), underscoring the focus on infrastructure and human capital development. In terms of currency composition, the debt portfolio remains highly exposed to the US dollar (69.8%), followed by the euro (18.1%), with smaller shares in the yen (5.4%) and yuan (3.2%). This structure highlights Tanzania’s reliance on public borrowing to fund long-term projects while emphasizing the importance of managing currency risk in debt servicing.
1. External Debt Stock by Borrower (June 2025)
Total external debt stock:USD 32,955.5 million.
Public sector dominates: Central Government accounts for 85.4%, while private sector holds 14.6%.
Details:
Central Government: USD 28,133.7m (85.4%)
Private Sector: USD 4,820.6m (14.6%)
Public Corporations: USD 1.3m (≈0.0%)
2. Disbursed Outstanding Debt by Use of Funds (June 2025, % Share)
Transport & telecommunications: 28.6%
Social welfare & education: 18.5%
Energy & mining: 16.7%
Agriculture: 6.4%
Industries: 5.7%
Other sectors (including finance, trade, etc.): 24.1%
Table 1: External Debt Stock by Borrower (June 2025)
Borrower
Amount (USD Million)
Share (%)
Central Government
28,133.7
85.4
Private Sector
4,820.6
14.6
Public Corporations
1.3
0.0
Total
32,955.5
100
Table 2: Disbursed Outstanding Debt by Use of Funds (%)
Sector / Use of Funds
Share (%)
Transport & Telecommunications
28.6
Social Welfare & Education
18.5
Energy & Mining
16.7
Agriculture
6.4
Industries
5.7
Other Sectors
24.1
Total
100
Table 3: External Debt by Currency Composition (%)
Currency
Share (%)
US Dollar (USD)
69.8
Euro (EUR)
18.1
Japanese Yen
5.4
Chinese Yuan
3.2
Other
3.5
Total
100
Economic Implications of External Debt Profile – June 2025
1. External Debt Stock by Borrower (June 2025)
Composition: The total external debt stock is USD 32,955.5 million, with the central government holding USD 28,133.7 million (85.4%), the private sector USD 4,820.6 million (14.6%), and public corporations a negligible USD 1.3 million (0.0%).
Economic Meaning: The heavy public sector dominance (85.4%) underscores the government's role in financing large-scale infrastructure and social projects, aligning with development goals (e.g., Vision 2050 targeting a USD 1 trillion economy). This reduces private sector borrowing pressure, supporting credit growth (15.9% annually), but increases public debt servicing risks (national debt at USD 46,586.6 million). The minimal public corporation share suggests limited state-owned enterprise reliance on external funds, potentially reflecting fiscal discipline. Compared to regional peers (e.g., Kenya’s 60% public share), Tanzania's high public borrowing may enhance state-led growth but requires robust revenue mobilization (tax revenue at TZS 3,108.7 billion) to sustain.
2. Disbursed Outstanding Debt by Use of Funds (June 2025, % Share)
Allocation: Transport and telecommunications lead at 28.6%, followed by social welfare and education (18.5%), energy and mining (16.7%), agriculture (6.4%), industries (5.7%), and other sectors (24.1%).
Economic Significance: The 47.1% allocation to transport/telecoms and social sectors supports long-term growth by improving connectivity (e.g., roads, digital infrastructure) and human capital (education, health), key to Tanzania’s 6% GDP growth projection. Energy and mining (16.7%) bolster resource exports (gold at USD 3,977.6 million), while the low agriculture (6.4%) and industries (5.7%) shares may hinder diversification, a noted challenge in IMF assessments. The "other" category (24.1%) likely includes trade and finance, indicating broad sectoral support. This mix reflects a development-focused strategy, but underinvestment in agriculture (despite 27% GDP contribution) could limit rural growth and food security (stocks at 485,930.4 tonnes).
Breakdown: USD dominates at 69.8%, followed by EUR (18.1%), JPY (5.4%), CNY (3.2%), and other currencies (3.5%).
Economic Implications: The 69.8% USD exposure heightens vulnerability to exchange rate fluctuations, especially with the TZS depreciating 1.34% to 2,666.79/USD in July 2025. A stronger dollar (e.g., amid global trade tensions) could raise debt servicing costs, straining public finances (surplus TZS 403.4 billion in June). Diversification into EUR (18.1%) and JPY (5.4%) mitigates some risk, reflecting loans from multilateral institutions (e.g., IMF, World Bank). The low CNY share (3.2%) suggests limited Chinese financing compared to peers like Zambia, potentially reducing geopolitical debt dependency. Stable reserves (USD 6,194.4 million) provide a buffer, but currency risk remains a key concern.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
Growth and Development: The debt structure supports infrastructure and social investment, driving Tanzania’s 6% growth outlook and export resilience (USD 9,479.4 million in goods). Public sector dominance ensures state-led progress, but private sector growth (14.6%) needs nurturing to diversify the economy.
Risk Management: High USD exposure (69.8%) and public debt concentration (85.4%) pose exchange rate and fiscal risks, though reserves and a fiscal surplus offer stability. This aligns with IMF’s moderate debt distress risk assessment, but prudent management is critical.
Comparative Context: Compared to 2024 (USD 32.89 billion), the slight rise to USD 32,955.5 million reflects controlled borrowing, outperforming countries with higher debt-to-GDP ratios (e.g., Ghana at 90%). The sectoral focus mirrors successful models like Rwanda’s infrastructure drive, but agriculture underfunding lags behind peers.
Future Outlook: Sustained tax revenue growth (107.8% of target) and export inflows (e.g., tourism at USD 3,871.9 million) could offset risks, though currency diversification and private sector debt expansion are needed for long-term sustainability.
The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 review highlights Zanzibar’s steady economic progress, marked by inflation easing to 4.1% in July 2025 from 5.3% a year earlier, driven by lower food prices such as rice and sugar. On the fiscal side, the government collected TZS 93.4 billion in revenues and grants, exceeding its target, though expenditures of TZS 118.4 billion resulted in a TZS 25.0 billion deficit. In the external sector, exports of goods and services rose 12.4% to USD 328.2 million, supported by tourism and clove exports, while imports grew faster at 14.1% to USD 470.9 million, widening the trade deficit to USD 142.7 million. Together, these trends reflect resilience in tourism and trade, even as fiscal and external balances remain under pressure.
1. Inflation in Zanzibar
Annual headline inflation (July 2025):4.1%, down from 5.3% in July 2024, and unchanged from June 2025.
Food inflation: 4.3% (vs. 9.2% in July 2024).
Non-food inflation: 3.9% (stable).
Monthly inflation: 0.2% (down from 0.5% in June 2025).
Decline mainly due to lower food prices (rice, sugar, wheat flour, green bananas).
2. Government Budgetary Operations
Revenue and grants (June 2025):TZS 93.4 billion, above the monthly target of TZS 87.6 billion.
Economic Implications of Zanzibar's Performance – July 2025
1. Inflation in Zanzibar
Trends: Annual headline inflation dropped to 4.1% in July 2025 from 5.3% in July 2024, with food inflation falling to 4.3% from 9.2% and monthly inflation easing to 0.2% from 0.5%.
Economic Meaning: The decline, driven by lower food prices (rice, sugar, wheat flour, green bananas), signals improved supply conditions, possibly due to the National Food Reserve Agency’s stock management (477,923 tonnes in June 2025). This boosts purchasing power and consumer confidence, supporting the 6.2% GDP growth in 2024 and a projected over 6% in 2025. The 4.1% rate remains above Mainland Tanzania’s 3.3% but aligns with regional stability (EAC/SADC targets). Risks include potential food price volatility if harvests falter, though current trends suggest resilience.
2. Government Budgetary Operations
Revenue and Spending: Revenue and grants reached TZS 93.4 billion in June 2025 (106.6% of the TZS 87.6 billion target), with TZS 80.2 billion from own sources and TZS 13.2 billion in grants. Expenditure totaled TZS 118.4 billion (recurrent TZS 79.9 billion, development TZS 38.5 billion), resulting in a TZS 25.0 billion deficit.
Economic Implications: Exceeding revenue targets reflects strong tax collection and grant inflows, supporting fiscal capacity amid 6.2% growth. However, the deficit, driven by 32.5% development spending (e.g., infrastructure), indicates reliance on borrowing or reserves, risking debt sustainability (41.1% GDP debt-to-GDP ratio). This aligns with fiscal prudence but highlights the need for expenditure control to match revenue, especially as tourism (12.7% growth) fuels economic activity.
3. External Sector Performance
Trade Dynamics: Exports rose to USD 328.2 million (up 12.4% from USD 292.1 million in 2024), with services (USD 227.4 million, tourism-led) up 9.9% and goods (USD 100.8 million, cloves/seaweed) up 18.5%. Imports increased to USD 470.9 million (up 14.1% from USD 412.6 million), driven by capital and consumer goods, widening the trade deficit to USD 142.7 million from USD 120.5 million.
Economic Significance: The 12.4% export growth, bolstered by tourism (2,662,219 arrivals in 2024) and clove/seaweed exports, strengthens foreign exchange reserves (USD 6 billion nationally), supporting the TZS stability (0.2% depreciation). However, the 14.1% import surge reflects import dependency (petroleum, industrial goods), straining the current account (surplus of USD 611.1 million in 2024/25). This could pressure reserves if export growth slows, though tourism’s momentum offers a buffer.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
Stability and Growth: Lower inflation (4.1%) and robust export growth (12.4%) underpin Zanzibar’s 6.2% GDP growth in 2024 and over 6% projection for 2025, driven by tourism and trade. This supports the Vision 2050 goal of diversification.
Fiscal Challenges: Revenue outperformance (TZS 93.4 billion) aids development spending (TZS 38.5 billion), but the TZS 25.0 billion deficit signals a need for fiscal balancing to sustain debt at 41.1% of GDP.
External Risks: Export gains are offset by faster import growth (14.1%), maintaining a trade deficit (USD 142.7 million). Tourism resilience and reserve adequacy (4.8 months of imports) mitigate risks, but import reliance remains a vulnerability.
Outlook: Compared to 2024’s 5.8% growth, 2025’s projection reflects optimism, though managing import costs and diversifying beyond tourism (e.g., manufacturing, agriculture) are critical for long-term stability.
Tanzania’s external sector strengthened in the year ending July 2025, with the current account deficit narrowing by 23.4% to USD 2,079.2 million, compared to USD 2,713.5 million in 2024. The improvement was driven by robust growth in services exports, which rose 8% to USD 7,175.6 million, led by tourism (USD 3,871.9m, +3.8%) and transport services (USD 2,631.9m, +13.8%). At the same time, services imports surged 21.2% to USD 2,925.1 million, largely due to higher transport costs (USD 1,458.1m, +12.7%) and a sharp rise in other services payments (USD 840.2m, +106.9%), even as travel-related payments fell. This combination reflects Tanzania’s resilience in boosting exports while managing rising import pressures, ultimately reducing external imbalances and supporting foreign reserve stability at over USD 6.1 billion.
1. Current Account Balance
Deficit:USD 2,079.2 million (year ending July 2025).
Improved compared to USD 2,713.5 million in the same period of 2024 (23.4% narrowing).
Improvement driven by higher exports of goods & services, outpacing import growth.
2. Exports – Services Receipts
Total services receipts:USD 7,175.6 million (up from USD 6,643.8 million in July 2024, +8%).
Breakdown by category (year ending July 2025):
Travel (Tourism): USD 3,871.9m (up from 3,730.2m in 2024, +3.8%).
Transport: USD 2,631.9m (up from 2,312.9m in 2024, +13.8%).
Other services (construction, insurance, ICT, business, etc.): USD 671.8m (up from 600.7m in 2024, +11.8%).
3. Imports – Services Payments
Total services payments:USD 2,925.1 million (up from USD 2,414.5 million in July 2024, +21.2%).
Breakdown by category (year ending July 2025):
Transport: USD 1,458.1m (up from 1,293.5m in 2024).
Travel: USD 626.7m (down slightly from 714.7m in 2024).
Other services: USD 840.2m (up from 406.3m in 2024).
Table 1: Current Account Balance (USD Million)
Period
2024
2025
% Change
Current Account Deficit
-2,713.5
-2,079.2
-23.4%
Table 2: Services Receipts by Category (Exports, USD Million)
Category
2024
2025
% Change
Travel (Tourism)
3,730.2
3,871.9
+3.8%
Transport
2,312.9
2,631.9
+13.8%
Other Services
600.7
671.8
+11.8%
Total Receipts
6,643.8
7,175.6
+8.0%
Table 3: Services Payments by Category (Imports, USD Million)
Category
2024
2025
% Change
Transport
1,293.5
1,458.1
+12.7%
Travel
714.7
626.7
-12.3%
Other Services
406.3
840.2
+106.9%
Total Payments
2,414.5
2,925.1
+21.2%
Economic Implications of External Sector Performance – Year Ending July 2025
1. Current Account Balance
Deficit and Improvement: The current account recorded a deficit of USD 2,079.2 million, a 23.4% narrowing from USD 2,713.5 million in July 2024, driven by higher exports of goods and services outpacing import growth.
Economic Meaning: The reduced deficit reflects a strengthening external position, supported by robust export performance (e.g., gold at USD 3,977.6 million, tourism at USD 3,871.9 million) and controlled import growth. This aligns with Tanzania’s 6% GDP growth projection, enhancing foreign exchange reserves (USD 6,194.4 million), which cover 4.8 months of imports—above the national benchmark. The improvement reduces pressure on the TZS (stable at 2,666.79/USD), supporting monetary easing (CBR 5.75%). However, the persistent deficit (3.8% of GDP per IMF estimates) indicates ongoing reliance on external financing (external debt at USD 32,955.5 million), necessitating sustained export growth to achieve balance.
2. Exports – Services Receipts
Total Growth: Services receipts rose to USD 7,175.6 million, an 8% increase from USD 6,643.8 million in July 2024.
Breakdown:
Travel (Tourism): USD 3,871.9 million (+3.8% from USD 3,730.2 million), accounting for 54% of receipts.
Transport: USD 2,631.9 million (+13.8% from USD 2,312.9 million).
Other Services (construction, insurance, ICT, business): USD 671.8 million (+11.8% from USD 600.7 million).
Economic Significance: The 54% tourism share underscores its role as a foreign exchange anchor, bolstered by 2,193,322 arrivals in June 2025 (up 10% year-on-year), reflecting global travel recovery. The 13.8% transport growth signals improved logistics (e.g., Dar es Salaam port upgrades), supporting trade (exports at USD 9,479.4 million). Other services’ 11.8% rise indicates diversification into ICT and construction, aligning with infrastructure investments (28.6% of external debt use). This growth enhances reserves and reduces current account pressure, though tourism’s dominance (54%) exposes the economy to global travel risks (e.g., pandemics).
3. Imports – Services Payments
Total Increase: Services payments surged to USD 2,925.1 million, a 21.2% rise from USD 2,414.5 million in July 2024.
Breakdown:
Transport: USD 1,458.1 million (+12.7% from USD 1,293.5 million).
Travel: USD 626.7 million (–12.3% from USD 714.7 million).
Other Services: USD 840.2 million (+106.9% from USD 406.3 million).
Economic Implications: The 21.2% increase reflects heightened import activity, with transport growth (12.7%) tied to freight costs for goods imports (USD 17,603.1 million). The 106.9% jump in other services (e.g., business, insurance) suggests rising costs for industrial inputs and operations, linked to manufacturing and construction booms (e.g., Julius Nyerere Hydropower Plant). The 12.3% travel drop may indicate lower outbound tourism or business travel, offsetting some pressure. This rapid rise, outpacing export growth (8%), strains the current account, though reserves and export inflows mitigate immediate risks.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
External Resilience: The 23.4% deficit narrowing and 8% export growth signal a robust external sector, supporting Tanzania’s 6% growth trajectory and reserve adequacy (4.8 months). Tourism (54%) and transport (37%) drive receipts, aligning with Vision 2050 goals.
Trade Dynamics: Export outperformance over imports strengthens the TZS and reduces financing needs, but the 21.2% import surge (especially other services) highlights import dependency, a challenge noted by the World Bank for structural transformation.
Risks and Opportunities: Tourism reliance (54%) and import cost spikes (106.9% in other services) pose vulnerabilities to global shocks (e.g., oil at USD 69.2/barrel). However, reserve growth (USD 6,194.4 million) and fiscal surplus (TZS 403.4 billion) provide buffers. Compared to 2024’s 4.2% GDP deficit projection, the 3.8% estimate reflects progress, outperforming peers like Uganda (5% deficit).
Future Outlook: Sustained tourism growth (3.8%) and logistics expansion (13.8%) could further narrow the deficit, but managing import costs (21.2%) and diversifying exports beyond services are critical for long-term stability.
The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 review highlights a strong fiscal outcome for June 2025, with total government revenues reaching TZS 3,753.4 billion, about 5.1% above target, driven by robust tax collections of TZS 3,108.7 billion (82.8% of total). Expenditures were contained at TZS 3,350.0 billion, with recurrent spending accounting for 72.9% and development spending 27.1%. This resulted in a budget surplus of TZS 403.4 billion, reflecting strengthened tax administration, cautious spending, and improved fiscal stability, thereby easing borrowing needs and supporting macroeconomic confidence.
1. Central Government Revenues (June 2025)
Total collections:TZS 3,753.4 billion, which was 5.1% above the monthly target.
Breakdown:
Central Government:TZS 3,579.2 billion (95.4% of total).
Tax revenue:TZS 3,108.7 billion, 7.8% above target – showing the impact of stronger tax administration.
Non-tax revenue:TZS 470.5 billion, short of the target (TZS 561.5 billion).
Tax revenues continue to be the dominant source, accounting for over 80% of government revenues.
2. Central Government Expenditures (June 2025)
Total expenditure:TZS 3,350.0 billion, broadly aligned with available resources.
Breakdown:
Recurrent expenditure:TZS 2,440.6 billion
Development expenditure:TZS 909.4 billion
Development expenditure accounted for about 27.1% of total spending, while recurrent expenditure (wages, interest, and other recurrent costs) made up 72.9%.
3. Fiscal Balance Context
Revenues (TZS 3,753.4 billion) exceeded expenditures (TZS 3,350.0 billion) by about TZS 403.4 billion, implying a budget surplus in June 2025.
The surplus mainly came from stronger tax performance, while expenditure remained aligned with available resources.
Table 1: Central Government Revenues (June 2025)
Revenue Source
Amount (TZS Billion)
Share of Total (%)
Target Performance
Total Revenue
3,753.4
100.0
105.1% of target
Central Government
3,579.2
95.4
Above target (3.9%)
├─ Tax Revenue
3,108.7
82.8
107.8% of target
└─ Non-Tax Revenue
470.5
12.6
Below target (83.8%)
Table 2: Central Government Expenditures (June 2025)
Expenditure Category
Amount (TZS Billion)
Share of Total (%)
Total Expenditure
3,350.0
100.0
Recurrent Expenditure
2,440.6
72.9
├─ Wages & Salaries
(included)
—
├─ Interest Payments
(included)
—
└─ Other Recurrent
(included)
—
Development Expenditure
909.4
27.1
Economic Implications of Central Government Finances – June 2025
1. Central Government Revenues (June 2025)
Performance and Breakdown: Total collections of TZS 3,753.4 billion surpassed the monthly target by 5.1%, with central government revenue at TZS 3,579.2 billion (95.4%). Tax revenue hit TZS 3,108.7 billion (82.8% of total), exceeding its target by 7.8%, while non-tax revenue lagged at TZS 470.5 billion (12.6%), falling short of the TZS 561.5 billion target.
Economic Meaning: The strong tax performance, driven by improved administration (e.g., VAT and income tax enforcement), enhances fiscal capacity, reducing reliance on external borrowing (external debt at USD 32,955.5 million). This supports infrastructure and development spending (TZS 909.4 billion), aligning with GDP growth goals. The underperformance in non-tax revenue (e.g., fees, dividends) suggests administrative delays or inefficiencies, potentially limiting supplementary funding. Over 80% tax reliance mirrors regional trends (e.g., EAC peers), but diversification could mitigate risks from economic shocks.
2. Central Government Expenditures (June 2025)
Allocation and Balance: Total expenditure was TZS 3,350.0 billion, with recurrent expenditure at TZS 2,440.6 billion (72.9%) and development expenditure at TZS 909.4 billion (27.1%).
Economic Significance: The high recurrent share (wages, interest, operations) ensures public sector stability and debt servicing (national debt at USD 46,586.6 million), but limits capital investment. Development spending (27.1%) supports growth in agriculture (e.g., food stocks at 485,930.4 tonnes) and infrastructure, though its share below one-third indicates a cautious approach. Alignment with available resources (revenue-driven) prevents deficit financing pressures, complementing the surplus and easing domestic borrowing needs (e.g., Treasury bill yields at 8.13%).
3. Fiscal Balance Context
Surplus Achievement: Revenues exceeded expenditures by TZS 403.4 billion, yielding a surplus driven by tax overperformance and controlled spending.
Economic Implications: This surplus strengthens fiscal buffers, reducing reliance on domestic securities (e.g., TZS 158.9 billion in Treasury bills accepted) and supporting the shilling's stability (TZS 2,666.79/USD). It allows debt reduction or reinvestment, enhancing credit ratings and attracting foreign inflows (e.g., tourism receipts at USD 3,871.9 million). In a global context of easing commodity prices (oil at USD 69.2/barrel), this positions Tanzania to weather external uncertainties, though sustained surpluses depend on addressing non-tax revenue gaps.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
Fiscal Strength and Stability: The surplus and robust tax collection signal effective fiscal management, supporting monetary easing (CBR 5.75%) and credit growth (15.9% annually). This fosters investor confidence and aligns with Tanzania's 6% growth trajectory.
Balanced Growth: While recurrent spending ensures stability, the lower development share may constrain long-term productivity gains, requiring policy focus on capital projects.
Comparative Context: Compared to 2024's fiscal deficits (e.g., 2.5% of GDP), the 2025 surplus reflects recovery, outperforming some EAC peers facing revenue shortfalls amid global trade tensions.
Challenges Ahead: Non-tax revenue underperformance and high recurrent spending (72.9%) need attention to sustain surpluses and fund development, especially with external debt at USD 32,955.5 million.