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 […]
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.