A comprehensive data-driven analysis of Tanzania's mining sector transformation from 2015-2025, examining GDP contribution, revenue generation, export performance, and development impact
Over the past decade, Tanzania's mining sector has undergone a profound transformation, evolving from a peripheral contributor to the economy into one of the country's most strategic growth engines. By 2024, the sector achieved a historic milestone by contributing 10.1% of national GDP, surpassing the government's 2026 target two years ahead of schedule.
Beyond headline GDP figures, the mining sector has become a cornerstone of government revenue mobilization and fiscal stability. Mining-related taxes, royalties, and levies rose sharply from TZS 624.6 billion in 2021/22 to an estimated over TZS 1.4 trillion in 2025, representing a year-on-year increase of more than 80%.
The sector has also redefined Tanzania's external economic position by becoming the country's largest source of foreign exchange. Mineral exports, dominated by gold, accounted for roughly 50-55% of total national exports in 2025, with export earnings estimated between USD 4.4 and 4.7 billion. High international gold prices (averaging around USD 2,500 per ounce) combined with increased production at major mines such as Geita and North Mara helped boost foreign exchange reserves to approximately USD 6.6 billion, providing more than five months of import cover.
The mining sector's contribution to Tanzania's GDP has experienced remarkable growth over the past decade, increasing from approximately 3.8% in 2015 to a historic 10.1% in 2024. This growth trajectory demonstrates the sector's transformation into a primary economic driver for the nation.
| Year/Quarter | GDP Contribution (%) | Mining GDP (TZS Million) | Mining GDP (USD Million) | Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | ~3.8% | 4,000,000 | 1,700 | - |
| 2018 | 4.8% | - | 2,960 | +26% |
| 2020 | 7.3% | 9,900,000 | 4,200 | +52% |
| 2021 | 7.2% | - | - | -1.4% |
| 2022 | 9.1% | 2,008,000 | 800 | +26% |
| 2023 | 9.1% | - | - | 0% |
| 2024 (Full Year) | 10.1% | 2,318,000 | 923 | +11% |
| 2025 Q1 | ~9.5% | 2,250,262 | 896 | -2.9%* |
| 2025 Q2 | ~9.5% | 2,335,835 | 930 | +3.8% (from Q1) |
| 2025 (Projected) | 10.0%+ | ~9,500,000 | ~3,785 | +5% |
Tanzania's mining sector significantly outperforms regional peers, establishing the country as the undisputed mining leader in East Africa. The country's mining GDP contribution is nearly double that of Mozambique, the second-ranked nation in the region.
| Rank | Country | Mining GDP (USD Million) | % of GDP |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Tanzania | 923 | 10.1% |
| 2nd | Mozambique | 460 | 5.2% |
| 3rd | Uganda | 226 | 0.8% |
| 4th | Kenya | 189 | 0.3% |
| 5th | Rwanda | 140 | 1.2% |
On the continental level, Tanzania ranks 4th in absolute mining GDP, demonstrating its significance in Africa's mining landscape. While countries like South Africa, Egypt, and Guinea have larger absolute mining GDP values, Tanzania's 10.1% GDP contribution percentage is among the highest on the continent.
| Rank | Country | Mining GDP (USD Billion) | % of National GDP |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | South Africa | 11.5 | 7-8% |
| 2 | Egypt | 5.8 | 4.5% |
| 3 | Guinea | 4.9 | 22% |
| 4 | Tanzania | 0.923 | 10.1% |
| 5 | Nigeria | 0.625 | <1% |
| 6 | Ghana | 0.580 | 5.2% |
| 7 | Zambia | 0.165 | 3.8% |
Tanzania's mining sector has emerged as a critical pillar of government revenue mobilization, with tax collections showing unprecedented growth over the past five years.
The mining sector has fundamentally transformed Tanzania's external trade position, emerging as the country's largest source of foreign exchange.
Tanzania's mining sector has evolved into a significant employment generator, creating opportunities across formal and informal segments. The sector's commitment to local content has resulted in one of the highest rates of indigenous workforce participation in Africa's mining industry.
| Category | 2020 | 2022 | 2024 | 2025 (Estimate) | Growth (2020-2025) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Mining Employment | 310,000 | 37,800* | 310,000+ | ~350,000+ | +12.9% |
| Large-scale Mining | - | - | 14,742 | ~16,000 | - |
| Medium-scale Mining | - | - | 3,100 | ~3,500 | - |
| Small-scale Mining (ASM) | - | - | 1,514** | ~40,000+ | - |
| Tanzanian Workers | - | - | 18,853 | ~340,000 | - |
| Foreign Workers | - | - | 503 | ~600 | - |
| Tanzanian Share (%) | - | - | 97.4% | 97.1% | - |
The formal mining sector shows a clear concentration of employment in large-scale operations, which offer higher wages and more stable working conditions. However, small and medium-scale mining provide crucial livelihood opportunities in rural areas.
| Mine Scale | Number of Employees | % of Total | Average Wage (TZS/month) | Average Wage (USD/month) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Large-scale | 14,742 | 76% | 850,000 | ~$339 |
| Medium-scale | 3,100 | 16% | 520,000 | ~$207 |
| Small-scale | 1,514 | 8% | 280,000 | ~$112 |
| Total (Formal) | 19,356 | 100% | 609,000 | ~$243 |
Tanzania's local content framework has achieved exceptional results, with Tanzanian-owned companies accounting for over 91% of total sales in the mining industry. This demonstrates the effectiveness of policies requiring indigenous participation in mining ventures.
| Metric | Value | Target | Achievement Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Local Content Plans Reviewed | 1,050 | 1,050 | 100% |
| Plans Meeting Standards | 1,036 | 1,050 | 98.7% |
| Local Company Sales (USD Billion) | 3.47 | - | - |
| Local Share of Total Sales (%) | 91.7% | 80% | 114.6% |
| Tanzanians in Workforce (%) | 97.4% | 90% | 108.2% |
Gold production remains the cornerstone of Tanzania's mining sector, with the country ranking among Africa's top gold producers. Recent years have seen record production levels, though 2025 figures reflect strategic shifts toward local value addition through new refining requirements.
| Year/Period | Production (kg) | Production (Troy Ounces) | Value (USD Million)* | Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 40,000 | 1,286,000 | 1,543 | - |
| 2017 | 43,000 | 1,382,000 | 1,658 | +7.5% |
| 2018 | 39,000 | 1,254,000 | 1,505 | -9.3% |
| 2020 | 47,000 | 1,511,000 | 2,867 | +20.5% |
| 2024 (Full Year) | 60,000 | 1,929,000 | 4,230 | +27.7% |
| 2025 Q1 | 9,539 | 306,606 | 692 | - |
| 2025 Q3 (Up to Sep) | 10,574 | 339,929 | 878 | Highest quarterly output |
| 2025 (Projected) | ~42,000+ | ~1,350,000+ | ~3,375+ | -30%** |
Tanzania's gold production is concentrated among several major mines operated by international mining companies. Geita Gold Mine, operated by AngloGold Ashanti, is the country's largest producer, accounting for 43% of total output.
Operator: AngloGold Ashanti | Region: Mwanza
Operator: Barrick (Twiga) | Region: Mara
| Mine | Operator | Production Share (%) | Annual Output (oz) | Region |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geita | AngloGold Ashanti | 43% | 649,730 | Mwanza |
| North Mara | Barrick (Twiga) | 21% | 317,310 | Mara |
| Buzwagi | Acacia/Barrick | 10% | 151,100 | Shinyanga |
| Shanta | Shanta Gold | 6% | 90,660 | Songwe |
| Bulyanhulu | Barrick (Twiga) | 3% | 45,330 | Kahama |
| Stamigold | STAMICO | 1% | 15,110 | Biharamulo |
| Others | Various | 16% | 241,760 | Various |
| Total | - | 100% | 1,511,000 | - |
Tanzania possesses substantial gold reserves and resources, with an estimated total of 45 million ounces. At current gold prices, these reserves represent over $107 billion in potential value, securing the country's position as a major gold producer for decades to come.
| Category | Quantity (Million Ounces) | Value (USD Billion)* | | Value (USD Billion) | | Value (USD Billion) | % of Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proven Reserves | 10.0 | 23.9 | 22% | ||||
| Probable Reserves | 15.0 | 35.8 | 33% | ||||
| Indicated Resources | 20.0 | 47.7 | 45% | ||||
| Total Estimated | 45.0 | 107.4 | 100% |
Tanzania is strategically positioning itself as a key player in the global transition to clean energy and electric vehicles. The country possesses significant deposits of critical minerals essential for battery production, renewable energy technologies, and advanced electronics.
| Mineral | Global Ranking | Estimated Reserves | Primary Use | Development Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Graphite | Top 10 | Large deposits | EV batteries | Production/Expansion |
| Nickel | Top 15 | 58 million tons | EV batteries, steel | Development |
| Rare Earth Elements (REE) | Top 20 | 24 types identified | Electronics, renewables | Exploration |
| Cobalt | Top 20 | Significant | EV batteries | Exploration |
| Lithium | Emerging | Being assessed | EV batteries | Exploration |
| Uranium | Top 10 globally | Large reserves | Nuclear energy | Exploration |
Several world-class critical mineral projects are advancing through development stages, attracting significant international investment and technological partnerships.
Investor: Lifezone Metals (UK) | Minerals: Nickel, Copper, Cobalt
Investor: Volt Resources (AUS) | Mineral: Graphite
Mineral: Rare Earths | Type: Exploration
| Project | Mineral | Investor | Investment (USD Million) | Status | Expected Production |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kabanga Nickel | Nickel, Copper, Cobalt | Lifezone Metals (UK) | 75+ | Development | High-grade sulphide |
| Bunyu Graphite | Graphite | Volt Resources (AUS) | 37 | Under construction | 40,000 tons/year |
| Lindi Jumbo | Graphite | Walkabout Resources | - | Development | Battery-grade |
| Mahenge Graphite | Graphite | Black Rock Mining | - | Early works | Industrial scale |
| Ngualla REE | Rare Earths | - | 3,150 | Exploration | Various REEs |
| Tembo Nickel | Nickel | - | Under negotiation | Negotiation | - |
The mining sector has emerged as the primary driver of foreign direct investment in Tanzania, attracting 41% of total national investment in 2025. This reflects strong investor confidence in Tanzania's geological potential and improved regulatory environment.
| Investment Category | Amount (USD Million) | Share (%) | Key Projects/Focus Areas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total National Investment | 10,950 | 100% | 915 total projects |
| Mining Sector Projects | 4,500 | 41% | Graphite, nickel, lithium, gold, REE |
| Mining-related Infrastructure | 3,550 | 32% | Railway, ports, power grid |
| New Mining Investments (2025) | 306 | 2.8% | 13 new mining projects |
| Other Sectors | 2,594 | 24% | Agriculture, tourism, manufacturing |
Tanzania has established a comprehensive regulatory framework governing mining operations, with clear licensing procedures and competitive fiscal terms designed to balance revenue generation with investment attraction.
| License Type | Issued | Target | Achievement Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Licenses | 34,348 | 37,318 | 92.0% |
| Small-scale Mining | 30,101 | 32,923 | 91.4% |
| Prospecting Licenses | 2,845 | 3,000 | 94.8% |
| Gemstone Dealer Licenses | 1,234 | 1,200 | 102.8% |
| Mining Licenses | 156 | 180 | 86.7% |
| Special Mining Licenses | 12 | 15 | 80.0% |
Tanzania's royalty structure is differentiated by mineral type, with higher rates for precious metals and gemstones compared to industrial minerals. All minerals are subject to a 1% inspection fee in addition to royalties.
| Mineral Category | Royalty Rate (%) | Inspection Fee (%) | Total Government Take (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diamonds & Gemstones | 6.0 | 1.0 | 7.0 |
| Precious Metals (Gold, Silver, Platinum) | 6.0 | 1.0 | 7.0 |
| Uranium | 6.0 | 1.0 | 7.0 |
| Base Metals (Copper, Nickel) | 6.0 | 1.0 | 7.0 |
| Industrial Minerals | 3.0 | 1.0 | 4.0 |
| Cut & Polished Gemstones | 1.0 | 1.0 | 2.0 |
| Coal | 1.0 | 1.0 | 2.0 |
| Salt | 1.0 | 1.0 | 2.0 |
Tanzania maintains a policy of government equity participation in mining projects, with a minimum 16% free carry interest in all large-scale mining operations. This ensures the government benefits directly from mining profits beyond tax and royalty revenues.
| Project Type | Minimum Free Carry Interest (FCI) | Additional Equity Option | Total Possible |
|---|---|---|---|
| Large-scale Mining | 16% (non-dilutable) | Up to 34% | 50% |
| Special Mining License | 16% (non-dilutable) | Commensurate with tax expenditures | 50% |
| Medium-scale | Negotiable | Negotiable | Varies |
The government has significantly strengthened inspection and compliance monitoring across all mine categories, with over 47,000 inspections conducted in 2024 alone. This robust oversight ensures adherence to safety, environmental, and operational standards.
| Mine Type | Number of Inspections | Compliance Rate (%) | Key Focus Areas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Large-scale Mines | 85 | 96% | Full regulatory compliance |
| Medium-scale Mines | 144 | 87% | Safety, environmental standards |
| Small-scale Mines | 47,500+ | 72% | Formalization, safety practices |
| Total | 47,729 | 75% | All standards |
Beyond direct economic contributions, Tanzania's mining sector has generated substantial social impact through corporate social responsibility investments and community development initiatives. Mining companies have become major contributors to local infrastructure and social services.
| Year | CSR Investment (TZS Billion) | CSR Investment (USD Million) | Key Areas |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023/2024 | 17.08 | 6.81 | Schools, hospitals, roads, water |
Mining companies have implemented comprehensive community development programs focusing on education, healthcare, water infrastructure, and transportation. These investments directly benefit over 500,000 people in mining communities.
| Project Type | Number of Projects | Investment (TZS Million) | Beneficiaries |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schools Construction/Renovation | 45 | 3,850 | 25,000+ students |
| Healthcare Facilities | 28 | 4,200 | 150,000+ people |
| Water Infrastructure | 67 | 5,100 | 200,000+ people |
| Road Construction | 34 | 3,930 | Multiple communities |
| Total | 174 | 17,080 | 500,000+ |
Large-scale infrastructure projects have been developed to support mining operations, creating broader economic benefits. These include railway lines, port facilities, and power grid upgrades that serve both mining operations and surrounding communities.
| Infrastructure Project | Investment (USD Billion) | Purpose | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tanzania-Zambia Railway Revival | 1.40 | Mineral transport | 2025-2055 (30-year) |
| Tanzania-Burundi Railway | 2.15 | Western mining regions access | 2025-2028 |
| Kigoma Port & Malindi Terminal | 0.50 | Export infrastructure | 2025-2027 |
| Grid Upgrades (Kabanga Project) | 0.08 | Mining operations power | 2025-2026 |
Tanzania's mining sector has consistently exceeded targets across multiple key performance indicators, demonstrating the effectiveness of policy reforms and favorable market conditions.
| Indicator | 2024 Achievement | 2025 Achievement | 2026 Target | 2025 Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GDP Contribution | 10.1% | 9.5-10.0% | 10.0% | ✅ On Target |
| Tax Revenue (TZS Million) | 753,820 | ~1,400,000 | 800,000 | ✅ Exceeded |
| Export Value (USD Million) | ~3,200 | 4,400-4,700 | 4,000 | ✅ Exceeded |
| Direct Employment | 310,000+ | ~350,000+ | 340,000 | ✅ Exceeded |
| Local Content (%) | 91.7% | 92.5% | 90.0% | ✅ Exceeded |
| Tanzanian Workforce (%) | 97.4% | 97.1% | 95.0% | ✅ Exceeded |
| Foreign Reserves Impact (USD Bn) | 5.8 | 6.6 | 6.0 | ✅ Exceeded |
| National GDP Growth Contribution | ~1.0% | ~0.58% (of 5.8% total) | 0.8% | ✅ Strong |
Tanzania has established ambitious targets for 2030 as part of its long-term development vision. Current progress demonstrates strong momentum toward achieving these goals.
| Objective | Current Status (2024) | 2030 Target | Progress (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Geoscientific Survey Coverage | 16% | 50% | 32% |
| GDP Contribution | 10.1% | 15% | 67% |
| Value Addition (Local Processing) | 15% | 40% | 38% |
| Employment Creation | 19,356 formal | 50,000 formal | 39% |
| Export Earnings (USD Bn) | 4.7 | 8.0 | 59% |
Tanzania's mining sector outperforms regional peers across multiple dimensions, from GDP contribution to employment generation and export earnings.
| Country | Mining GDP % | Employment (000s) | Mineral Exports (USD Bn) | Key Minerals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tanzania | 10.1% | 19.4 | 4.70 | Gold, diamonds, tanzanite |
| Kenya | 0.3% | 8.5 | 0.15 | Soda ash, fluorspar |
| Uganda | 0.8% | 12.0 | 0.20 | Gold, cement |
| Rwanda | 1.2% | 6.8 | 0.45 | Tin, tantalum, tungsten |
| Zambia | 3.8% | 85.0 | 9.50 | Copper, cobalt |
| DRC | 25.0% | 200.0 | 15.00 | Copper, cobalt, diamonds |
Tanzania scores highly on investment attractiveness metrics, particularly in regulatory framework, local content compliance, and geological potential.
| Factor | Tanzania Score | Regional Average | Africa Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regulatory Framework | 78/100 | 65/100 | 60/100 |
| Geological Potential | 85/100 | 70/100 | 75/100 |
| Infrastructure | 65/100 | 60/100 | 55/100 |
| Political Stability | 72/100 | 68/100 | 62/100 |
| Local Content Compliance | 92/100 | 70/100 | 65/100 |
| Overall Score | 78/100 | 67/100 | 63/100 |
Expand local processing and refining capacity to capture more economic value domestically. The 20% local refining mandate is a good start, but greater value addition opportunities exist in gemstone cutting, mineral processing, and battery materials production.
Increase geological survey coverage from current 16% to achieve 50% by 2030. Enhanced geological data will attract more investment and unlock new mineral discoveries, particularly for critical minerals.
Continue investing in railway, port, and power infrastructure to support growing mining operations. The $4+ billion infrastructure pipeline should be accelerated to reduce operational costs and improve competitiveness.
Establish specialized mining training institutions and technical programs to build local capacity for technical mining positions, reducing reliance on foreign expertise and creating higher-value employment.
Accelerate development of critical mineral projects (graphite, nickel, lithium, REEs) to reduce dependency on gold and position Tanzania as a key supplier in global clean energy supply chains.
Maximize benefits from Tanzania's participation in the Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) to attract investment, technology transfer, and market access for critical minerals development.
Tanzania's mining sector has undergone a remarkable transformation over the past decade, evolving from a peripheral contributor to become one of the country's most strategic economic pillars. The achievement of 10.1% GDP contribution in 2024—two years ahead of schedule—demonstrates the sector's robust growth trajectory and the effectiveness of policy reforms.
With mineral exports exceeding $4.7 billion, revenue collections surpassing $1.4 billion, and employment reaching 350,000+, the mining sector has proven its capacity to drive economic growth, generate government revenue, create employment, and support infrastructure development.
Looking ahead, Tanzania's strategic focus on critical minerals positions the country at the forefront of the global energy transition. As the world shifts toward electric vehicles and renewable energy, Tanzania's deposits of graphite, nickel, lithium, and rare earth elements offer tremendous growth potential. With continued policy support, infrastructure investment, and commitment to local content, Tanzania's mining sector is poised to deliver sustained economic and social benefits for decades to come.
Real-time economic indicators and trends for Tanzania
Comprehensive business analytics and market insights
Analysis of Tanzania's economic growth trajectory and drivers
Business environment assessment and market opportunities
Critical analysis of economic inclusion challenges
Currency Appreciation & Sustainable Debt Management Drive Economic Resilience
Tanzania's macroeconomic position in November 2025 demonstrated remarkable resilience, characterized by a strengthening shilling and prudent debt management. The Tanzanian Shilling appreciated significantly from TZS 2,460.54/USD in October to TZS 2,444.81/USD in November, representing a monthly gain of TZS 15.73. More impressively, the currency recorded an 8.1% year-on-year appreciation, reversing the 6.3% depreciation witnessed in late 2024.
This currency stability was underpinned by robust export performance, particularly gold exports which surged 42.1%, alongside overall export growth of 13.1%. The Interbank Foreign Exchange Market (IFEM) showed increased activity with turnover rising to USD 158.7 million, while the Bank of Tanzania strategically sold USD 52.5 million net to smooth market volatility without distorting fundamentals.
National debt management remained disciplined, with total debt standing at USD 51.9 billion and recording modest monthly growth of just 0.4%. Although external debt accounts for 69.7% of the total—predominantly USD-denominated—the appreciating shilling has reduced exchange-rate risks and debt-servicing pressures. Strong foreign reserves of USD 6.43 billion, equivalent to 4.9 months of import cover, ensure debt service obligations are comfortably met.
Strong exports → FX inflows → Shilling appreciation → Lower debt servicing costs → Increased confidence → More investment
This virtuous cycle demonstrates effective policy coordination between export promotion, currency management, and fiscal discipline.
| Indicator | October 2025 | November 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Exchange Rate (TZS/USD) | 2,460.54 | 2,444.81 | ▼ 15.73 (Appreciation) |
| Month-on-Month Change | — | Shilling Strengthened by 0.64% | |
| Year-on-Year Change | — | +8.1% Appreciation (Reversed 6.3% depreciation from Nov 2024) | |
| Indicator | October 2025 | November 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total IFEM Turnover | USD 133.7 million | USD 158.7 million | +18.7% |
| Bank Share of Transactions | — | 66.9% | Dominant market participants |
| BoT Net FX Intervention | — | USD 52.5 million (net sale) | Smoothing volatility |
| Debt Category | Amount | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Total National Debt | USD 51,870.3 million | 100% |
| External Debt | USD 36,127.8 million | 69.7% |
| Domestic Debt | TZS 38,361.3 billion | 30.3% |
| Monthly Debt Growth: 0.4% (Controlled & Sustainable) | ||
| Indicator | Value | Details |
|---|---|---|
| External Debt Stock | USD 36,127.8 million | 69.7% of total debt |
| Public Sector Share | 80.5% | Government & SOEs |
| USD-Denominated Debt | 66.8% | Primary currency exposure |
| Euro-Denominated Debt | Second largest | Diversified currency risk |
High USD Exposure (66.8%): Makes shilling stability critical for debt sustainability. Every 1% depreciation increases TZS-equivalent debt servicing costs.
Current Mitigation: The 8.1% shilling appreciation has reduced exchange rate risk and lowered the TZS cost of servicing USD-denominated debt, creating favorable conditions for debt management.
| Indicator | Value |
|---|---|
| Domestic Debt Stock | TZS 38,361.3 billion |
| Monthly Growth | 0.2% (Very modest) |
| Dominant Instruments | Treasury Bonds (Long-term focus) |
| Major Holders | Commercial Banks & Pension Funds (~56%) |
| External Debt Flow Item | November 2025 (USD million) |
|---|---|
| Loan Disbursements | 200.4 |
| Total Debt Service | 109.0 |
| Principal Repayment | 75.4 |
| Interest Payment (Estimated) | 33.6 |
| Net Position: +USD 91.4 million (Disbursements exceed servicing) | |
The relationship between Tanzania's currency stability and debt dynamics demonstrates a mutually reinforcing cycle of macroeconomic resilience.
| Economic Dimension | November 2025 Evidence | Effect on Shilling & Debt |
|---|---|---|
| Export Performance | Overall exports up 13.1% | ✓ Strengthens FX supply, supports shilling |
| Gold Exports | Surged +42.1% | ✓ Major USD inflows, reduces external pressure |
| Debt Accumulation | Only 0.4% month-on-month growth | ✓ Limited FX demand for debt servicing |
| Domestic Financing | Rising bond issuance in TZS | ✓ Reduces reliance on USD-denominated borrowing |
| Foreign Reserves | USD 6,432.9 million (4.9 months import cover) | ✓ Strong shock absorption capacity |
| Currency Appreciation | +8.1% year-on-year | ✓ Lowers TZS cost of USD-denominated debt |
Implication: Lower imported inflation, enhanced purchasing power, reduced debt servicing burden
✓ Highly PositiveAssessment: High USD exposure mitigated by appreciation, strong reserves, and export growth
✓ Under ControlBenefit: Lower rollover risk, stable funding base, reduced refinancing pressure
✓ SustainableStatus: Above EAC benchmark (4.5 months), provides strong shock absorption capacity
✓ ExcellentThe November 2025 data reveals a robust and mutually reinforcing relationship between Tanzania's currency stability and national debt management. The Tanzanian Shilling's 8.1% year-on-year appreciation, driven by strong export performance—particularly the 42.1% surge in gold exports—has created favorable conditions for managing the country's USD 51.9 billion debt portfolio.
Key achievements include:
The appreciating shilling reduces the TZS-equivalent cost of servicing USD-denominated external debt (66.8% of external debt), directly improving debt sustainability metrics.
Modest 0.4% monthly debt accumulation demonstrates fiscal discipline while meeting development financing needs through positive net flows.
Strong export earnings (13.1% growth) generate sufficient FX to comfortably meet debt service obligations without depleting reserves.
Increasing domestic financing (30.3% of total debt) through long-term TZS bonds reduces exchange rate vulnerability and rollover risks.
Strong exports → FX inflows → Shilling appreciation → Lower debt servicing costs → Improved fiscal space → Increased investor confidence → More foreign investment → Further economic growth
This positive reinforcement cycle, supported by prudent monetary policy, adequate foreign reserves (USD 6.43 billion), and effective Bank of Tanzania interventions, positions Tanzania favorably for sustained macroeconomic stability. The country's financial architecture demonstrates resilience against external shocks while maintaining the flexibility needed for continued development financing.
Tanzania's November 2025 performance reflects a well-managed economy with:
Over the past three decades, Tanzania has achieved remarkable progress in managing its trade balance—reducing the deficit from a severe -20.47% of GDP in 1993 to a more sustainable -3.82% in 2023. In the most recent four-year period, the deficit narrowed from -$3.16 billion in 2022 to -$3.02 billion in 2023, reflecting improved export competitiveness and balanced import management. Notably, 2020 marked a historic low deficit of just -0.96% of GDP, the smallest in decades, underscoring Tanzania’s growing economic resilience, diversification, and external stability.
Tanzania's trade balance has shown significant improvement over the past four years, with the trade deficit narrowing substantially from -$3.16 billion in 2022 to -$3.02 billion in 2023. More importantly, when measured as a percentage of GDP, the trade deficit has improved dramatically from its 2022 peak, reflecting enhanced export competitiveness and more balanced trade dynamics.
| Year | Trade Balance (USD) | Year-on-Year Change | As % of GDP | Deficit Improvement |
| 2023 | -$3.02 billion | -4.52% (improvement) | -3.82% | Deficit narrowed |
| 2022 | -$3.16 billion | -167.34% (widening) | -4.18% | Deficit widened |
| 2021 | -$1.18 billion | -87.53% (widening) | -1.68% | Deficit widened |
| 2020 | -$631.13 million | -9.43% (widening) | -0.96% | Smallest deficit in decades |
The 2020 period marked a historic achievement, with Tanzania recording its smallest trade deficit as a percentage of GDP (-0.96%) in over two decades. While the deficit expanded in 2021 and 2022—likely due to post-pandemic import recovery and global commodity price increases—2023 shows a positive reversal with the deficit narrowing by 4.52%.
The Critical Years: Deep Deficits (1990-1999)
| Year | % of GDP | Year | % of GDP |
| 1990 | -17.10% | 1995 | -12.00% |
| 1991 | -16.10% | 1996 | -8.27% |
| 1992 | -18.53% | 1997 | -6.52% |
| 1993 | -20.47% | 1998 | -5.93% |
| 1994 | -15.85% | 1999 | -4.69% |
The early 1990s represented Tanzania's most challenging period for external trade, with the deficit reaching a staggering -20.47% of GDP in 1993. This period coincided with economic liberalization and structural adjustment programs. The consistent improvement from 1993 onwards—declining from -20.47% to -4.69% by 1999—demonstrates the gradual success of economic reforms in improving trade competitiveness.
| Year | % of GDP | Year | % of GDP |
| 2000 | -2.36% | 2006 | -5.94% |
| 2001 | -0.36% | 2007 | -8.40% |
| 2002 | +1.06% | 2008 | -10.10% |
| 2003 | -0.26% | 2009 | -7.14% |
| 2004 | -1.52% | 2010 | -8.43% |
| 2005 | -2.99% |
Milestone Achievement: 2002 stands out as a remarkable year when Tanzania achieved a rare trade surplus of +1.06% of GDP—the only positive trade balance recorded in the entire 34-year dataset. This brief surplus was followed by a return to deficits, which widened significantly during the 2007-2008 global commodity price boom, reaching -10.10% in 2008.
| Year | % of GDP | Impact Level |
| 2011 | -12.90% | Severe deficit |
| 2012 | -9.62% | High deficit |
| 2013 | -10.61% | High deficit |
| 2014 | -9.22% | High deficit |
| 2015 | -6.55% | Moderate-high deficit |
This period saw persistently high trade deficits, with 2011 recording the second-worst deficit (-12.90%) in Tanzania's modern history. These large deficits reflected substantial imports of capital goods and machinery for infrastructure development, including major projects in energy, transportation, and mining sectors.
| Year | % of GDP | Year | % of GDP |
| 2016 | -2.72% | 2020 | -0.96% |
| 2017 | -1.79% | 2021 | -1.68% |
| 2018 | -3.16% | 2022 | -4.18% |
| 2019 | -0.95% | 2023 | -3.82% |
The most recent period shows general improvement with trade deficits stabilizing between -1% and -4% of GDP—substantially better than the double-digit deficits of earlier years. The 2019-2020 period marked particular success, with deficits below -1% of GDP.
| Period | Average Deficit (% of GDP) | Trend | Key Characteristics |
| 1990-1999 | -12.16% | Improving | Structural adjustment, gradual reform success |
| 2000-2010 | -4.93% | Mixed | Brief surplus (2002), commodity price volatility |
| 2011-2015 | -9.78% | High deficits | Infrastructure investment boom |
| 2016-2023 | -2.63% | Stabilizing | Improved export performance, balanced growth |
| Rank | Year | % of GDP | Context |
| 1 | 1993 | -20.47% | Peak of economic crisis |
| 2 | 1992 | -18.53% | Structural adjustment period |
| 3 | 1990 | -17.10% | Pre-reform economy |
| 4 | 1991 | -16.10% | Economic transition |
| 5 | 1994 | -15.85% | Continued reforms |
| Rank | Year | % of GDP | Context |
| 1 | 2002 | +1.06% | Only surplus year - exceptional exports |
| 2 | 2003 | -0.26% | Near-balance trade |
| 3 | 2001 | -0.36% | Strong export performance |
| 4 | 2019 | -0.95% | Modern era best performance |
| 5 | 2020 | -0.96% | Pandemic-era resilience |
Import Composition Factors
Tanzania's persistent trade deficits reflect the country's development needs:
Export Performance Evolution
Tanzania's export basket has diversified over time:
Why 2020 Was Exceptional
The remarkably low trade deficit in 2020 (-0.96% of GDP) resulted from:
The 2021-2022 Expansion
The widening of the trade deficit in 2021-2022 reflected:
2023 Improvement
The 4.52% narrowing of the deficit in 2023 indicates:
Comparison with Development Stage
For a developing economy like Tanzania, trade deficits are not inherently negative. They often indicate:
Sustainability Considerations
Trade deficits become concerning when:
Tanzania's recent performance suggests manageable deficits, with the 3-4% range representing a sustainable level given continued FDI inflows ($1.63 billion in 2023) and growing export capacity.
Progress Achieved
Comparing the current -3.82% deficit (2023) with the -20.47% deficit of 1993 demonstrates remarkable progress in:
Challenges Ahead
To further improve trade balance, Tanzania needs to:
Opportunities
Tanzania is well-positioned to improve its trade balance through:
Tanzania's trade balance trajectory over three decades tells a story of significant progress from crisis-level deficits to more manageable and sustainable levels. The improvement from -20.47% of GDP in 1993 to -3.82% in 2023 represents an 81% reduction in the deficit-to-GDP ratio—a major achievement in external sector management.
The 2020 accomplishment of reducing the deficit to just -0.96% of GDP demonstrates Tanzania's potential for balanced trade, while the subsequent widening and recent narrowing show the economy's responsiveness to global conditions and policy interventions.
As Tanzania continues its development journey, maintaining trade deficits in the 3-4% range while building export capacity, attracting productive FDI, and investing in competitiveness appears to be a sustainable path. The long-term trend toward improvement provides optimism that Tanzania can achieve even better trade balance outcomes in the years ahead.
Data Source: TICGL Historical trade balance data from 1990 to 2023
Tanzania’s current account deficit narrowed significantly to USD 2,117.6 million in the year ending June 2025, a 24.3% improvement from USD 2,797.7 million in June 2024. This USD 680.1 million reduction reflects robust growth in goods and services exports, especially from tourism and transport, which drove the net goods & services deficit down by 61.7% to USD 676.6 million. Service receipts rose to USD 7,110.4 million (+8.1%), led by travel (USD 3,934.5 million, +6.9%) and transport (USD 2,530.0 million, +9.8%), supported by a 10% increase in tourist arrivals. However, rising primary income outflows (USD 1,949.6 million, +17.9%) due to external debt servicing and a drop in remittances (USD 508.7 million, -18.1%) partially offset these gains. Meanwhile, foreign reserves stood at USD 5,307.7 million, covering 4.3 months of imports, above the national benchmark. Despite a surge in outbound travel spending (+51.4%), Tanzania’s external sector continues to show resilience, highlighting the importance of export diversification, tourism investment, and policy measures to manage foreign exchange outflows.
The current account balance reflects Tanzania’s trade in goods and services, primary income (e.g., interest and dividends), and secondary income (e.g., personal transfers and remittances) with the rest of the world. A deficit indicates that outflows exceed inflows, often financed by external borrowing or reserves.
Key Figures (Year Ending June 2025)
| Item | 2024 (USD Million) | 2025p (USD Million) | % Change |
| Current Account Balance | -2,797.7 | -2,117.6 | +24.3% |
| Goods & Services (Net) | -1,764.7 | -676.6 | +61.7% |
| Primary Income (Net) | -1,653.9 | -1,949.6 | -17.9% |
| Secondary Income (Net) | +620.9 | +508.7 | -18.1% |
Service receipts represent earnings from Tanzania’s service exports, including tourism (travel), transport, and other services (e.g., financial, insurance, ICT). These are critical to narrowing the current account deficit.
Total Service Receipts (Year Ending June 2025)
Category Breakdown
| Service Category | 2023 (USD Mn) | 2024 (USD Mn) | 2025p (USD Mn) | % Change (2024–2025) |
| Travel (Tourism) | 2,944.9 | 3,679.7 | 3,934.5 | +6.9% |
| Transport | 2,015.0 | 2,304.3 | 2,530.0 | +9.8% |
| Other Services | 440.9 | 594.6 | 645.9 | +8.6% |
Tourism Highlight
Service payments represent Tanzania’s expenditures on imported services, such as outbound travel, freight, and other services (e.g., financial, consulting).
Total Service Payments (Year Ending June 2025)
Category Breakdown
| Service Category | 2023 (USD Mn) | 2024 (USD Mn) | 2025p (USD Mn) | % Change (2024–2025) |
| Travel (Outbound) | 388.0 | 573.2 | 867.9 | +51.4% |
| Transport | 1,280.4 | 1,453.0 | 1,453.2 | ≈ 0% |
| Other Services | 691.1 | 691.1 | 573.2 | -17.1% |
| Indicator | 2024 | 2025p | Change |
| Current Account Deficit | -2.8 Bn USD | -2.1 Bn USD | ↓ 24.3% |
| Service Receipts (Total) | 6.58 Bn USD | 7.11 Bn USD | ↑ 8.1% |
| — Travel | 3.68 Bn USD | 3.93 Bn USD | ↑ 6.9% |
| — Transport | 2.30 Bn USD | 2.53 Bn USD | ↑ 9.8% |
| Service Payments (Total) | 2.36 Bn USD | 2.89 Bn USD | ↑ 22.7% |
| — Outbound Travel | 573 Mn USD | 867 Mn USD | ↑ 51.4% |
As of May 2025, Tanzania’s national debt stood at TZS 107.70 trillion, comprising TZS 72.94 trillion in external debt and TZS 34.76 trillion in domestic debt. The external debt stock, equivalent to approximately USD 34.1 billion (using an exchange rate of TZS 2,884.42 per USD from April 2025), was primarily held by multilateral institutions and directed toward key sectors such as transportation (21.5%) and telecommunications. The central government accounted for 78.3% of external debt (USD 26.7 billion), with 67.7% of this debt denominated in US dollars (USD 23.1 billion). Domestic debt, at TZS 34.26 trillion in March 2025, was largely financed by commercial banks (29%) and pension funds (26.5%), with Treasury bonds dominating at 78.2%.
In May 2025, principal repayments on external debt amounted to USD 267 million. Debt servicing costs are significant, with historical data indicating that external debt servicing consumed up to 40% of government expenditures in earlier years. For 2023, total debt service was 2.89% of Gross National Income (GNI), and in 2025, servicing the external debt (at concessional rates) and domestic debt (at 15.5% lending rates) could cost approximately USD 1–2 billion and TZS 5.31 trillion annually, respectively. These costs divert resources from productive investments, potentially straining fiscal space.
The Tanzania Shilling’s stability in May 2025 is supported by several factors related to debt management and economic performance:
Despite these stabilizing factors, the Shilling experienced a 3.86% annual depreciation against the USD, trading at TZS 2,884.42 per USD in April 2025. This depreciation, though improved from the previous month, reflects pressures from external debt servicing and import demands. The high USD denomination of external debt (67.7%) exacerbates these pressures, as a depreciating Shilling increases the local currency cost of debt servicing by approximately TZS 2.37 trillion for the USD 34.1 billion external debt, based on a 2.6% depreciation rate.
The BoT’s interventions in the Interbank Foreign Exchange Market (IFEM) have been critical to maintaining the Shilling’s stability. In January 2025, the BoT sold USD 7 million to stabilize the exchange rate, preventing excessive depreciation amid a 1.37% month-on-month weakening of the Shilling (from TZS 2,420.84 to TZS 2,454.04 per USD). Similar interventions likely occurred in April and May 2025, as the document notes that seasonal inflows from cash crops and gold exports, combined with BoT actions, mitigated depreciation pressures. However, IFEM transactions declined significantly from USD 95.7 million in December 2024 to USD 16.3 million in January 2025, suggesting reduced market activity, possibly due to lower trade or investor participation.
These interventions, supported by adequate reserves, have ensured short-term stability, with the Shilling appreciating by 2.6% year-on-year from January 2024 to January 2025. The BoT’s ability to intervene is bolstered by improved current account performance, with the deficit narrowing by 31.1% to USD 2,021.5 million in the year ending January 2025, driven by strong export earnings and moderate import growth.
The composition of Tanzania’s external debt and reliance on commodity-driven inflows pose several risks to the Shilling’s long-term stability:
Tanzania’s authorities are implementing measures to mitigate these risks:
In May 2025, Tanzania’s national debt developments and foreign exchange interventions have supported the Tanzania Shilling’s short-term stability, with reserves of USD 5,360 million (4.2 months of import cover) and export-driven inflows mitigating a 3.86% annual depreciation. BoT interventions in the IFEM, backed by strong gold and cashew nut exports, have prevented sharp fluctuations, maintaining the Shilling at TZS 2,884.42 per USD in April 2025. However, the high USD denomination of external debt (67.7% of USD 34.1 billion), reliance on volatile commodity exports, and global uncertainties pose risks to long-term stability. A potential further depreciation could increase debt servicing costs by TZS 2.37 trillion, straining reserves and fiscal space. Continued prudent fiscal and monetary policies, alongside diversification efforts, are critical to sustaining Shilling stability and supporting Tanzania’s projected 6% GDP growth in 2025.
| Indicator | Value | Notes |
| Total National Debt | TZS 107.70 trillion | Comprises TZS 72.94 trillion external debt and TZS 34.76 trillion domestic debt. |
| External Debt Stock | USD 34.1 billion (TZS 72.94 trillion) | 78.3% held by central government; 67.7% denominated in USD (USD 23.1 billion). |
| Domestic Debt Stock | TZS 34.26 trillion | 78.2% in Treasury bonds; 29% financed by commercial banks, 26.5% by pension funds. |
| External Debt Principal Repayments | USD 267 million | For May 2025, part of annual debt servicing (~USD 1–2 billion). |
| Foreign Exchange Reserves | USD 5,360 million | Covers 4.2 months of imports, exceeding the 4-month national benchmark. |
| Foreign Exchange Reserves (Mar 2025) | USD 5,700 million | Covers 3.8 months of imports, indicating sustained adequacy. |
| Exchange Rate (Apr 2025) | TZS 2,884.42 per USD | Annual depreciation of 3.86%, improved from the previous month. |
| Exchange Rate Depreciation (Annual) | 3.86% | Driven by debt servicing and import demands; mitigated by BoT interventions. |
| Exchange Rate (Jan 2025) | TZS 2,454.04 per USD | 2.6% appreciation from Jan 2024, supported by USD 7 million BoT intervention. |
| IFEM Transactions (Jan 2025) | USD 16.3 million | Down from USD 95.7 million in Dec 2024, indicating reduced market activity. |
| Export Value (Year ending Apr 2025) | USD 16.7 billion | 16.8% increase, driven by gold (24.5% rise) and cashew nuts (141% rise). |
| Gold Price (Mar 2025) | USD 2,983.25 per ounce | Bolsters foreign exchange inflows, supporting Shilling stability. |
| Current Account Deficit (Year ending May 2025) | USD 2,175 million | Narrowed by 31.1% from USD 2,866 million in 2024, due to export growth. |
| Inflation Rate (May 2025) | 3.2% | Stable, below BoT’s 5% target, reducing pressure on the Shilling. |
| Central Bank Rate (Apr 2025) | 6% | Maintained to safeguard against trade tariffs and geopolitical tensions. |
| Debt Servicing Cost (Estimated, 2025) | USD 1–2 billion (External), TZS 5.31 trillion (Domestic) | Based on 2.89% of GNI (2023) and 15.5% domestic lending rates. |
Notes and Explanations
This table provides a concise overview of the key figures driving the Tanzania Shilling’s stability in May 2025, highlighting the interplay between debt developments, foreign exchange interventions, and external sector performance, as well as underlying risks from debt composition and commodity reliance.
In October 2024, Tanzania’s external sector demonstrated notable resilience, driven by robust export growth and a substantial narrowing of the current account deficit. Key contributors include a rise in tourism revenue and strong performance in gold exports, which supported foreign reserves and bolstered economic stability. Despite these gains, the Tanzanian Shilling continued to face depreciation pressures, underscoring the importance of careful currency management to maintain the country's economic momentum and resilience.
In summary, Tanzania’s external sector performance reflects solid economic fundamentals, with growth in exports, particularly in tourism and commodities, bolstering reserves and reducing the current account deficit. However, the ongoing depreciation of the Shilling suggests continued foreign