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HOW ELECTION DISRUPTIONS AND TANZANIA’S IMAGE AFFECT BUSINESS AND INVESTMENT (2026–2030)
November 7, 2025  
Authored by Amran Bhuzohera, this paper presents a timely analysis of the economic, policy, and social implications of election-related disruptions in Tanzania. It explores how political instability and electoral uncertainty influence investment confidence, fiscal stability, business continuity, and macroeconomic performance. Drawing from historical data covering elections between 1995 and 2020, the study highlights the recurring […]

Authored by Amran Bhuzohera, this paper presents a timely analysis of the economic, policy, and social implications of election-related disruptions in Tanzania. It explores how political instability and electoral uncertainty influence investment confidence, fiscal stability, business continuity, and macroeconomic performance.

Drawing from historical data covering elections between 1995 and 2020, the study highlights the recurring link between election periods and economic slowdowns, where investor hesitation, fiscal reallocations, and heightened political tension create short-term volatility across key sectors.

Key Findings

  • GDP growth deceleration: Average national growth declines by 1.5–2.2 percentage points during election years, driven by disruptions in trade, infrastructure projects, and tourism.
  • Investment slowdown: Private investment drops by 8–12% on average in the six months preceding elections, with foreign investors adopting a wait-and-see stance.
  • Fiscal imbalance: Increased government expenditure on administrative and security functions leads to temporary budget reallocation, limiting funds for development projects.
  • Inflationary pressure: Election-related uncertainty leads to short-term inflation spikes of 1.5–2%, particularly in food and transport prices.
  • Policy discontinuity: Changes in leadership priorities often delay or reverse major public-private initiatives, reducing the predictability of long-term economic programs.

Broader Implications

The paper argues that predictable political environments and transparent electoral processes are vital to sustaining Tanzania’s economic transformation agenda under FYDP III and Vision 2050. Political calm fosters confidence among local and foreign investors, while election disruptions can erode progress in industrialization, SME growth, and infrastructure modernization.

Policy Recommendations

  • Strengthen institutional safeguards to ensure fiscal discipline and continuity of economic programs before, during, and after elections.
  • Promote transparent electoral management through independent oversight and civic education to minimize disruptions.
  • Enhance public-private dialogue mechanisms to maintain investor confidence amid political transitions.
  • Develop contingency macroeconomic frameworks to manage volatility during election cycles.
  • Advance regional policy coordination under the EAC framework to mitigate cross-border effects of political disruptions.

Ultimately, the study underscores that stable governance and credible elections are as critical to economic performance as fiscal and industrial reforms. A well-managed democratic process is not only a political necessity but an economic imperative for sustainable development in Tanzania.


📘 Read the Full Discussion Paper:
“Impacts of Election Disruptions and Tanzania: Economic and Policy Implications”
Authored by Amran Bhuzohera
Published by TICGL | Economic Research Centre
🌐 www.ticgl.com

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