Executive Summary

Tanzania's USD 25 Billion Infrastructure Gap Requires a Structural Solution

Tanzania's public finances face a structural financing gap that threatens the country's ambition to achieve Tanzania Development Vision 2050 — the goal of building a USD 1 trillion economy by 2050. Nominal GDP reached approximately TZS 223 trillion (USD 87.44 billion) in 2025, up from TZS 156.6 trillion in 2024. Yet despite strong TRA collection performance, the tax-to-GDP ratio remains at only 13.1–13.3% — well below the Sub-Saharan Africa average of 16.1%.

The budget financing gap has widened to approximately TZS 20.2 trillion in FY 2024/25 (40% of expenditure) and a projected TZS 22.4 trillion in FY 2025/26 (40%). FDI inflows have stabilised at approximately USD 1.7 billion annually — a small fraction of the USD 20–30 billion annual infrastructure need. The Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE), while surging 34% in 2025 to TZS 24 trillion total market cap, still represents only approximately 10–11% of GDP. Local Government Authorities (LGAs) generate just 8% of their funding from own-source revenue.

A critical legal milestone was reached with the 2023 amendments to the PPP Act (Cap. 103), which now explicitly mandate SPV incorporation before any PPP agreement is signed, and allow the government to hold up to 25% minority equity in the SPV. Full operationalisation of this mandate would unlock a conservative USD 3.5–7.0 billion in private infrastructure investment by 2030, create tens of thousands of jobs, and materially advance the Vision 2050 target.

40%
of government expenditure is unfunded — TZS 22.4T gap in FY 2025/26
USD 1.7B
annual FDI vs USD 20–30B Vision 2050 infrastructure need
2023 Act
PPP Act amendment mandates SPV before any PPP agreement is signed
10 Pillars
TICGL SPV Implementation Framework to operationalise the legal mandate

The Financing Gap That Makes PPP Imperative

Tanzania's economy has maintained a growth rate of 6–7% annually over the past decade. Yet macroeconomic resilience has not translated into sufficient public revenue to fund the infrastructure a growing population of 65 million requires.

Achieving Vision 2050 — a USD 1 trillion economy requiring sustained 8–10% real growth and massive capital mobilisation — demands infrastructure investment far beyond what public finance alone can provide. The convergence of a widening budget gap, modest FDI inflows, shallow capital markets, and negligible local government fiscal capacity makes structured private capital mobilisation through PPPs not just desirable but existentially necessary.

Nominal GDP 2025 (Est.)
TZS 223Trln
≈ USD 87.44 Billion · Up from TZS 156.6T in 2024
+42.4% growth in TZS terms (2024–2025)
Financing Gap FY 2025/26
TZS 22.4Trln
~40% of projected TZS 56.49T budget · Widening trend
Up from ~TZS 13.0T in FY 2023/24
Annual Infrastructure Need
USD 20–30B
Required to sustain 8–10% real growth to Vision 2050
FDI covers only USD 1.7B (6–9% of need)
Figure 1: Tanzania Budget Financing Gap Trend (TZS Trillions)
Domestic Revenue vs. Total Expenditure vs. Financing Gap — FY 2023/24 to FY 2025/26
Trend: The financing gap has nearly doubled in two fiscal years — from ~29% to 40% of expenditure — demonstrating the urgency of private capital mobilisation.
Sources: Ministry of Finance Tanzania Budget Execution Reports; KPMG Tanzania Budget Brief; TRA Revenue Performance Reports FY 2024/25–2025/26; TICGL analysis.

1.1 Budget Execution and Financing Gap Data

Table 1: Tanzania Central Government Budget and Financing Gap (TZS Trillions)
Fiscal Years 2023/24 – 2025/26 with Nominal GDP Context
Fiscal YearDomestic Revenue Target / Actual (TZS Trln)Total Expenditure (TZS Trln)Financing Gap (TZS Trln)Gap as % of ExpenditureStatus
FY 2023/2431.38 target; ~30.01 actual~44.4~13.0 (est.)~29%Baseline
FY 2024/25~30.01 actual (exceeded target)~50.21~20.240%Widening
FY 2025/26 (proj.)34.10 target (tax-to-GDP ~13.3%)~56.49~22.4~40%Projected
Nominal GDP 2024TZS 156.6 Trln / ~USD 61.2 BnBase year for FY 2024/25 ratios
Nominal GDP 2025 (est.)TZS 223.0 Trln / ~USD 87.4 BnVision 2050 target: USD 1 Trillion
Sources: Ministry of Finance Tanzania Budget Execution Reports; KPMG Tanzania Budget Brief; TRA Revenue Performance Reports FY 2024/25–2025/26; TICGL analysis.

FDI, Capital Markets & LGA Revenue: The Structural Weaknesses

Three additional structural weaknesses compound the financing gap: insufficient FDI, shallow capital markets, and negligible local government fiscal capacity.

FDI inflows have stabilised around USD 1.7 billion annually in 2024–2025, driven by manufacturing, mining, and infrastructure — yet this is still only a fraction of the USD 20–30 billion annual need to sustain 8–10% growth to 2050. The DSE capital market surged an impressive 34% in 2025, closing at TZS 24 trillion total market capitalisation (USD 8.9 billion), with domestic market cap at TZS 15.6 trillion (USD 5.8 billion). Despite this growth, the DSE represents only approximately 10–11% of GDP. LGA own-source revenue remains stubbornly at 8% of LGA funding, leaving virtually no local fiscal space for infrastructure.

Figure 2: Tanzania FDI Net Inflows (USD Million)
Actual inflows 2022–2025 vs. Vision 2050 annual requirement
Sources: UNCTAD World Investment Report 2024; REPOA FDI Analysis; TICGL analysis.
Figure 3: DSE Capital Market Growth (TZS Trillion)
Total and domestic market capitalisation 2023–2025
Sources: DSE Annual Report 2025; TICGL analysis.
Figure 4: Tax-to-GDP Ratio — Tanzania vs. Sub-Saharan Africa Average (2023–2025)
Tanzania's structural tax gap vs. regional benchmark (OECD Revenue Statistics Africa 2025)
Tanzania's tax-to-GDP is persistently ~3 percentage points below the SSA average — equivalent to approximately TZS 6–7 trillion in foregone annual revenue at current GDP.
Sources: OECD Revenue Statistics in Africa 2025; World Bank Development Indicators; TICGL analysis.
Table 2: Tanzania FDI, Capital Market, and Subnational Revenue Indicators
Key data updated through 2025 with Vision 2050 benchmarks
Indicator202320242025 (Est./Actual)Benchmark / Target
FDI Net Inflows (USD Mn)1,339 (−19.9%)1,718 (+28.3%)~1,700 (~−0.1%)USD 20–30 Bn/yr needed for Vision 2050
FDI Stock (USD Bn)19.9721.69~23.4Vision 2050: >USD 100 Bn
Nominal GDP (TZS Trln / USD Bn)156.6 / ~61.2223.0 / ~87.4Vision 2050: USD 1 Trillion
DSE Total Market Cap (TZS Trln / USD Bn)17.9 / ~6.424.0 / ~8.9 +34%DSE growing; SPV bond listings needed
DSE Domestic Market Cap (TZS Trln / USD Bn)~13.5 / ~5.015.6 / ~5.8Domestic component key for pension fund investment
DSE Market Cap as % of GDP~11.4%~10–11%Kenya NSE: ~12% — Tanzania approaching parity
Tax-to-GDP Ratio (%)13.1% (OECD actual)12.8% (est.)13.3% (proj.)SSA avg: 16.1% — structural gap persists
LGA Own-Source Revenue (% of LGA Funding)~8%~8%~8%>30% required for local fiscal self-sufficiency
Sources: UNCTAD World Investment Report 2024; Bank of Tanzania; REPOA FDI Analysis; World Bank Development Indicators; DSE Annual Report 2025; OECD Revenue Statistics Africa 2025; TICGL analysis.
LGA Fiscal Self-Sufficiency Gap
LGA Own-Source Revenue Actual: 8%
Required for Self-Sufficiency Target: >30%
LGAs are nearly entirely dependent on central government transfers. Without a functional local PPP framework, sub-national infrastructure will remain chronically underfunded.
FDI Coverage of Vision 2050 Need
Current Annual FDI ~USD 1.7 Bn
Annual Infrastructure Need USD 20–30 Bn
FDI covers less than 6–9% of Tanzania's annual infrastructure need. Structured SPV-based PPPs are the primary mechanism to close this gap without increasing sovereign debt.

Why PPP Is Tanzania's Economic Bridge to Vision 2050

PPP is not merely a financing mechanism — it is an instrument for transferring operational risk, embedding private sector discipline, and aligning long-term incentives between government and investors. It allows the government to deliver infrastructure now, funded by future revenue streams (tolls, tariffs, user fees, availability payments), while private partners bear construction and operational risk.

Without scaled PPPs, Tanzania cannot close the infrastructure gap required to sustain the 8–10% real growth needed for the Vision 2050 USD 1 trillion economy target. The 2023 PPP Act amendments have provided the foundational legal architecture. The missing piece is now implementation: disciplined SPV formation, standardised documentation, political commitment to non-interference in SPV governance, and the capital market infrastructure to enable SPV bond financing on the DSE.

Key Legal Milestone: 2023 PPP Act (Cap. 103) Amendment

The 2023 amendment formally mandates that the successful private party incorporate an SPV under the Companies Act prior to executing the PPP agreement. Additionally, the public entity may hold up to 25% minority equity in the SPV, provided it can demonstrate financial capacity and risk-bearing ability. This legal reform aligns Tanzania with international best practice and removes previous ambiguity about SPV status in project structures.

Three Critical Implementation Challenges Remain

(i) Low awareness and capacity on SPV concepts among procuring entities and private sector; (ii) Risk of political interference in SPV board operations; and (iii) Limited domestic experience in full project finance structuring. These gaps are the immediate priority for PPPC and the Ministry of Finance.

Low SPV Awareness

Most procuring entities across ministries and LGAs lack awareness of SPV concepts, structuring requirements, and the implications of the 2023 Act mandate. Without capacity, the legal requirement cannot be operationalised.

Political Interference Risk

Political pressure on SPV boards — appointment of politically connected directors, overriding commercial decisions — directly undermines the governance discipline that lenders require for non-recourse project finance.

No Standardised SPV Documents

Each transaction team must develop SPV Articles of Association, Shareholders' Agreements, and concession templates from scratch — increasing costs, timelines, and the risk of structurally deficient documentation.

Figure 5: Tanzania GDP Trajectory — Actual (2020–2025) vs. Vision 2050 Required Growth Path
USD Billion nominal GDP — demonstrating the gap between current trajectory and USD 1 trillion Vision 2050 target
At current 6–7% growth, Tanzania reaches ~USD 220B by 2050 — far short of the USD 1 trillion target. Scaled PPP infrastructure investment is required to close this gap through productivity-enhancing capital accumulation.
Sources: World Bank; Bank of Tanzania; IMF; TICGL projections and analysis.

Understanding the Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) in PPP Context

An SPV — also termed a Special Purpose Entity (SPE) — is a legally separate, bankruptcy-remote company created specifically for a single project. Under Tanzania's 2023 PPP Act amendments, the successful private party must now incorporate an SPV under the Companies Act before signing the PPP agreement.

In PPP infrastructure finance, the SPV ring-fences the project's assets, liabilities, and cash flows from the sponsors' other businesses, enabling non-recourse project financing and simplifying risk allocation between public and private partners. The SPV sits at the centre of a web of contractual relationships: it contracts with an EPC contractor for asset delivery; with an O&M company for service provision; with lenders for debt; and with government for the concession rights to collect revenues.

Coming in Batch 2

The next section covers: SPV core principles and five fundamental features · SPV vs. Traditional Procurement comparison (Table 3) · Risk Allocation Framework (Table 4) · Global Case Studies (Section 3) · African Case Studies (Section 4) · China's PPP Experience (Section 5). This page will be updated as additional HTML batches are assembled.