Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

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TICGL | Economic Consulting Group
Corporate Governance Reforms for Stronger SOE Performance in Tanzania
November 19, 2025  
Rescuing Tanzania's State-Owned Enterprises Authored by Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza (PhD, FMVA, CP3P) and Co-Author Amran Bhuzohera, this comprehensive research presents a transformative framework for converting Tanzania's chronically loss-making state-owned enterprises (SOEs) into financially sustainable entities through strategic corporate governance reforms—demonstrating that full corporatisation offers a politically viable alternative to privatisation while unlocking billions in […]
TICGL | Economic Consulting Group

Rescuing Tanzania's State-Owned Enterprises

Authored by Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza (PhD, FMVA, CP3P) and Co-Author Amran Bhuzohera, this comprehensive research presents a transformative framework for converting Tanzania's chronically loss-making state-owned enterprises (SOEs) into financially sustainable entities through strategic corporate governance reforms—demonstrating that full corporatisation offers a politically viable alternative to privatisation while unlocking billions in fiscal savings and dividend potential.

Despite Tanzania's impressive 6-7% GDP growth and a record TZS 1.028 trillion in SOE dividends for 2024/25, critical utility enterprises in energy, water, telecommunications, and transport continue hemorrhaging funds through political interference, weak board independence, and soft budget constraints—costing taxpayers nearly TZS 400 billion annually while undermining service delivery in sectors vital to poverty reduction and economic transformation.

Key Findings and Insights

  • Financial crisis quantified: Service-delivery SOEs like TANESCO (energy), TTCL (telecommunications), and DAWASA/DAWASCO (water) posted cumulative losses approaching TZS 400 billion in 2022/23 despite partial reforms, with TANESCO alone requiring TZS 400 billion in government subsidies annually even after 2022's TZS 5 trillion debt-to-equity conversion.
  • Partial reforms show promise: Performance contracts and limited board restructuring since 2020 reduced annual losses by 40-60% across case studies—TANESCO cut losses from TZS 450 billion (2019/20) to TZS 180 billion (2023/24), while DAWASCO improved revenue collection efficiency from 65% to 78%—yet no utility SOE achieved sustained profitability.
  • Governance gaps identified: Political interference cited by 78% (22 of 28) key informants as primary barrier, with boards averaging less than 40% independent directors pre-2020 reforms, civil-service salary structures offering no profit-linked incentives, and routine bailouts creating "soft budget constraints" that eliminate performance discipline.
  • International benchmarks prove feasibility: Singapore's Temasek Holdings transformed 36 subsidized state entities into a SGD 389 billion portfolio (USD 290 billion) delivering SGD 10-20 billion annual dividends through professional boards and market discipline; China's 1990s-2000s corporatisation boosted SOE productivity 30% without privatisation; New Zealand's 1980s SOE Act converted loss-makers to profitability within 5 years.
  • Statistical validation: Regression analysis shows governance score improvements explain 52-58% of variance in loss reduction (R²=0.52-0.58, p<0.001), with correlation analysis revealing positive association (r=0.68-0.71, p<0.05) between corporate governance elements (independent boards, performance incentives) and financial performance—strongly supporting Hypothesis H1.
  • Agency Theory confirmed: Findings validate Jensen and Meckling's (1976) predictions that separation of ownership (citizens/state) from control (politicians/managers) creates severe information asymmetry and moral hazard—managers face no personal stakes in losses while enjoying civil-service job security, perpetuating inefficiency through misaligned incentives.
  • Record dividends mask utility failures: While Tanzania's SOE sector achieved historic TZS 1.028 trillion dividend contributions in 2024/25 (68% increase), gains came overwhelmingly from already-profitable financial institutions and port authorities—utility SOEs remain net fiscal drains, highlighting the uneven application of corporatisation reforms.
  • Applicability strongly endorsed: Questionnaire responses from 50 managers rated private-sector governance practices highly applicable (mean scores 4.4-4.8 out of 5), with 92% of respondents viewing Singapore and China models as most transferable—emphasizing board independence and performance incentives over outright privatisation as politically feasible pathways.

Theoretical Framework: Understanding SOE Underperformance

Agency Theory Diagnosis:

The research employs Agency Theory (Jensen and Meckling, 1976) to explain chronic SOE inefficiencies through the lens of principal-agent conflicts:

Agency ProblemTanzania SOE ManifestationFinancial Impact
Information AsymmetryMultiple bureaucratic layers dilute state/citizen ownership accountabilityManagers pursue political objectives over profitability
Moral HazardCivil-service job security eliminates performance riskOverstaffing, operational inefficiencies persist
Weak MonitoringLimited independent oversight of management decisionsTANESCO investment delays cost TZS 150 billion (CAG, 2024)
Misaligned IncentivesNo profit-linked compensation for executivesLow motivation; questionnaire scores averaged 2.8/5 on incentive adequacy

Public Choice Theory Application:

Drawing on Buchanan and Tullock (1962) and Niskanen (1971), the research demonstrates how rent-seeking behavior undermines reform:

  • Political Patronage: Board appointments serve vote-buying and clientelism rather than competence—TTCL's 2018 re-nationalization reversed privatization gains, resulting in TZS 27.7 billion loss by 2023/24
  • Bureaucratic Self-Interest: Officials benefit from maintaining SOE status quo through employment distribution and procurement control—explaining failed DAWASA private lease (2003-2005) and resistance to hard budget constraints
  • Soft Budget Constraints: Expectation of government bailouts eliminates market discipline—unlike Singapore where "no credible threat of exit" forces efficiency, Tanzania SOEs anticipate rescue packages

New Public Management (NPM) Alignment:

The framework operationalizes Hood's (1991) NPM principles of "letting managers manage" through:

  • Performance-based incentives replacing input controls
  • Customer orientation over bureaucratic compliance
  • Results accountability instead of process adherence
  • Commercial autonomy within state ownership

Financial Performance Analysis: Three Critical Case Studies

Case Study 1: TANESCO (Tanzania Electric Supply Company)

Sector: Energy | Reform Status: Partially unbundled with some private generation participation

Financial Trajectory (2019/20 - 2023/24):

YearNet Loss (TZS Billion)Government SubsidyReturn on Assets
2019/20(450)600-4.2%
2020/21(380)550-3.8%
2021/22(320)500-3.1%
2022/23(250)450-2.5%
2023/24(180)400-1.8%

Reform Impact: 2022 TZS 5 trillion debt-to-equity conversion improved solvency; board restructuring increased independent directors to 40-50%, credited with 20% efficiency gains and 15% improvement in collection rates since 2021.

Remaining Challenges: Despite 60% loss reduction, sustained profitability remains elusive due to tariff controls, delayed ministerial approvals (costing ~TZS 150 billion in investment delays per CAG 2024), and persistent political interference.

Case Study 2: TTCL (Tanzania Telecommunications Corporation)

Sector: Telecommunications | Reform Status: Corporatised 1990s, partially privatised (49% sold), government re-acquired majority

Financial Trajectory:

YearNet Loss (TZS Billion)Revenue GrowthNotes
2019/20(19.0)8%Post-corporatisation period
2020/21(15.0)12%Brief improvement
2021/22(4.3)15%Near break-even
2022/23(0.9)10%Closest to profitability
2023/24(27.8)5%Deterioration after national backbone takeover

Governance Lesson: Temporary profitability under corporate governance (2021/22) evaporated when government re-assumed operational control for national backbone infrastructure—demonstrating fragility of reforms without sustained autonomy and illustrating Public Choice Theory's predictions about political interference.

Case Study 3: DAWASA/DAWASCO (Dar es Salaam Water and Sewerage)

Sector: Water services | Reform Status: Failed private lease (2003-2005), reverted to public corporation

Chronic Loss Pattern:

  • Sustained losses averaging TZS 100-140 billion annually (2019-2024)
  • Revenue collection efficiency improved from 65% (2019/20) to 78% (2023/24) through metering reforms
  • Project implementation delays continue adding costs despite collection gains

Critical Insight: Failed privatization attempt (2003-2005 lease) demonstrates that corporatisation offers middle path—neither full public bureaucracy nor outright private control, addressing political sensitivities while enabling commercial discipline.

Comparative Analysis: Traditional vs. Corporate Governance Practices

Governance ElementTraditional Public Practice (Pre-2020)Corporate Practice (Post-2020 Reforms)Performance Impact
Board Composition80-100% political appointees; limited expertise30-50% independent directors in TANESCO/TTCLReduced interference; 18/25 interviewees noted faster decisions
Managerial AutonomyHigh ministerial oversight; procurement requires approvalsPerformance contracts; delegated authorityTANESCO collection rates +15% since 2021
Executive CompensationFixed civil-service salaries; no performance bonusesKPI-linked pay in reformed entitiesQuestionnaire scores: 4.1/5 on motivation (vs. 2.8/5 prior)
TransparencyDelayed/incomplete CAG disclosuresAnnual IFRS audits; quarterly reportsInvestor confidence improved; sector dividends +68% to TZS 1.028trn (2024/25)
Budget DisciplineSoft constraints (routine bailouts expected)Harder post-debt conversionsTANESCO subsidies down 33% since 2022 (TZS 600bn → TZS 400bn)

Qualitative Evidence: Thematic analysis of 28 key informant interviews identified political interference as dominant theme (78% of respondents), with one TANESCO executive stating: "Board independence has helped, but ministerial approvals still delay investments by 6-12 months."

Global Success Models: Proven Corporatisation Frameworks

Singapore's Temasek Holdings: The Gold Standard

Establishment: 1974 as private company managing 36 government-linked companies (GLCs)

Governance Pillars:

  • 100% state ownership but operates independently under Companies Act
  • No serving politicians on board—exclusively independent global business leaders
  • Market-competitive executive compensation including long-term incentive plans
  • Hard budget constraints—no government debt guarantees; entities borrow on own merit
  • Constitutional safeguards—past reserves require Presidential approval for drawdowns

Results:

  • Portfolio value: SGD 354 million (1974) → SGD 389 billion (USD 290 billion) in 2024
  • Compounded annual return: ~9% since inception, 7-8% in recent decades
  • Annual dividends: SGD 10-20 billion to government without fiscal strain
  • GLC competitiveness: Singapore Airlines, DBS Bank, SingTel rank among Asia's top firms

Tanzania Relevance: Demonstrates how full legal autonomy + professional boards + commercial mandates = financial sustainability within 10 years, even for strategic sectors.

China's Gradual Corporatisation (1990s-2000s)

Approach: Company Law application without privatisation; internal governance reforms

Key Mechanisms:

  • Independent directors mandated on SOE boards
  • Performance contracts linking management compensation to profitability
  • State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC) as professional supervisor

Outcomes:

  • SOE return on assets: <2% (pre-reform) → 4-6% (post-reform)
  • Productivity gains: +30% through governance improvements alone
  • Profitability increased significantly while maintaining state control

Tanzania Relevance: Proves corporatisation works without ownership transfer—critical for politically sensitive utilities where privatisation faces resistance.

New Zealand SOE Act (1986-1989)

Reform: Converted government departments into limited liability companies under commercial law

Requirements:

  • Clear commercial mandates separate from social obligations
  • Independent boards appointed through merit-based process
  • Hard budget constraints with no subsidies for commercial operations
  • Annual performance targets negotiated with shareholding ministers

Results: Loss-making entities turned profitable within 5 years; sustained dividend contributions to national budget

Tanzania Relevance: Legal reclassification under Companies Act 2002 could replicate results—recommended as Priority 1 in this study's policy framework.

Malaysia's Khazanah Nasional

Model: Sovereign wealth fund managing strategic GLCs including Telekom Malaysia, Tenaga Nasional

Success Factors:

  • Partial stock exchange listing increased transparency
  • Professional boards enforcing performance accountability
  • Market discipline through investor scrutiny

Results: Transformed subsidized utilities into profitable, internationally competitive entities with market capitalizations exceeding RM 100 billion

Statistical Evidence: Governance-Performance Linkage

Regression Analysis Results:

VariableCoefficient (β)t-Valuep-ValueInterpretation
Governance Score (OECD Indicators)-4.63-4.02<0.0011-unit governance improvement reduces losses by TZS 4.63 billion
Model SummaryR² = 0.52-0.58F = 16.16p < 0.00152-58% of loss variance explained by governance quality

Correlation Analysis:

  • Pearson r = 0.68-0.71 (p < 0.05) between governance reforms and reduced losses
  • Positive association between independent director percentage and profitability improvements

Hypothesis Validation: Statistical evidence strongly supports H1—corporate governance practices are positively and significantly associated with improved financial sustainability in Tanzania SOEs.

Eight-Point Policy Recommendation Framework

#RecommendationResponsible BodyTimelineExpected OutcomeFeasibility Score
1Legal Reclassification: Amend Public Corporations Act to place strategic SOEs under Companies Act 2002, granting full commercial autonomyParliament / Ministry of Finance2026-2027Hard budget constraints; eliminate routine bailouts3.8/5 (requires political will)
2Board Independence Mandate: Require minimum 60% independent non-executive directors through merit-based competitive processTreasury Registrar / President's OfficeImmediate-2027Reduced political interference; faster decision-making4.2/5 (medium cost)
3Performance-Based Compensation: Implement binding contracts with 20-40% variable executive pay linked to profitability, efficiency KPIsTreasury Registrar with sector ministries2026 onwardStronger managerial incentives; alignment with profitability4.5/5 (medium cost)
4SOE Holding Company: Establish professional entity (modeled on Temasek/Khazanah) to centralize ownership, appoint boards, enforce disciplineMinistry of Finance2027-2029Unified oversight; professional management culture3.9/5 (high initial cost)
5Full IFRS Adoption: Mandate International Financial Reporting Standards with quarterly public disclosures, independent audits online within 90 daysTreasury Registrar / NBAAImmediateEnhanced transparency; investor confidence4.7/5 (low cost)
6Phased Subsidy Elimination: Replace routine bailouts with performance-based viability gap funding over 5 yearsMinistry of Finance2026-2030Fiscal savings >TZS 500bn annually by 20304.0/5 (revenue neutral)
7Customer-Oriented Reforms: Digital billing, 24/7 call centers, service guarantees with automatic rebates for outagesIndividual SOEs (TANESCO, DAWASA, TTCL)2026-2028Revenue collection >90%; higher satisfaction4.3/5 (medium-high IT investment)
8Capacity Building: Board and executive training on corporate governance (partner with IFC, OECD, Singapore)Treasury Registrar / Institute of Directors TanzaniaOngoingStronger governance culture4.5/5 (medium training cost)

Projected Impact by 2030-2035:

  • Transform loss-making utilities to cash-flow positive entities within 5-7 years
  • Generate annual dividends >TZS 2 trillion by 2035 (double 2024/25 record)
  • Reduce government subsidies by TZS 500+ billion annually
  • Improve service delivery metrics (electricity reliability, water access, connectivity)

Implementation Challenges and Mitigation Strategies

Challenge CategorySpecific ThreatProbability/ImpactMitigation Strategy
Political ResistancePoliticians unwilling to cede board control and patronage opportunitiesHigh / HighCross-party parliamentary endorsements; demonstrate fiscal benefits through pilot programs
Capacity ConstraintsLocal Government Authorities lack skills to implement corporate toolsMedium / MediumPhased rollout prioritizing high-capacity entities; intensive training programs
Union OppositionFears over job losses and performance-linked accountabilityMedium / MediumCommunicate that corporatisation retains state ownership; transparency about retrenchment vs. efficiency
Legal ComplexityAmending Public Corporations Act requires parliamentary time and consensusMedium / HighPrepare comprehensive legal drafts; engage Law Reform Commission early
Cultural InertiaDeep-rooted bureaucratic mindset resistant to commercial orientationHigh / MediumLeadership from top; showcase early wins (e.g., TANESCO collection improvements)

Adaptive Management: Quarterly reviews with stakeholder forums (government, SOE boards, development partners), biannual evaluations by external experts, 2027 mid-term review adjusting targets based on early results.

Research Methodology Strengths

Mixed-Methods Design:

  • Quantitative: Financial statement analysis (2015-2024) for TANESCO, TTCL, DAWASA from CAG reports; structured questionnaires (n=50 managers)
  • Qualitative: Semi-structured interviews (n=28 key informants including SOE executives, Treasury officials, academics); thematic analysis using NVivo software

Case Study Selection Rationale:

  • TANESCO (energy): Best performer, most reformed
  • TTCL (telecommunications): Mixed outcomes, re-nationalization lessons
  • DAWASA/DAWASCO (water): Failed PPP, least reformed—allows examination of different governance arrangements

Statistical Rigor: Correlation and regression analyses in SPSS/Stata; pre-post reform comparisons; saturation principles for qualitative sampling (Guest et al., 2006)

Knowledge Contribution and Future Research

Filling Literature Gaps:

  1. Provides recent (2020-2025) empirical evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa, region under-represented in corporatisation studies dominated by Asian/OECD cases
  2. Demonstrates corporate governance reforms generate fiscal benefits even in politically sensitive infrastructure sectors, challenging narrative that only privatisation works in Africa
  3. Validates Agency Theory and Public Choice Theory in Tanzanian context through mixed-methods evidence

Future Research Directions:

  • Longitudinal evaluation: Track proposed SOE Holding Company performance over 10 years post-establishment
  • Comparative African study: Corporatisation vs. PPPs in utilities across Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda
  • Political economy analysis: Resistance mechanisms through in-depth interviews with politicians, union leaders
  • ESG integration: Environmental, social, governance dimensions of reformed SOEs; access to climate finance
  • Gender and inclusivity: Impact of diversified board composition (women, youth) on decision-making quality

Conclusion: The Corporatisation Imperative

Tanzania's SOE sector stands at a decisive crossroads. While the historic TZS 1.028 trillion dividend contribution in 2024/25 demonstrates the potential of well-governed state enterprises, the continued hemorrhaging of billions in utility sectors reveals the cost of incomplete reform. This research provides evidence-based confirmation that full corporatisation—characterized by legal autonomy, board independence, performance incentives, and hard budget constraints—offers a politically viable pathway to financial sustainability without surrendering strategic assets to private control.

The Evidence is Clear:

  • Partial reforms since 2020 reduced losses 40-60% in case study SOEs
  • International benchmarks (Singapore, China, New Zealand) prove sustained profitability is achievable within 5-10 years under proper governance
  • Statistical analysis confirms 52-58% of performance variance explained by governance quality (R²=0.52-0.58, p<0.001)
  • Stakeholders overwhelmingly endorse applicability (4.4-4.8/5 ratings) of private-sector practices

The Path Forward:

Implementation of the eight-point recommendation framework—prioritizing legal reclassification, board independence mandates, and establishment of a professional SOE holding company—can transform Tanzania's loss-making utilities into dividend-generating engines of national development by 2030-2035. The alternative—maintaining

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