Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Tanzania Vision 2050 envisions a middle-income, semi-industrialized economy by 2050, with a population exceeding 114 million, requiring 8-10% GDP growth, poverty below 10%, and robust infrastructure. The performance of TIC, LGAs, TRA, and PPPC suggests they can collectively serve as viable alternatives for development and economic growth, provided they address scalability and coordination challenges. Below, we assess their contributions and potential with figures.

1. Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC)

2. Local Government Authorities (LGAs)

3. Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA)

4. Public-Private Partnership Centre (PPPC)

Collective Potential

Table: Performance and Viability for Vision 2050

InstitutionCurrent Metric (2024)2050 TargetGDP Growth ImpactDevelopment RoleViability Score (1-10)
TIC$6.2B FDI$50B FDI3% → 4%Jobs, industrialization8
LGAs$0.46B revenue$2.6B revenue1% → 1.5%Services, rural growth5
TRA$9.26B revenue$37B revenue2% → 4%Budget, infrastructure9
PPPC$3B PPPs$20B PPPs1% → 3%Infrastructure, urbanization7

Viability Score: Reflects capacity to drive sustainable development and growth.

Conclusion

TIC, LGAs, TRA, and PPPC can serve as viable alternatives for development and economic growth under Vision 2050, with TRA (score 9) and TIC (score 8) showing the strongest potential due to revenue and FDI scalability. PPPC (score 7) and LGAs (score 5) are less effective but critical for infrastructure and services. Collectively, they could drive 9-10% GDP growth by 2050, supporting industrialization and poverty reduction for 114 million people, provided they address execution, funding, and governance gaps. The bar chart highlights their trajectory toward Vision 2050 goals.

The table will focus on their current performance (2024/2025), Vision 2050 targets, and contributions to the 8-10% GDP growth goal, aligned with the projected 114-million population by 2050. Figures are drawn from prior analyses, with monetary values in USD (1 USD ≈ TZS 2,700, 2025 rate). The table will highlight their roles in industrialization and poverty reduction, as requested in the context of Vision 2050.

Table: Key Figures for TIC, LGAs, TRA, and PPPC in Support of Vision 2050

InstitutionMetricCurrent Value (2024/2025)Vision 2050 Target (2050)Contribution to 8-10% GDP GrowthImpact on Development (2050)
TICForeign Direct Investment (FDI)$6.2B (2023)$50B~3% (current) → ~4%10M jobs, poverty from 25% to 15%
Job Creation150,000 jobs10M jobsSupports industrial GDP (25% → 40%)Supports 50M people (5 per job)
Export Growth12% annually (2020-2024)20% annuallyBoosts manufacturing exportsEnhances rural/urban livelihoods
LGAsOwn-Source Revenue$0.46B (5% national revenue)$2.6B (10% share)~1% (current) → ~1.5%Funds SMEs, rural growth
Service Coverage8,000 schools, 2,500 health facilities15,000 schools, 5,000 facilitiesSupports human capitalServices for 114M, 60% urban
Staffing Levels40% positions filled (some regions)80% positions filledEnhances local productivityReduces inequality
TRATax-to-GDP Ratio12.5% ($9.26B revenue)20% ($37B revenue)~2% (current) → ~4%Funds $100B budget
Informal Sector Formalization50,000 SMEs formalized1M SMEs formalizedExpands tax base5M SME jobs, urban poverty cut
Digital Compliance80% of businesses95% of businessesScales revenue collectionSupports infrastructure
PPPCPPP Investment$3B (2020-2024)$20B~1% (current) → ~3%Urban housing, rural infrastructure
Completed PPP Projects10 projects50 projects/yearBoosts trade, urbanizationLifts 5M poor, 60% urban
Local Private Sector Share15% of projects40% of projectsEnhances local capacityDrives inclusive growth

Notes:

Explanation of Key Figures

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