
Fixing Tanzania's Local Government PPP Projects Through Strategic Fiscal Reforms
TICGL’s Economic Research Centre has published a groundbreaking research paper authored by Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza PhD, FMVA, CP3P (braviouskahyoza5@gmail.com) and Amran Bhuzohera, which examines the budgetary deviations, implementation challenges, and allocation inefficiencies affecting Local Government Authority (LGA)-initiated Public-Private Partnership (PPP) projects in Tanzania between 2021/2022 and 2024/2025.
The study provides a detailed analysis of how financial misalignments and operational gaps hinder project performance and service delivery at the local level. Leveraging Dr. Kahyoza’s expertise in financial modeling, valuation, and PPP management, the paper offers evidence-based recommendations to strengthen fiscal discipline, enhance accountability, and improve the overall effectiveness of Tanzania’s decentralized PPP framework.
With 184 local councils serving as the primary initiators of PPP projects under the PPP Act of 2010 (amended 2023), these decentralized partnerships are essential for delivering infrastructure and services in housing, transportation, water, and health. However, the paper reveals that persistent fiscal constraints and institutional bottlenecks have undermined the PPP model's potential, threatening Tanzania's ability to meet its Development Vision 2025 goals.
Key Findings and Insights
Policy Gaps and Opportunities
While Tanzania's Third National Five-Year Development Plan (FYDP III) for 2021/22–2025/26 and the National PPP Policy (2023) provide a robust legal and strategic framework, implementation gaps persist—particularly in sub-national fiscal allocation, procurement efficiency, and risk-sharing mechanisms.
Key structural constraints include:
Policy Recommendations
To unlock the transformative potential of LGA-led PPPs and save an estimated TZS 2.61 trillion through private sector leverage, the paper proposes a comprehensive reform agenda:
Conclusion
Tanzania's Local Government Authorities hold immense potential as drivers of decentralized development through PPPs. However, without urgent fiscal reforms and institutional strengthening, the country risks losing trillions of shillings in private sector investment and falling short of its infrastructure development targets.
The authors emphasize that fixing LGA-led PPPs is not merely a budgetary exercise—it is a strategic imperative for inclusive growth, service delivery, and fiscal sustainability. With the proposed reforms, Tanzania can reduce budgetary deviations to 20-25%, increase allocation efficiencies to 75%, and position LGAs as catalysts for the PPP-driven transformation envisioned in Development Vision 2025.
By 2030, with well-implemented reforms, Tanzania could emerge as an East African leader in sub-national PPP governance, demonstrating how decentralized partnerships can bridge infrastructure gaps and empower local communities.
📘 Read the Full Research Paper:
"Local Government-Initiated Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Projects: Analyzing Budgetary Deviations, Allocations, and Implementation Shifts in Tanzania, 2021/2022–2024/2025"
Authored by Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza PhD, FMVA, CP3P (braviouskahyoza5@gmail.com) and Amran Bhuzohera
Published by TICGL | Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd
🌐 www.ticgl.com