Government Domestic Debt in Tanzania
Comprehensive Analysis by Creditor Category | December 2025
Tanzania Economic Development Context: Focus on Government Domestic Debt
Tanzania's economy continued its robust trajectory in 2025, underscoring a commitment to sustainable development amid global uncertainties. Real GDP growth in mainland Tanzania accelerated to 6.4% in the third quarter of 2025, driven by investments in agriculture, mining, construction, and financial services.
Headline inflation remained contained at 3.6% in December 2025, within the 3-5% national target, supported by stable food supplies and declining global fuel prices. Monetary policy, with the Central Bank Rate at 5.75%, facilitated credit growth to the private sector at 23.5%, bolstering broad money supply (M3) expansion to 25.8%.
The external sector improved, with the current account deficit narrowing to USD 2,015.5 million, fueled by exports of gold and tourism services. Fiscal operations in October 2025 showed revenue at TZS 3,080.2 billion and expenditure at TZS 4,168.6 billion, emphasizing infrastructure and social spending.
Overall, these dynamics position Tanzania for 6.3% growth in 2026, per IMF estimates, with debt management central to maintaining fiscal space for development priorities like the FYDP III (2021/22β2025/26).
Total Government Domestic Debt Stock
As of December 2025, Tanzania's government domestic debt stock stood at TZS 37,899.0 billion (approximately USD 15.4 billion at TZS 2,452.76 per USD), representing a 1.2% decline from November 2025 but a broader upward trend over the year. This accounts for 30.5% of total public debt (TZS 124.4 trillion overall), with the remainder external. The debt is fully denominated in Tanzanian shillings, eliminating direct foreign exchange risks and enhancing monetary policy effectiveness.
| Indicator | Amount / Detail |
|---|---|
| Total Domestic Debt Stock | TZS 37,899.0 billion |
| Share of Total Public Debt | 30.5% |
| Dominant Instrument | Treasury Bonds (81.6%) |
| Debt Currency | Tanzania Shilling (100% TZS) |
Domestic Debt Composition by Instrument
Total Public Debt Structure (TZS 124.4 Trillion)
π‘ Key Interpretation
The TZS denomination shields the economy from currency volatility, a critical advantage given Tanzania's import dependency and external debt exposure. However, the stock's sizeβequivalent to approximately 17% of GDPβrequires vigilant management to avoid crowding out private investment.
- Zero currency risk: 100% shilling-denominated eliminates forex exposure
- Monetary policy flexibility: Enhances Bank of Tanzania's control over domestic liquidity
- GDP ratio consideration: At 17% of GDP, sustainable but requires monitoring to prevent private sector displacement
