Tanzania Economic Analysis 2026: President Samia's First 100 Days | TICGL TICGL Research — February 2026 Tanzania Economic Analysis 2026:President Samia's First 100 Days A comprehensive data-driven evaluation of Tanzania's macroeconomic performance, sectoral dynamics, infrastructure milestones, fiscal position, and economic outlook — covering October 2025 to February 2026. Published: February 10, 2026 Sources: Bank of […]
Tanzania Economic Analysis 2026: President Samia's First 100 Days | TICGL
TICGL Research — February 2026
Tanzania Economic Analysis 2026: President Samia's First 100 Days
A comprehensive data-driven evaluation of Tanzania's macroeconomic performance, sectoral dynamics, infrastructure milestones, fiscal position, and economic outlook — covering October 2025 to February 2026.
Published: February 10, 2026
Sources: Bank of Tanzania, IMF, World Bank, NBS
Second Term Evaluation: Oct 29, 2025 – Feb 5, 2026
GDP Growth 2025
6.0%
▲ from 5.5% in 2024
Gold Exports
$4.7B
▲ Record High 2025
Inflation (2025 avg)
3.3%
✓ Within 3–5% Target
Forex Reserves
$6.3B
4.9 months imports
Tourism Revenue
$4.3B
▲ 11.4% arrivals
IMF GDP Outlook 2026
6.3%
Projected Growth
Public Debt/GDP
49.6%
▼ to 48.3% by 2026
ES Executive Summary
Overview: Economic Resilience Amid Political Transition
President Samia Suluhu Hassan was inaugurated for her second term on November 3, 2025, following the general election on October 29, 2025 where she secured 97.66% of the vote. Her first 100 days — evaluated through February 5, 2026 — present a paradox of strong macroeconomic fundamentals coexisting with significant political and governance challenges.
Tanzania's economy demonstrated robust performance with GDP growth reaching 6.0% annually in 2025, driven by record gold exports of $4.7 billion, a booming tourism recovery generating $4.3 billion in revenues, and the landmark completion of the Julius Nyerere Hydropower Project — the largest dam in East Africa. Inflation remained well within the Bank of Tanzania's 3–5% target at an annual average of 3.3%.
🔍 TICGL Key Finding
While Tanzania's headline growth metrics are among the strongest in Sub-Saharan Africa, growth has not been sufficiently inclusive. GDP grew 37.5% nominally from 2020–2025, yet urban wages rose only 5.3% and rural wages 4.9% over the same period — effectively stagnant in real terms. The effective inflation rate for the poorest 50% is estimated at 5.5–6.5%, far above the official 3.4% headline.
6.0%
GDP Growth 2025
$4.7B
Gold Exports Record
2,115 MW
Julius Nyerere Dam Capacity
3.3%
Annual Average Inflation
53,000+
New Jobs Created
$6.3B
Foreign Reserves (Jan 2026)
01 Political & Economic Context
1. Political and Economic Context of the Second Term
1.1 Election Context (October 2025)
The October 2025 election, while decisive in outcome, was marked by significant controversy. Key opposition parties — Chadema and ACT-Wazalendo — were excluded from the ballot. An internet blackout was imposed on election day and subsequent days. Post-election unrest resulted in reported casualties, drawing sharp international criticism from the African Union, European Union, and SADC election observers.
1.2 Government Response
In her inaugural address to the 13th Parliament on November 14, 2025, President Hassan announced four landmark commitments designed to stabilise the post-election environment and set a progressive development agenda:
Commitment
Details
Status
Enquiry Commission
Independent body to investigate post-election events and unrest
In Progress
Reconciliation Commission
Commission for Reconciliation and Mediation across political divides
In Progress
Constitutional Rewrite
Commitment to begin process within the first 100 days
Initiated
Tanzania Vision 2050
Ambitious long-term national development framework launched
Launched
⚠ Political Risk Note
The United States imposed partial travel restrictions effective January 1, 2026, reflecting concerns about democratic governance. These restrictions create potential headwinds for FDI and tourist arrivals from key markets, and may affect bilateral aid and development partner support.
02 Macroeconomic Performance
2. Macroeconomic Performance (Q4 2025)
2.1 GDP Growth Trajectory
Tanzania's economy demonstrated strong performance in 2025, with GDP growth reaching 6.0% annually, up from 5.5% in 2024. The second quarter showed particularly robust expansion at 6.3%, driven primarily by agriculture, mining, and construction. The IMF projects continued growth at 6.3% for 2026 and 6.3–6.5% through 2028, positioning Tanzania as one of Africa's fastest-growing large economies.
Tanzania Real GDP Growth Rate (%)
Annual growth 2020–2026 (2026 = IMF projection) — Source: IMF, Bank of Tanzania
Year
GDP Growth (%)
GDP (USD Billion, est.)
IMF Sub-Saharan Africa Avg
Performance vs Region
2020
1.9%
62.4
−1.6%
+3.5 pp
2021
4.3%
67.8
4.7%
−0.4 pp
2022
4.7%
75.5
3.9%
+0.8 pp
2023
5.2%
79.9
3.4%
+1.8 pp
2024
5.5%
88.1
3.8%
+1.7 pp
2025
6.0%
93.5
4.1%
+1.9 pp
2026 (Proj.)
6.3%
95–102
4.2% (est.)
+2.1 pp
2.2 Inflation and Price Stability
Tanzania maintained headline inflation within the Bank of Tanzania's 3–5% target range throughout 2025, averaging 3.3% for the year. However, a critical disparity exists between headline and food inflation. Food prices rose at 6.6% — nearly double the headline rate — disproportionately burdening low-income households where food constitutes 60–80% of total expenditure.
📊 Inflation Disparity Alert
The official headline inflation of 3.4% masks a significantly higher effective inflation rate for the poorest 50% of Tanzanians, estimated at 5.5–6.5%. Food inflation at 6.6% creates a poverty inflation trap — affecting those least able to absorb price increases. This is a key challenge for inclusive growth policy design.
Inflation: Headline vs. Food Prices vs. Effective Rate for Bottom 50% (%)
2022–2025 — Source: Bank of Tanzania, TICGL estimates
Indicator
2023
2024
2025 (Annual Avg)
Jan 2026
Headline Inflation
3.8%
3.5%
3.3%
3.4%
Food Inflation
6.1%
6.4%
6.6%
6.5% (est.)
Core Inflation (ex-food, energy)
2.9%
2.7%
2.5%
2.6%
Effective Inflation — Bottom 50%
5.2%
5.4%
5.5–6.5%
~5.8% (est.)
BoT Policy Rate
5.50%
5.75%
5.75%
5.75% (held)
2.3 Private Sector Credit Growth
Private sector credit expanded at approximately 8–10% in 2025, signalling improved financial intermediation and business confidence. The benchmark interest rate was held at 5.75% in January 2026 to support growth while containing inflation, reflecting the Bank of Tanzania's balanced monetary stance.
03 Sectoral Performance
3. Sectoral Performance — Key Economic Drivers
Tanzania's growth in 2025 was broadly diversified but led by three standout sectors: mining (gold), tourism, and financial services. Agriculture remains the backbone of employment but underperforms growth relative to GDP potential.
Sectoral Growth Rates — Q2 2025 (% YoY)
Source: Tanzania NBS, Bank of Tanzania
3.1 Mining Sector — The Star Performer
The mining sector was the standout performer of 2025, recording the highest growth rate among all sectors at 19% in Q2 2025. Gold exports reached a record $4.7 billion by November 2025, driven by a combination of record-high global gold prices and increased production volumes at major mines including Geita Mine (Barrick) and North Mara Mine.
Gold Export Revenue (USD Billion) & Gold Price Outlook
2021–2026 export revenues + 2026 major bank gold price forecasts — Source: BoT, J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley
Mining Metric
Value / Status
Context
Gold Exports (2025)
$4.4–4.7 billion
Record high; up 35.5–42.1% YoY
Gold's Share of Goods Exports
~45–55%
Dominant export commodity
Mining Sector Growth (Q2 2025)
19%
Highest sectoral growth rate
Key Producing Mines
Geita, North Mara, Bulyanhulu
All operational at full capacity
Gold Price Outlook 2026 (JPM)
$4,400–$5,055/oz
Bullish; highs forecast up to ~$5,500
Gov. Gold Holdings Liquidation
$1.2–1.3 billion
Directed to infrastructure funding
💎 Gold Price Tailwind
Major global banks — including J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley — project gold averaging $4,400–$5,055/oz in 2026 with potential highs of ~$5,500. This structural tailwind provides Tanzania with a sustained revenue windfall through at least 2027, significantly buffering fiscal and external risks. The government's strategic liquidation of ~$1.2–1.3 billion in gold holdings to fund infrastructure is a prudent measure that unlocks liquidity while maintaining reserve adequacy.
3.2 Tourism Sector — Continued Recovery
The tourism sector continued its post-pandemic recovery, with international arrivals increasing by 11.4% to reach 2.3 million visitors by October 2025. Tourism revenue reached $4.3 billion, briefly surpassing gold as Tanzania's top foreign exchange earner at certain periods during 2025, underlining the sector's growing strategic importance.
Tourism: International Arrivals (Millions) & Revenue (USD Billion)
2019–2025 recovery trajectory — Source: Tanzania Tourism Board, BoT
Tourism Indicator
2023
2024
2025
Change
International Arrivals
1.9M
2.06M
2.3M
+11.4%
Tourism Revenue (USD)
$3.3B
$3.8B
$4.3B
+13.2%
Share of GDP
~4.1%
~4.3%
~4.6%
+0.3 pp
Avg Revenue per Visitor (USD)
$1,737
$1,845
$1,870
+1.4%
⚠ Tourism Risk — US Travel Restrictions
US partial travel restrictions effective January 1, 2026 represent a potential headwind for high-value tourism from North American markets. The US is typically a top-5 source market for Tanzania's luxury safari segment. Proactive diplomatic engagement will be critical to mitigating this risk.
3.3 Agriculture Sector
Agriculture grew at 4.1% in Q2 2025 — below the mining and financial services sectors, but still a meaningful contribution to overall growth. The sector continues to employ over 60% of Tanzania's workforce and accounts for approximately 26% of GDP. Key agricultural exports including tobacco, cashew nuts, and tea showed mixed performance.
Agriculture: GDP Share (%) vs. Employment Share (%)
Highlighting the structural productivity gap — Source: Tanzania NBS, ILO
⚡ Agriculture Productivity Gap
Agriculture employs 60%+ of Tanzania's workforce but contributes only ~26% of GDP — implying dramatically lower productivity per agricultural worker compared to other sectors. This structural imbalance is a root cause of rural wage stagnation and is central to Tanzania's inclusive growth challenge. Vision 2050's target to expand irrigation to 5 million acres is a direct response to this gap.
3.4 Manufacturing Sector — Persistent Weakness
Manufacturing remains a structural weakness in Tanzania's economy. Manufacturing exports declined to $1.31 billion from $1.36 billion in 2025, signalling stagnation despite government emphasis on industrial development. Manufacturing's share of GDP has remained stuck at approximately 8% since the mid-1990s — a 30-year structural failure to diversify.
Sector
Q2 2025 Growth
GDP Share
Employment Share
Trend
Mining & Quarrying
19.0%
~5%
~1%
🚀 Surging
Financial Services
8.5%
~7%
~1%
↑ Growing
Construction
6.8%
~8%
~5%
↑ Growing
Tourism / Trade
6.2%
~9%
~8%
↑ Recovering
Agriculture
4.1%
~26%
>60%
→ Steady
Manufacturing
3.2%
~8%
~4%
↓ Stagnant
ICT / Digital
7.1%
~3%
~2%
↑ Emerging
Sectoral Contribution to GDP Growth
Agriculture (26% GDP)
26%
Trade & Tourism (~9%)
9%
Manufacturing (~8%)
8%
Construction (~8%)
8%
Financial Services (~7%)
7%
Mining (~5%)
5%
ICT / Digital (~3%)
3%
04 External Sector
4. External Sector Performance
Tanzania's external sector showed significant improvement in 2025. The current account deficit narrowed to $2.22 billion (2.4% of GDP) from $2.89 billion in 2024 — a 23.2% improvement — driven by strong export performance in gold and tourism. This improvement reflects both the structural strength of Tanzania's commodity exports and the ongoing post-pandemic recovery of the services sector.
$2.22B
Current Account Deficit 2025
2.4%
of GDP (down from 3.2%)
$6.17B
Forex Reserves (2025)
4.7 mo
Import Cover (EAC min: 4)
+25.2%
Traditional Agri-Exports Growth
Stable
TZS Exchange Rate
Current Account Deficit Trend (USD Billion & % of GDP)
2020–2026 — Source: Bank of Tanzania, IMF
External Indicator
2023
2024
2025
Change YoY
Current Account Deficit (USD B)
$2.61B
$2.89B
$2.22B
▼ –23.2%
Current Account (% of GDP)
3.3%
3.2%
2.4%
▼ –0.8 pp
Foreign Reserves (USD B)
$5.36B
$5.74B
$6.17B
▲ +7.5%
Import Cover (months)
4.2
4.4
4.7
▲ +0.3 mo
Goods Export Growth
+8.4%
+11.2%
+18.5%
▲ Strong
Traditional Agri-Export Growth
+6.1%
+9.3%
+25.2%
▲ Surge
Manufacturing Export Value
$1.42B
$1.36B
$1.31B
▼ –3.7%
Forex Reserves (Jan 2026)
—
—
$6.3B
4.9 months cover
4.1 ODA Decline and Financing Gap
A critical structural vulnerability in Tanzania's external position is the dramatic decline in Official Development Assistance (ODA). ODA to Tanzania has declined approximately 84% since 2013, with further projected drops of 9–17% in 2025–2026. This creates an estimated ~15% budget financing gap, increasing reliance on domestic revenue mobilisation, commercial borrowing, or non-traditional development partners.
ODA Decline vs. Domestic Revenue Growth (Index: 2013 = 100)
Tanzania's shift from aid-dependent to domestically-financed development — Source: OECD, BoT
⚠ Financing Risk — ODA Cliff
ODA declined ~84% from 2013 to 2025, creating a structural financing gap. With further drops of 9–17% projected in 2025–2026, the government's "Sovereign Pragmatism" doctrine — shifting from aid to trade-driven growth — is not merely aspirational but a fiscal necessity. The risk is that the pace of domestic revenue growth lags the pace of aid withdrawal, potentially constraining public investment in social services and infrastructure.
4.2 Exchange Rate and TZS Stability
The Tanzanian shilling maintained relative stability in 2025, supported by strong gold export inflows and tourism revenues. The Bank of Tanzania's foreign reserves buffer of $6.3 billion (4.9 months import cover) as of January 2026 — comfortably above the 4-month EAC prudential minimum — provides meaningful protection against external shocks and TZS depreciation pressures.
05 Infrastructure
5. Infrastructure Development — Key Milestones
The period under review was marked by some of Tanzania's most significant infrastructure achievements in decades, with the completion of multiple flagship projects that will define the country's economic trajectory for years to come.
🏆 Landmark Achievement
Julius Nyerere Hydropower Project Largest Dam in East Africa
Completed and fully operational as of April 2025, the Julius Nyerere Hydropower Project represents Tanzania's most significant infrastructure achievement — built 99.5% from domestic revenues, demonstrating fiscal sovereignty and long-term vision.
2,115 MW
Total Installed Capacity
5,920 GWh
Annual Power Production
TZS 6.5T
Total Cost (~$2.9B)
99.5%
Domestically Financed
#1 EA
Largest in East Africa
#4 Africa
4th Largest Dam in Africa
Tanzania Power Generation Capacity — Before & After Julius Nyerere Dam (MW)
National grid capacity milestone — Source: TANESCO, Ministry of Energy
5.2 Other Major Infrastructure Progress
Project
Status
Strategic Impact
Timeline
Julius Nyerere Hydropower (2,115 MW)
✅ Fully Operational
Energy self-reliance; export potential to Zambia & neighbours
Completed April 2025
Standard Gauge Railway (SGR)
🔄 Under Construction
Connects DSM to Lake Victoria; freight & passenger logistics transformation
Ongoing 2025–2027
Kwala Dry Port
✅ Launched
SGR electric freight services; inland cargo hub
Launched July 2025
Kigongo-Busisi Bridge (JPM Bridge)
✅ Inaugurated
East Africa's longest bridge; Lake Victoria connectivity
Inaugurated June 2025
Dar es Salaam Port Expansion
🔄 Ongoing
Capacity uplift for regional trade hub ambitions
Ongoing
East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP)
🔄 Advanced Stage
$42B LNG project; regional energy export corridor
Expected completion by July 2026
Power Transmission to Zambia
🔄 Under Construction
Electricity export revenue stream for Tanzania
2026–2027
⚡ Energy Transformation Impact
The full operationalisation of the Julius Nyerere Dam is expected to be a game-changer for Tanzania's industrialisation agenda. Reliable, affordable electricity is the single most critical input for manufacturing growth. With national capacity now approximately doubling, Tanzania is positioned to attract industrial investment that was previously deterred by unreliable power supply. The dam also enables potential electricity exports to neighbouring countries, creating a new revenue stream estimated at hundreds of millions of dollars annually.
06 Vision 2050
6. Tanzania Vision 2050 — Strategic Development Framework
In her inaugural address to Parliament on November 14, 2025, President Hassan officially launched Tanzania Vision 2050 — an ambitious long-term national development framework targeting Tanzania's transformation into a high-income, industrialised economy by mid-century. The framework sets a target of a $1 trillion economy and high-income status by 2050.
Tanzania Vision 2050 — Key Targets Progress Tracker
Current baseline vs. 2030 short-term targets — Source: President's Office, TICGL
6.1 Short-Term Targets (By 2030)
Vision 2050 Target (by 2030)
Current Baseline
2030 Target
Required Change
Feasibility
GDP Growth Rate
5.6–6.0%
>7.0%
+1.0–1.4 pp
Challenging
Power Generation Capacity
~4,000 MW
8,000 MW
Double (+4,000 MW)
On Track
Irrigated Land
~0.7M acres
5 million acres
+7× expansion
Ambitious
Manufacturing GDP Growth
~4.8%
9% annually
Nearly double
Requires structural reform
New Jobs Created
~53,000 (100 days)
8 million total
Sustained creation
Challenging
Total Investment Attraction
~$8–10B annual FDI
$50 billion total
Scaled attraction strategy
Moderate feasibility
6.2 Medium-to-Long Term Milestones (2031–2050)
2027–2030: GDP Growth 6.5%
6.5%
2030: Poverty Rate Target 41%
41%
2030: Debt/GDP Stabilise at 50–52%
52%
2030: Manufacturing share of GDP 9%
9%
2026: GDP USD 95–102 billion
~$98B
🎯 Sovereign Pragmatism Doctrine
The administration unveiled a "Sovereign Pragmatism" doctrine — a deliberate strategic pivot shifting Tanzania's development model from aid-dependency to trade-driven growth and value-added investments. This is reflected in new partnerships including strengthened Russia-Tanzania economic ties, diversified FDI sources, and prioritisation of domestic resource mobilisation. The doctrine is a direct response to the structural 84% decline in ODA since 2013.
07 Fiscal Position
7. Fiscal Position and Public Debt
Tanzania's fiscal position remains relatively healthy. Public debt stood at 49.6% of GDP in 2025 — among the lowest in the East African region and significantly below the IMF's 55% sustainability threshold. The present value (PV) of debt was estimated at 40.6% of GDP, well within safe parameters. Debt is projected to decline to 48.3% of GDP by 2026, reflecting a controlled trajectory.
Public Debt as % of GDP — Tanzania vs. EAC Peers (2025)
Tanzania maintains one of the lowest debt ratios in East Africa — Source: IMF, World Bank
Fiscal Indicator
2023
2024
2025
2026 (Proj.)
Public Debt (% of GDP)
51.2%
50.4%
49.6%
48.3%
PV of Debt (% of GDP)
43.1%
41.8%
40.6%
~39.5%
Fiscal Deficit (% of GDP)
–3.6%
–3.4%
–3.2%
–3.0%
Tax Revenue (% of GDP)
12.4%
12.8%
13.1%
Target: 13.3%
Domestic Revenue (% of GDP)
15.1%
15.6%
15.9%
Target: 16.7%
Debt Service (TZS Trillion/yr)
9.8T
10.6T
11.5T
Rising ↑
Debt Service (% Gov't Revenue)
18%
21%
20–25%
26–30% by 2028
External Debt Service/Revenue
28.4%
31.3%
~30%
~24% (proj.)
Debt Service Burden (% of Government Revenue) — 2020–2028 Projection
While Tanzania's overall debt level is manageable, the debt service burden is rising. Annual debt service of ~TZS 11.5 trillion (20–25% of government revenue in 2025) is projected to rise toward 26–30% by 2028 — approaching levels that constrain fiscal space for social spending. The IMF/DSA assesses overall debt at low-to-moderate distress risk, but sustained revenue mobilisation above the current 13.1% tax-to-GDP ratio is essential to prevent fiscal tightening.
7.1 Revenue Mobilisation Challenge
Tanzania's tax-to-GDP ratio of approximately 13.1% remains significantly below the optimal 17–20% range recommended for sustainable development financing. Government revenues at approximately 15% of GDP limit the capacity to fund social programmes and infrastructure without increasing external borrowing. The 2025/26 budget targets domestic revenue of 16.7% of GDP and tax revenue of 13.3% — modest but directionally correct improvements.
Tax Revenue as % of GDP — Tanzania vs. Optimal Range
Tanzania significantly lags the 17–20% optimal for development financing — Source: IMF, OECD
08 Key Challenges
8. Key Economic Challenges
Despite strong headline growth metrics, Tanzania faces four structural and cyclical challenges that must be addressed to achieve Vision 2050's targets and ensure that economic growth translates into broadly shared prosperity.
🔴 Critical Challenge
Inclusive Growth Gap
GDP grew 37.5% nominally (2020–2025), but urban wages rose only 5.3% and rural wages just 4.9% — effectively stagnant in real terms. The poorest 50% face an effective inflation rate of 5.5–6.5%, not the headline 3.4%.
🔴 Critical Challenge
Revenue Mobilisation
Tax-to-GDP ratio of 13.1% is far below the 17–20% optimal range. This severely constrains public investment without risking unsustainable borrowing levels.
🟡 Significant Risk
Political Uncertainty
Contested election, US travel restrictions (Jan 2026), international criticism from AU/EU/SADC, and potential FDI confidence effects. Reconciliation commission progress is crucial.
🟡 Significant Risk
Manufacturing Stagnation
Manufacturing exports declined to $1.31B from $1.36B. GDP share stuck at ~8% since mid-1990s — 30 years of industrial under-development despite policy rhetoric.
🟡 Significant Risk
ODA Withdrawal
84% decline in ODA since 2013; further 9–17% drops projected. Creates ~15% budget financing gap. Shifts pressure to domestic revenue — which is not yet adequate.
🟢 Moderate / Manageable
Geopolitical & Climate Shocks
Red Sea shipping disruptions, global trade tensions, erratic rainfall risks for agriculture and hydropower. Buffered by strong reserves and diversified exports.
8.1 The Inclusive Growth Paradox
The most profound challenge Tanzania faces is the disconnect between strong macroeconomic performance and lived economic reality for ordinary Tanzanians. GDP grew 37.5% in nominal terms from 2020 to 2025. Yet urban wages rose only 5.3% and rural wages 4.9% over the same period. After adjusting for inflation, real wage growth is essentially zero — meaning that most Tanzanians have not materially benefited from Tanzania's "economic success story."
GDP Growth vs. Wage Growth vs. Effective Inflation (2020–2025, cumulative %)
The inclusive growth gap — Source: Tanzania NBS, ILO, TICGL estimates
Inclusive Growth Indicator
2020
2022
2025
5-Yr Change
Nominal GDP Growth (cumulative)
Base
+14%
+37.5%
+37.5%
Urban Wage Growth (nominal)
Base
+2.1%
+5.3%
+5.3% only
Rural Wage Growth (nominal)
Base
+1.8%
+4.9%
+4.9% only
Headline Inflation (cumulative)
Base
+8.6%
~+18%
Erodes wages
Real Urban Wage Growth
Base
–6.5%
~–12%
Negative
Real Rural Wage Growth
Base
–6.8%
~–13%
Negative
Food Inflation (avg annual)
—
7.5%
6.6%
Persistent ↑
Poverty Rate (% population)
~44%
~43%
~42%
Slow decline
📊 The Inclusive Growth Crisis
Tanzania's GDP-wage divergence is among the most severe in Sub-Saharan Africa. A nominal GDP expansion of +37.5% alongside nominal wage growth of only +5.3% urban / +4.9% rural implies that the productivity gains from Tanzania's economic growth are not being captured by workers. The gains flow disproportionately to capital owners, particularly in the mining sector where foreign companies dominate. Unless targeted inclusive growth policies are implemented, poverty reduction will remain frustratingly slow despite impressive headline growth.
09 Economic Outlook
9. Economic Outlook for 2026 and Beyond
Tanzania's economic prospects for 2026 and the medium term remain robustly positive, underpinned by strong fundamentals and major infrastructure investments now coming online. The IMF projects 6.3% real GDP growth in 2026, with sustained growth of 6.3–6.5% through 2028. Tanzania is expected to remain one of Sub-Saharan Africa's fastest-growing economies.
Tanzania GDP Growth Projections 2026–2030 — Multi-Scenario
Optimistic, Base, and Downside scenarios — Source: IMF, TICGL projections
Indicator
2026 (Base)
2027
2028
2030 (Vision)
Real GDP Growth (%)
6.0–6.3%
6.3–6.5%
6.3–6.5%
>7.0% target
GDP (USD Billion)
$95–102B
~$107B
~$114B
~$140B+
Mainland GDP Growth
6.1%
~6.3%
~6.3%
7%+ target
Zanzibar GDP Growth
7.2%
~7.0%
~6.8%
8%+ target
Inflation
3.5–4.0%
~3.5%
~3.5%
<5% target
Forex Reserves (USD B)
$6.5B (proj.)
~$6.8B
~$7.1B
$8B+ target
Debt/GDP
48.3%
~47%
~46%
50–52% ceiling
Poverty Rate (%)
~41%
~41% (target)
~39%
<35% target
9.1 Key Growth Drivers for 2026
✅ Growth Driver
Julius Nyerere Dam
Full operationalisation providing reliable, affordable electricity — unlocking industrial investment and manufacturing competitiveness across Tanzania.
✅ Growth Driver
Gold Price Tailwind
Major banks forecast gold averaging $4,400–$5,055/oz in 2026 (highs up to $5,500). Sustained FX inflows, reserve accumulation, and fiscal windfall expected.
✅ Growth Driver
Tourism Recovery
International arrivals and revenue momentum continuing into 2026. Sector diversification reducing dependence on single commodity exports.
✅ Growth Driver
LNG Project ($42B)
Negotiations in advanced stages. Finalisation would be transformative — among Africa's largest energy investments and a major new export revenue stream.
✅ Growth Driver
Critical Minerals
Tanzania's nickel, graphite, and lithium deposits attracting global investment interest amid green energy transition. Emerging diversification opportunity.
✅ Growth Driver
SGR & Infrastructure
SGR completion enhancing trade logistics, reducing transport costs, and improving Tanzania's position as a regional transit hub for landlocked neighbours.
TICGL's analysis identifies five immediate priorities for 2026 and five medium-term actions for 2026–2030, drawn directly from the data evidence in this report. These recommendations prioritise inclusive growth, fiscal sustainability, and structural economic transformation.
10.1 Immediate Priorities (2026)
#
Recommendation
Target Metric
Responsible Body
1
Political Reconciliation — Accelerate enquiry & reconciliation commissions to restore domestic stability and international confidence
Lift US travel restrictions; restore bilateral ODA
President's Office
2
Revenue Enhancement — Increase tax-to-GDP ratio from 13.1% to at least 15% via base broadening and improved TRA collection efficiency
Tax/GDP: 13.1% → 15%
Ministry of Finance / TRA
3
Inclusive Growth Mechanisms — Targeted wage support, rural productivity programmes, and social protection for bottom 50%
Rural wage growth >5% real; poverty rate <40% by 2027
Ministry of Labour, PMORALG
4
Manufacturing Support — Concrete incentives (tax holidays, industrial land, infrastructure) to revive manufacturing exports and achieve 9% growth
Mfg exports >$1.5B; GDP share 8% → 10%
Ministry of Trade & Industries
5
Food Security — Strategic reserves, improved distribution, and agri-productivity enhancements to reduce food inflation from 6.6%
Food inflation below 5% by end-2026
Ministry of Agriculture
10.2 Medium-Term Actions (2026–2030)
#
Action
Target
Investment Required
1
Energy Infrastructure — Execute plan to double power generation from 4,000 MW to 8,000 MW; develop electricity export corridor to Zambia and regional markets
8,000 MW by 2030
$3–5B (mixed public/private)
2
District Industrial Parks — Establish manufacturing zones in all regions to promote value-addition, local employment, and agro-processing
Mfg GDP share 9% by 2030
TZS 2–3 trillion
3
LNG Development — Finalise the $42 billion LNG project through negotiated terms that maximise local content, tax revenues, and national benefit
FID decision by 2026; first gas 2031+
$42B (international IOCs)
4
Human Capital Investment — Education, TVET, and skills training reforms aligned to industrialisation, digital economy, and technology adoption needs
Technical graduate output +50% by 2030
Reprioritise education budget
5
Social Protection Expansion — Expand cash transfer and insurance schemes from current <10% coverage to 25% of poor households by 2030
<10% → 25% coverage
~1.5% additional GDP expenditure
11 Conclusion
11. Conclusion — Resilience, Paradox, and the Path Forward
The first 100 days of President Samia Suluhu Hassan's second term present a paradox of economic resilience amidst political turbulence. Tanzania's economy has demonstrated strong fundamentals: 6.0% GDP growth, record gold exports of $4.7 billion, robust tourism recovery generating $4.3 billion, and the successful completion of the Julius Nyerere Hydropower Project — the largest dam in East Africa. Inflation remains controlled at 3.3%, foreign reserves are at a comfortable 4.9 months import cover, and public debt trajectory is declining.
However, these macroeconomic achievements are overshadowed by three critical challenges. First, the contested October 2025 election and subsequent unrest have damaged Tanzania's international reputation and raised legitimate concerns about democratic governance. Second, and most critically for long-term development, economic growth has not translated into improved living standards for most Tanzanians — with real wages essentially stagnant while GDP expanded 37.5%. Third, structural vulnerabilities in revenue mobilisation and manufacturing diversification remain unresolved despite years of policy attention.
📋 TICGL Net Assessment
Three Critical Success Factors for Tanzania 2026–2050
🤝
Political Reconciliation
Restore investor and international confidence through credible democratic reform and transparent accountability processes.
💰
Revenue Mobilisation
Increase tax-to-GDP from 13.1% toward 17–20% to fund development sustainably without reliance on unsustainable external borrowing.
🏘
Inclusive Growth
Ensure GDP growth translates to real wage increases, food security, and expanded social protection for all Tanzanians — not just headline statistics.
Looking ahead to 2026 and beyond, Tanzania's economic prospects remain positive, with the IMF projecting 6.3% growth. The Julius Nyerere Dam, advancing LNG negotiations, continued infrastructure development, and strong commodity exports provide solid foundations. The Vision 2050 framework sets ambitious targets including a $1 trillion economy and high-income status by 2050 — achievable if Tanzania successfully navigates its current political challenges, accelerates revenue mobilisation, and implements genuinely inclusive growth policies.
The completion of the Julius Nyerere Hydropower Project stands as tangible evidence of what Tanzania can achieve through domestic resource mobilisation and long-term vision. The challenge now is to apply this same determination and strategic focus to ensuring that economic growth creates opportunities and improves lives across all segments of Tanzanian society. With the right policies, the 2020s could be the decade in which Tanzania's economic story becomes one that is felt not just in statistics — but in the daily lives of its 65 million people.
📚 Data Sources & Methodology
This analysis draws on data from the Bank of Tanzania (BoT) monetary and financial stability reports, IMF Article IV consultations and World Economic Outlook projections, World Bank Tanzania economic updates, Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) quarterly GDP and inflation releases, and research from J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, and other international institutions. Report prepared: February 10, 2026. Analysis by TICGL Research Team.
🔗 Related Research
Explore More TICGL Economic Research
Deepen your understanding of Tanzania's economy with these related analyses and tools from the TICGL research team.
This analysis was produced by TICGL's senior research leadership, combining decades of economic expertise in Tanzania and East Africa.
BK
Chief Economist & Research Director
Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza
PhDFMVA®CP3PPCMC
Qualifications
▸ Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) — Economics
▸ Financial Modelling & Valuation Analyst (FMVA®)
▸ Certified PPP Professional (CP3P)
▸ Professional Certificate in Media & Communication (PCMC)
Dr. Kahyoza leads TICGL's economic research division, specialising in macroeconomic policy analysis, public-private partnerships, and Tanzania's development finance landscape. As Chief Economist, he oversees all quantitative modelling, policy advisory work, and the organisation's flagship research publications.
AB
Senior Economist & Research Lead
Amran Bhuzohera
Senior EconomistResearch LeadTICGL
Areas of Expertise
▸ Macroeconomic Research & Data Analysis
▸ Tanzania Sectoral Performance & Trade Economics
▸ East African Investment Climate Assessment
▸ Development Finance & Fiscal Policy
Amran Bhuzohera serves as TICGL's Senior Economist and Research Lead, driving the organisation's quantitative and qualitative economic research programmes. He leads data collection, sectoral analysis, and contributes core findings to TICGL's policy briefs and economic intelligence reports for Tanzania and East Africa.
TICGL
Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd (TICGL)
East Africa's leading economic research and investment consultancy — providing data-driven intelligence since 2018. ticgl.com
Published: February 10, 2026
📢 Share
Share This Analysis
Found this analysis valuable? Share it with your network and help spread evidence-based economic research on Tanzania.
Help grow Tanzania's research ecosystem. When you share this analysis, you help policymakers, investors, researchers, and citizens access evidence-based economic intelligence about Tanzania. Tag us @TICGL when sharing so we can amplify your post.
Quick Links
Upcoming Events
Insights
Contact Us
TICGL | Economic Consulting Group P.O.BOX 8269 Dar Es Salaam-Tanzania Tel: +255 768 699 002 Tel: +255 734 862 343 Email: economist@ticgl.com