Introduction
Over the past two decades, Tanzania has emerged as one of East Africa's most consistently growing economies, demonstrating resilience amid global and regional economic shocks. Since 1999, the country has recorded annual GDP growth ranging between 4.5% and 7.7%, with only one major disruption in 2020 when growth slowed to 2.0% due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Growth has rebounded strongly to 4.3% in 2021, 4.7% in 2022, 5.3% in 2023, and 5.5% in 2024, with Q1 2025 recording 5.4% growth driven primarily by mining, electricity generation, and financial services. Tanzania's GDP has expanded from USD 75.5 billion in 2022 to an estimated USD 78.8-83 billion in 2024, projected to reach USD 88 billion in 2025.
Key Finding: While Tanzania's economy is undeniably growing with strong macroeconomic fundamentals, the central challenge remains translating sustained expansion into faster structural transformation, stronger domestic revenue mobilization, and broader improvements in living standards.
GDP Growth 2024
Q1 2025 Growth
GDP 2025 (Projected)
GDP Per Capita 2024
Inflation 2024
Regional Ranking
GDP Growth Performance
Recent GDP Growth Rates
| Year | GDP Growth Rate | Key Drivers |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 2.0% | COVID-19 impact (lowest point) |
| 2021 | 4.3% | Post-pandemic recovery |
| 2022 | 4.7% | Recovery strengthening |
| 2023 | 5.3% | Agriculture, construction, manufacturing |
| 2024 | 5.5% | Electricity, infrastructure, improved agriculture |
| Q1 2025 | 5.4% | Mining (16.6%), electricity (19%), financial services (15.4%) |
Growth Projections by Leading Institutions
| Source | 2024 Projection | 2025 Projection | 2026 Projection |
|---|---|---|---|
| IMF | 5.4% | 6.0% | 6.3% |
| World Bank | 5.6% | 6.0% | 6.4% |
| African Development Bank | 5.7% | 6.0% | — |
| Bank of Tanzania | 5.5% | 6.0%+ | — |
Historical Context
Tanzania has demonstrated consistent economic growth for over two decades, with growth rates between 4.5% and 7.7% annually from 1999-2024. The only significant disruption occurred in 2020 due to COVID-19. The average annual GDP growth from 2000-2024 stands at approximately 6.2%.
Economic Size and Regional Position
Tanzania's GDP Evolution
| Metric | 2022 | 2024 | 2025 (Projected) |
|---|---|---|---|
| GDP (Current USD) | $75.5 billion | $78.8-83 billion | $88 billion |
| GDP Per Capita | — | $1,215 | $1,302 |
| Regional Ranking | 2nd in East Africa | 2nd in East Africa | 2nd in East Africa |
| Sub-Saharan Africa Ranking | 7th largest | 7th largest | 7th largest |
Tanzania has firmly positioned itself as the second-largest economy in East Africa after Kenya and the seventh largest in Sub-Saharan Africa. GDP per capita has risen to approximately $1,215 in 2024 and is expected to reach $1,302 in 2025, reflecting gradual but sustained improvements in average income levels.
Economic Structure and Sectoral Performance
Major Sectors by GDP Share (2024)
| Sector | Share of GDP | Key Activities |
|---|---|---|
| Services | 38-40% | Wholesale/retail trade (12%), Public administration (6%), Transport (5%) |
| Industry | 28-30% | Construction (16%), Manufacturing (9%), Mining (5-9.8%) |
| Agriculture | 26-30% | Crops (14-18%), Livestock (8%), Forestry, Fishing |
| Tourism | 5.7% | Accommodation, food services (recovering from COVID) |
Sector Growth Rates (Q3 2024)
| Sector | Growth Rate | Notable Performance |
|---|---|---|
| Electricity | 19.0% | Julius Nyerere Hydropower Plant impact |
| Mining & Quarrying | 16.6% | Gold prices, natural gas development |
| Financial Services | 15.4% | Banking sector expansion |
| Forestry | 6.2% | Timber and non-wood products |
| Professional Services | 4.2% | Technical, scientific services |
| Agriculture | 3.0% | Crops and livestock production |
Tanzania's growth is underpinned by a diversified economic structure. The services sector contributes about 38-40% of GDP, followed by industry at 28-30% and agriculture at 26-30%. However, agriculture still employs around 65% of the population, highlighting the structural transformation challenge.
Macroeconomic Stability
Inflation Performance
| Year | Inflation Rate | Target/Note |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 3.3% | Low due to pandemic |
| 2021 | 3.7% | Moderate increase |
| 2022 | 4.3% | Post-pandemic adjustment |
| 2023 | 3.8% | Below 5% target |
| 2024 | 3.3% | Well-controlled |
| 2025 | 3.4% (projected) | Within 3-5% target range |
Fiscal and Debt Indicators
| Indicator | 2022/23 | 2023/24 | 2024 | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fiscal Deficit (% of GDP) | 3.5% | 3.2% | 2.5% | Improving, approaching 3% target |
| Tax Revenue (% of GDP) | — | — | 13.1% | Low compared to peers |
| Public Debt (% of GDP) | 43.6% | 45.5% | ~50% | Contained, moderate risk |
| Current Account Deficit | 3.8% | — | 2.6% | Sustainable |
Banking Sector Health (2024)
| Indicator | Value | Benchmark |
|---|---|---|
| Non-Performing Loans (NPL) | 4.3% | Below 5% target ✓ |
| Core Capital Adequacy | Well-capitalized | — |
| Foreign Exchange Reserves | 4.5 months | Target: 4+ months ✓ |
| Central Bank Rate | 5.75% | Reduced from 6.00% |
Macroeconomic stability has reinforced Tanzania's growth trajectory. Inflation has remained well contained below 5%, declining from 4.3% in 2022 to 3.3% in 2024. Fiscal performance has improved with the deficit narrowing from 3.5% of GDP in 2022/23 to about 2.5% in 2024, while public debt remains moderate at around 50% of GDP.
Primary Growth Drivers (2024-2025)
1. Infrastructure Investment
- Julius Nyerere Hydropower Dam
- Standard Gauge Railway (SGR)
- East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP)
- Bridges, flyovers, and transport infrastructure
2. Natural Resources Development
- Gold mining expansion (89% of mineral exports)
- Natural gas development (Ntorya gas field - 25-year license)
- Diamonds and tanzanite extraction
- Rising commodity prices
3. Tourism Recovery
- Strong visitor arrivals post-COVID
- Accommodation and food services (15.3% contribution to growth)
4. Agricultural Development
- Employs 65% of population
- Crops and livestock production improvements
- Weather-dependent but showing resilience
5. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
- Improved business environment
- Growing FDI in productive sectors
- Political stability attracting investment
Employment and Income Dynamics
Labor Market Evolution
| Period | Agriculture Employment | Industry Employment | Services Employment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early 1990s | 84.8% | 2.6% | 12.6% |
| 2022 | 65.0% | 6.8% | 29.0% |
Wage Trends (2025)
| Category | Mean Wage (TZS) | USD Equivalent | Change from 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urban Wage | 494,812 | $189 | Small increase |
| Rural Wage | 367,034 | $140 | Small increase |
| Minimum Wage (Public) | 500,000 | $191 | Raised from 370,000 (July 2025) |
Unemployment Trends
| Year | Official Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 10.5% | — |
| 2021/22 | 9.3% | — |
| 2024-2025 | ~2.5-2.6% | Low due to informal sector absorption (76-80% informal employment) |
Poverty and Inequality
Poverty Indicators
| Metric | Value (Latest) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| National Poverty Rate | 26-27% | Slower reduction in rural areas |
| Multidimensional Poverty Rate | ~47-50% (2022-2024) | Includes health, education, living standards deprivations |
| Extreme Poverty ($2.15/day) | ~40-43% (2023-2024) | ~25-26 million people |
| Lower-Middle Poverty ($3-$5.50/day) | ~49-70% (2024 est.) | Matches ~49% below $3/day PPP |
Income Inequality (2023)
| Indicator | Value | Comparison/Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gini Coefficient | 40.5-41 (2018-2024 est.) | Moderate-high; higher in urban areas |
| Top 1% Share of Income | ~17.9% (2023) | Bottom 50% share only ~14.1% |
| Rural-Urban Gap | Significant | Urban per capita higher; rural poverty more persistent |
Cost of Living Pressures (2025)
| Period/Metric | Headline Inflation | Food Inflation | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall 2025 (avg.) | ~3.2-3.4% | ~6.0-7.7% | Food weighs heavily in household budgets |
| May-August 2025 | 3.2-3.4% | 5.6-7.7% | Staples like rice, maize, cassava drove rises |
| Impact on Households | Low headline masks food/energy strains | Hits poor hardest (80% informal sector) | |
Regional and Global Position
Wealth Rankings (2025)
| Metric | Tanzania's Position |
|---|---|
| Africa's Wealthiest Countries | 12th |
| East Africa Ranking | 3rd |
| USD Millionaires | 2,100 |
| Centi-millionaires ($100M+) | 5 |
| Billionaires | 1 (Mohammed Dewji) |
| Growth in Millionaires (2015-2025) | +17% (vs. Africa avg: -5%) |
Vision 2050 and Future Outlook
Government Economic Targets
Vision 2050 Goals:
- Achieve upper-middle-income status by 2050
- Target: $1 trillion economy
- Focus areas: STEM education, manufacturing, digital skills, green industries
Medium-term Projections (2025-2030)
| Year | Projected GDP (Current Prices) |
|---|---|
| 2025 | $88 billion |
| 2030 | $117 billion |
| Average CAGR | 5.7% |
Structural Challenges and Risks
Economic Constraints
1. Revenue Generation
- Tax revenue at only 13.1% of GDP (low compared to peers)
- Narrow tax base
2. Structural Issues
- Manufacturing share stuck at ~8% since mid-1990s
- Slow structural transformation
- Heavy agriculture dependence (vulnerable to climate)
3. External Risks
- Geopolitical tensions
- Global economic slowdown
- Climate shocks
- Foreign exchange shortages (Shilling depreciated 8% in 2023)
4. Infrastructure Gaps
- Energy and transport bottlenecks
- Need for continued investment
5. Governance Issues
- Corruption challenges (though improving in 2025 indices)
- Weak governance ratings
Why Do Tanzanians Experience Economic Difficulties Despite GDP Growth?
Yes, Tanzania's economy is growing steadily (around 5.5% in 2024 and projected 6% in 2025), but this headline growth has not translated into widespread improvements in living standards for most citizens. While GDP expands, poverty reduction lags, manufacturing stagnates, and growth remains non-inclusive.
Key Reasons for Persistent Economic Hardship:
- High Poverty Levels: Nearly half the population lives in poverty, with limited access to basic needs
- Income Inequality: Growth benefits concentrate among the wealthy and urban areas (Top 1% capture ~17.9% of income while bottom 50% receive only ~14.1%)
- Cost of Living Pressures: Food prices rise faster than overall inflation (6-7.7% vs 3.3-3.4%), hitting low-income households hardest
- Employment Challenges: Most jobs are informal (76-80%), low-wage, and vulnerable, especially in agriculture
- Population Growth: Rapid increase (~3% annually) dilutes per capita gains
- Structural Issues: Slow shift from agriculture to higher-productivity sectors limits broad prosperity
- Limited Social Services: Low tax revenue (13.1% of GDP) constrains government capacity to expand social protection
Economic growth has been uneven, capital-intensive, and slow to transform livelihoods, particularly for rural and low-income populations. Growth is concentrated in sectors like mining, electricity, and finance, which generate limited employment compared to their GDP contribution.
Conclusion: Is Tanzania's Economy Growing—and Why Do Economic Hardships Persist?
The evidence clearly confirms that Tanzania's economy is growing. Over the last two decades, the country has sustained average annual GDP growth of about 6.2%, with growth rebounding strongly after the COVID-19 shock—from 2.0% in 2020 to 5.3% in 2023, 5.5% in 2024, and 5.4% in Q1 2025. In absolute terms, Tanzania's economic size has expanded from USD 75.5 billion in 2022 to a projected USD 88 billion in 2025, consolidating its position as the second-largest economy in East Africa.
Inflation has remained stable at around 3.3-3.4%, fiscal deficits have narrowed to about 2.5% of GDP, and public debt remains moderate at around 50% of GDP. By macroeconomic standards, Tanzania is therefore experiencing real, steady, and resilient economic growth.
However, the same data explains why most Tanzanians continue to experience economic difficulties despite this growth.
First, economic expansion has not been sufficiently inclusive. Although GDP per capita has risen to about USD 1,215 in 2024 and is projected to reach USD 1,302 in 2025, these gains are diluted by rapid population growth and concentrated in capital-intensive sectors such as mining, electricity, and finance, which generate limited employment. Agriculture still employs around 65% of the population, yet grows slowly (about 3.0%) and remains vulnerable to climate shocks.
Second, poverty reduction has lagged behind GDP growth. While national poverty has declined only gradually, an estimated 49% of Tanzanians still live below the international USD 3-a-day poverty line, indicating that nearly half of the population has not meaningfully benefited from aggregate growth. Income inequality further deepens this gap: the top 1% capture about 17.9% of total income, while the bottom 50% receive only 14.1%.
Third, employment and income dynamics remain weak. Most jobs are informal and low-productivity, particularly in rural areas. Mean monthly wages remain modest—about TZS 495,000 (USD 189) in urban areas and TZS 367,000 (USD 140) in rural areas—and have increased only marginally over time. Even with controlled headline inflation, food prices rise faster than overall inflation (6-7.7% vs 3.3-3.4%), placing disproportionate pressure on low-income households.
Finally, structural transformation has been slow. Manufacturing's contribution has stagnated at around 8-9% of GDP for decades, while tax revenue remains low at 13.1% of GDP, limiting the government's capacity to expand social services, support productive sectors, and cushion vulnerable groups.
In conclusion, Tanzania's economy is undeniably growing, supported by strong macroeconomic fundamentals, infrastructure investment, and sectoral diversification. However, the persistence of economic hardship among the majority of Tanzanians reflects the nature—not the absence—of growth. Growth has been uneven, capital-intensive, and slow to transform livelihoods, particularly for rural and low-income populations.
The core challenge ahead is therefore not achieving growth per se, but making growth more inclusive, employment-creating, and structurally transformative, so that rising GDP is matched by tangible improvements in living standards for the broader population.
