Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Employment Trends in Tanzania (2025-2030), Bridging the Formal and Informal Gap

Tanzania’s workforce is 71.8% informal (25.95 million workers) and 28.2% formal (10.17 million workers), highlighting a major divide in job security, wages, and social protection. While formal employment is projected to rise to 38% by 2030, barriers such as limited job availability (42%), skills mismatches (26%), and bureaucratic challenges (21%) slow the transition. This report explores the key trends, challenges, and opportunities in Tanzania’s employment landscape, emphasizing the role of industrialization, digital transformation, and policy reforms in shaping the future workforce.

Key Figures

Main Issues Breakdown

1. The Divide Between Formal and Informal Employment

2. Education and Employment Trends

3. Work Experience and Job Stability

4. Challenges in Informal Employment

5. Factors Encouraging Formalization

6. Digital Technology and Employment Growth

7. Job Creation by Sector

Policy Recommendations

To address these employment challenges, the report suggests:

  1. Expand Industrialization and Special Economic Zones (SEZs) to increase formal jobs.
  2. Improve Vocational Training to align skills with industry needs.
  3. Simplify Business Registration and Taxation to encourage formalization.
  4. Enhance Digital and Remote Work Opportunities through ICT training.
  5. Introduce Affordable Social Protection Schemes for informal workers.

Conclusion

The Tanzanian labor market is shifting towards more formalization, but challenges like bureaucracy, low education levels, and financial constraints remain. The digital economy and government policy reforms present new opportunities to increase formal employment and improve workforce stability.

Employment Trends by Sector in Tanzania (2025-2030)

SectorEmployment ShareKey Trends & Insights
Agriculture28%Largest employer but mostly informal; faces challenges like low wages, seasonal instability, and outdated methods. Modernization efforts could increase formalization and productivity.
Manufacturing18%Growing due to industrialization and special economic zones (SEZs); projected to create more formal jobs in food processing, textiles, and construction materials.
Construction14%Driven by infrastructure projects; employs both formal and informal workers, but many lack social protection and job stability.
Small Business17%44% of informal jobs come from micro-enterprises, retail, and street vending; registration barriers slow formalization.
Services14%Includes tourism, finance, and logistics; a growing source of formal jobs, but requires skilled workforce.
Technology/ICT9%Fast-growing sector, creating new jobs in fintech, e-commerce, and software development; digital skills gap remains a challenge.

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