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Tanzania's FDI Registration-to-Disbursement Gap: Bridging the US$170 Billion Financing Chasm | TICGL Research
📊 Research Report TICGL Economic Analysis April 2026

Tanzania's FDI Registration-to-Disbursement Gap:
Bridging the US$170 Billion Financing Chasm

Toward Tanzania Dira 2050 / FYDP IV — US$121 Billion GDP Target by 2030/31. An eleven-year analysis of why approved capital pledges consistently fail to translate into real investment flows — and what must change.

US$10.95B
FDI Registered in 2025
~15%
Realisation Rate (2025)
US$9.29B
Annual Disbursement Gap
US$170B
Total Financing Gap to 2031
US$121B
GDP Target by 2030/31
Focus Area FDI & Development Finance
Data Period 2015 – 2025
Sources TISEZA / BOT / UNCTAD / World Bank / IMF
Issued April 2026
Publisher TICGL Research Division

The Investment That Never Arrives

Tanzania has achieved remarkable growth in FDI registrations over 2015–2025, yet the capital pledged rarely materialises into actual flows. This structural divergence — the registration-to-disbursement gap — has emerged as Tanzania's single most consequential investment climate bottleneck and a macro-fiscal constraint threatening the Dira 2050 agenda.

📈
Registration Growth
5× increase
Approved FDI capital rose from US$2.1B (2015) to US$10.95B (2025) — a five-fold surge reflecting aggressive promotion efforts by TIC and TISEZA.
📉
Actual Inflows (2024/25)
US$1.66–1.72B
Balance-of-payments FDI inflows grew only modestly — from US$1.54B (2015) to an estimated US$1.66–1.72B in 2024/25 — barely 8% real growth in a decade.
⚠️
Realisation Rate
~15%
In 2025, only approximately 15 cents in every approved dollar of FDI was actually disbursed — the lowest rate in the eleven-year series. Global benchmarks for peer economies: 45–65%.
🎯
Dira 2050 Annual FDI Need
US$10–12B/yr
Meeting the US$121B GDP target by 2030/31 requires annual FDI of US$10–12 billion — six to eight times the current actual inflow of US$1.4–1.7 billion.
🔑
The Leverage Point
+1 ppt = +US$100M
Each 1 percentage-point improvement in Tanzania's realisation rate on the current US$10–11B registered base generates approximately US$100–110 million of additional annual FDI inflows.
🏗️
Reform Potential
+US$5–6B/yr
Lifting the realisation rate from 20% to 60–70% through targeted structural reforms would unlock an additional US$5–6 billion annually — covering 50–60% of the annual private-sector financing shortfall.
🔎 Core Research Finding
Tanzania's FDI pipeline — US$10.95 billion per year in approved commitments — already exists. Policymakers do not need to generate new investor interest; they need to convert existing commitments into disbursed capital. At current average realisation rates of 20–25%, the FDI pipeline generates only US$1.4–1.7 billion per year — roughly one-fifth of what Dira 2050 requires. This is a conversion challenge, not an attraction challenge.

Conceptual Framework: What the Gap Measures

The gap analysis rests on two distinct measurement frameworks that are frequently conflated in policy discourse, creating misleading impressions about Tanzania's FDI performance. Understanding the difference is foundational to designing effective solutions.

📋
Data Source 1
Registered FDI (Pipeline / Approvals)

Data published by TIC and TISEZA reflects approved projects and their declared investment commitments at registration. These are forward-looking pledges, not cash flows.

A project approved in 2024 may disburse capital over a 3–5 year construction horizon — or may never disburse at all if market conditions change.

💵
Data Source 2
Actual FDI Inflows (Balance of Payments)

Data compiled by the Bank of Tanzania (BOT) and reported to UNCTAD measures real capital that crossed Tanzania's borders — equity injections, reinvested earnings, and intra-company loans.

This is the only figure that contributes to investment in the national accounts and is therefore the only measure that matters for Dira 2050 growth targets.

📐 The Realisation Rate — Core Policy Metric
Realisation Rate = Actual FDI Inflows ÷ Registered FDI Value

Global benchmarks suggest that mature investment promotion agencies in high-performing emerging markets achieve realisation rates of 45–65% within 3–4 years of registration. Tanzania's current 20–25% rate places it in the lowest quartile of Sub-Saharan African comparators for a country of its size and strategic positioning.

A 1 percentage-point improvement in Tanzania's realisation rate — on a registered base of US$10–11 billion — generates approximately US$100–110 million of additional annual FDI inflows. Raising the rate from 20% to 50% would be worth US$3.3 billion per year at current registration volumes, equivalent to 2.7% of Tanzania's 2024 GDP.

Historical Data Analysis: 2015–2025

The following dataset — the most comprehensive publicly available — covers eleven years of Tanzania's FDI registration and actualisation. Sources: TISEZA Annual Investment Reports; Bank of Tanzania Annual Reports; UNCTAD World Investment Report 2015–2025; IMF Article IV Consultations.

YearProjects RegisteredRegistered Value (US$B)Actual FDI Inflows (US$B)Realisation RateGap (US$B)Dominant Sector
2015~2102.101.5473%0.56Mining / Tourism
2016~2302.451.0944%1.36Manufacturing
2017~2652.801.1842%1.62Oil & Gas
2018~2753.101.1035%2.00Manufacturing
2019~2903.200.9229%2.28Transport / Logistics
2020Data unavailable (COVID-19 disruptions)0.94ICT / Services
20212523.701.1932%2.51Manufacturing / Agri
2022~300–400~4.5–5.01.44~30%~3.10Construction / Energy
2023~5265.721.3423%4.38Multi-sector
20249019.301.7218.5%7.58Manufacturing / SEZs
2025*91510.95~1.66*~15%~9.29Manufacturing / Transport

* 2025 actual FDI is a partial-year BOT estimate; full-year figure pending. Sources: TISEZA Investment Reports 2015–2025; BOT Annual Reports; UNCTAD World Investment Report 2015–2025; IMF Article IV.

Tanzania FDI: Registered Pipeline vs. Actual Inflows & Realisation Rate (2015–2025)
Left axis: US$ Billion | Right axis: Realisation Rate (%) | Sources: TISEZA, BOT, UNCTAD, IMF
Annual Disbursement Gap Growth (US$B)
Registered Value minus Actual Inflows
Project Registrations vs. Realisation Rate (%)
Surge in registrations without matching conversions

Trend Analysis: Three Distinct Phases

The eleven-year data series reveals three structurally distinct periods in Tanzania's FDI disbursement performance, each driven by different underlying forces.

1
Phase 1 · 2015–2016
Relatively High Realisation
44–73%
Tanzania's 2015 realisation rate of approximately 73% was unusually high by regional standards, largely because the registered base was modest (US$2.1B) and dominated by natural resource projects in mining and tourism with long lead times already behind them. The 2016 drop to 44% reflected a global commodity price shock that delayed several large mining projects.
2
Phase 2 · 2017–2021
Structural Decline
29–42%
Realisation rates declined steadily from 42% to 32%. This phase coincided with: (i) regulatory tightening under the 2017 Natural Wealth and Resources Acts, which created uncertainty for extractive sector investors; (ii) COVID-19 disruptions in 2020 suppressing both registrations and disbursements; and (iii) a sectoral shift toward capital-intensive manufacturing projects with inherently longer disbursement horizons.
3
Phase 3 · 2022–2025
Registration Surge, Lagging Conversion
~15%
The post-2021 investment promotion offensive produced a dramatic surge — from 252 projects (2021) to 915 projects (2025), a 263% increase. Registered capital tripled to US$10.95B. However, actual inflows grew only from US$1.19B to ~US$1.66B (39% growth), compressing the realisation rate to an estimated 15% in 2025 — the lowest in the series. The absolute gap widened from US$2.51B to ~US$9.29B.
⚠️ Data-Driven Finding
The registration-to-disbursement gap has grown six-fold in absolute value over the past five years — from US$1.36B (2016) to approximately US$9.29B (2025). This represents 7.5% of Tanzania's 2024 GDP trapped in approved but undisbursed investment commitments. Recovering even 30% of this pipeline through accelerated conversion would add US$2.8 billion to the capital account.

Sectoral Composition of the Gap (2021–2025 Cumulative)

TISEZA data disaggregated by sector reveals that the gap is not uniformly distributed. Capital-intensive sectors — manufacturing, transport infrastructure, and energy — account for the largest share of registered value but have among the lowest near-term realisation rates due to their long pre-construction phases.

SectorRegistered Value (US$B, 2021–25)Est. Actual Inflows (US$B)Implied Realisation RateKey Disbursement Constraint
Manufacturing & Agro-processing12.42.117%Land acquisition; factory approval delays
Transport & Logistics7.81.013%Port infrastructure; road wayleaves
Tourism & Hospitality3.21.341%Shorter lead time; land deeds
Mining & Quarrying4.51.840%Licensing; royalty negotiations
Energy (incl. Renewables)5.90.712%Grid connectivity; PPAs
ICT & Financial Services2.10.943%Regulatory licensing (TCRA / BoT)
Agriculture & Agribusiness2.80.414%Land leasing; off-take guarantees
Construction & Real Estate3.00.620%Permit backlogs; financing
Other / Multi-sector2.30.626%

Note: Sectoral data are estimates derived from TISEZA sector classifications, BOT sectoral BOP data, and UNCTAD greenfield FDI database. Figures are indicative and subject to revision pending full TISEZA 2025 sectoral disaggregation.

Registered Value by Sector (US$B, 2021–2025)
Cumulative registered commitments per sector
Sectoral Realisation Rates (%)
ICT, Tourism, and Mining lead; Energy, Transport lag

The Dira 2050 / FYDP IV Financing Gap: Quantitative Context

Tanzania's Vision 2050 (Dira 2050) and FYDP IV set out an ambitious macroeconomic trajectory. The headline GDP target — US$121 billion by 2030/31 — implies approximately 8.5% average annual real growth and requires a step-change in capital formation that cannot be achieved under the current disbursement trajectory.

GDP Target (2030/31)
US$121B
Required Annual Investment (2026–2031)
US$11–15B/yr
Cumulative Investment Required (2026–2031)
US$230–250B
Available Domestic Public Resources (est.)
~US$60–80B
Residual Financing Gap
~US$170B
Private Sector Share Required (70% of gap)
~US$119B
FDI Required (50–60% of private share)
US$60–70B cumul.
Annual FDI Required (avg. 2026–2031)
US$10–12B/yr
Actual Avg. Annual FDI (2021–2025)
~US$1.4–1.7B
Annual FDI Shortfall vs. Target
US$8.3–10.6B/yr
Dira 2050 Financing Gap Breakdown (US$B)
Composition of the US$230–250B cumulative requirement

Sources: Tanzania Dira 2050; FYDP IV 2021/22–2025/26; Ministry of Finance Budget Speech 2025/26; IMF Article IV Tanzania 2024; World Bank Tanzania Economic Update 2025.

⚡ Concentration Risk

The Reinvested Earnings Problem

BOT 2024 balance of payments data reveals that 67% of Tanzania's actual FDI inflows are classified as reinvested earnings — profits of existing foreign-invested enterprises retained and ploughed back rather than repatriated.

While this reflects genuine investor confidence, it signals a structural problem: Tanzania is heavily dependent on a narrow base of committed existing investors rather than attracting new capital at scale. Reinvested earnings cannot be meaningfully scaled through investment promotion — they are a function of the profitability decisions of existing firms.

FDI Composition (BOT 2024)

Scenario Analysis: What the Gap Costs Tanzania

The following scenario matrix quantifies the FDI realisation outcome under four policy trajectories for the 2026–2031 period, using an annual registered pipeline of US$11 billion (2025 baseline) and the Dira 2050 annual FDI requirement of US$10–12 billion.

ScenarioRealisation RateAnnual Actual FDI (US$B)6-Year Cumulative (US$B)% of US$119B Private TargetPolicy Status
Business As Usual~15–20%~1.7–2.2~10–13~9–11%⚠️ Current Trajectory
Moderate Reform~35–40%~3.9–4.4~23–26~19–22%Feasible (3–4 yrs)
Ambitious Reform~55–60%~6.1–6.6~37–40~31–34%Feasible (5–6 yrs)
Dira 2050 Target~70–75%~7.7–8.3~46–50~39–42%🎯 Target Scenario
Scenario Comparison: Annual FDI Inflows vs. Dira 2050 Requirement (US$B)
Four policy trajectories projected to 2031 against the US$10–12B annual FDI target
🔴 Critical Gap
Even under the most ambitious reform scenario (70–75% realisation), FDI alone covers only 39–42% of the US$119 billion private-sector financing gap. This underscores that while closing the registration-to-disbursement gap is necessary and high-leverage, it must be complemented by capital market deepening, diaspora bond issuance, and domestic savings mobilisation to fully close the Dira 2050 financing requirement.

Structural Drivers of the Realisation Gap

The registration-to-disbursement gap is multi-causal. Using BOT survey data, World Bank B-READY 2024 assessments, TISEZA project-level tracking, and IMF technical assistance findings, six primary structural drivers are identified and ranked by their estimated contribution to gap expansion in the 2021–2025 period.

1
28%
Share of Total Gap
Land Acquisition & Title Deed Issuance
Manufacturing Agriculture Tourism
The average land acquisition process — from application through gazette, valuation, compensation, and title deed issuance — takes 18–24 months, often exceeding investors' feasibility horizons. The absence of a pre-titled industrial land bank forces each new investor to initiate the full process from scratch.
✅ Reform: Land Tenure Reform (MLHHSD)
2
22%
Share of Total Gap
Multi-Agency Regulatory Approvals
All Sectors
Large investment projects require approvals from an average of 7 agencies — including TIC/TISEZA, NEMC, municipal councils, sector ministries, and utility authorities. Sequential (rather than parallel) processing and inconsistent service-level enforcement create compounding delays averaging 8–14 months for licences alone.
✅ Reform: One-Stop Facilitation Centre (OIFC)
3
18%
Share of Total Gap
Foreign Exchange Availability & Repatriation Uncertainty
All Sectors
BOT BoP Report 2024 and IMF Article IV findings document periodic FX liquidity constraints and uncertainty about future repatriation conditions. Without forward certainty on currency repatriation, investors in capital-intensive projects — which have 10–20 year payback periods — cannot complete bankability assessments or secure offshore project finance.
✅ Reform: BOT FX Framework Reforms
4
16%
Share of Total Gap
Infrastructure Gaps
Energy Manufacturing Agriculture
Power, roads, and port connectivity deficits at project sites — particularly outside the Dar es Salaam–Arusha corridor — significantly extend pre-disbursement lead times. TANESCO grid connection queues for large industrial consumers average 14–18 months. Rural agricultural zones lack all-weather road access, preventing disbursement of registered agribusiness investments.
✅ Reform: BRN / Big Results Now II Programme
5
10%
Share of Total Gap
Long-Term Local Currency Finance Unavailability
Manufacturing Renewables Infrastructure
Most registered manufacturing and energy projects require a local currency co-financing tranche to match offshore equity — essential for hedging project cash flows denominated in Tanzanian shillings. TIB Development Bank and commercial bank capacity for 10–15 year project finance is insufficient at current scale. IFC surveys note that 38% of stalled projects cite local finance as the binding constraint.
✅ Reform: TAFFA / Blended Finance Facility
6
6%
Share of Total Gap
Investment Protection Uncertainty
Mining Energy Technology
The World Bank Rule of Law Index and UNCTAD investment policy monitoring identify contract enforcement quality and ICSID arbitration access as secondary but persistent concerns, particularly for extractive and long-dated infrastructure projects. Tanzania's Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) portfolio remains under review following the 2017 legislative changes.
✅ Reform: BIT Portfolio Review
#ConstraintSectors Most AffectedEst. % of GapEvidence SourceExisting Reform Initiative
1Land acquisition & title deed issuance (avg. 18–24 month process)Manufacturing, Agri, Tourism~28%World Bank B-READY 2024; BOT surveyLand Tenure Reform (MLHHSD)
2Multi-agency regulatory approvals (avg. 7 agencies for large projects)All sectors~22%TISEZA Aftercare Data 2024; UNCTADOne-Stop Facilitation Centre
3Foreign exchange availability and repatriation uncertaintyAll sectors~18%BOT BoP Report 2024; IMF Art. IVBOT FX Framework Reforms
4Infrastructure gaps (power, roads, port connectivity)Energy, Manufacturing, Agri~16%TANROADS/TANESCO assessmentsBRN / Big Results Now II
5Long-term local currency project finance unavailabilityManufacturing, RE, Infra~10%TIB Dev. Bank reports; IFC surveysTAFFA / Blended Finance
6Investment protection uncertainty (contract enforcement; ICSID)Mining, Energy, Tech~6%World Bank Rule of Law Index; UNCTADBIT Portfolio Review
Structural Drivers: Share of Realisation Gap (%)
Ranked by estimated contribution to disbursement failure, 2021–2025
Driver Impact by Sector Exposure
Heat-map of constraint severity across key investment sectors
💡 Strategic Insight: The Reinvested Earnings Trap
BOT 2024 data shows that 67% of Tanzania's actual FDI inflows are reinvested earnings — genuine investor confidence, but a structural ceiling. Tanzania's Dira 2050 strategy must focus disproportionately on converting the registered pipeline of new greenfield investors — precisely the segment most afflicted by land, regulatory, and FX constraints. Closing the disbursement gap is therefore equivalent to unlocking a new-entrant greenfield FDI surge without needing to generate additional investor interest.

Reform Pathway: From Pipeline to Disbursement

The following reforms are ranked by estimated impact on realisation rate improvement, implementation feasibility within 36 months, and alignment with commitments already announced in the 2025/26 Budget Speech and TISEZA Strategic Plan. A coherent, sequenced implementation approach is modelled below.

ReformImplementing AgencyTimelineEst. Rate UpliftPolicy Anchor
Establish a Centralised Land Bank for Industrial Zones with pre-titled plotsMLHHSD / TISEZA12–18 months+8–10 pptsBudget Speech 2025/26, Para 89
Reduce multi-agency approvals to single TIC/TISEZA window with legally binding SLAsTIC / TISEZA / PMO6–12 months+5–7 pptsOIFC Reform Commitment
Introduce Mandatory Investor Aftercare Programme for all projects >US$5MTISEZA6–9 months+4–6 pptsTISEZA Strategic Plan 2024–2029
Establish FX Forward Facility for capital repatriation certainty (BOT-guaranteed)BOT / MoF18–24 months+3–5 pptsIMF Art. IV Recommendation
Fast-track grid connectivity for SEZ projects (TANESCO dedicated team)TANESCO / TPDC12–24 months+3–4 pptsSEZ Infrastructure Programme
Launch Blended Finance Facility (TIB Dev. Bank + DFI co-lending) for local project financeTIB / MoF / DFIs24–36 months+2–4 pptsTAFFA Framework

Sequenced Implementation Roadmap

Reforms are phased over three annual windows to allow institutional capacity to build progressively and to maximise compound impact on the realisation rate.

⚡ Year 1 — 2026: Quick Wins (0–12 months)
1. Single-Window Approval SLAs & 2. Mandatory Aftercare Programme

Legally binding 60-day SLA for all investment approvals through the One-Stop Facilitation Centre. Simultaneous mandatory aftercare enrolment for all projects with capital commitments above US$5 million. These two reforms require no new capital expenditure — only legislative instruments and institutional reinforcement — and can generate realisation rate uplift of +9–13 percentage points within 12 months.

🏛️ TIC / TISEZA / PMO ⏱️ 6–12 months 📈 +9–13 ppts (combined)
🏗️ Year 2 — 2027: Structural Reforms (12–24 months)
3. Industrial Land Bank & 4. FX Forward Facility

Launch of the pre-titled Industrial Land Bank targeting 5,000 hectares across three TISEZA zones by end-2026. Simultaneous establishment of the BOT-backstopped FX Forward Facility providing investors with 5-year currency repatriation certainty. The Land Bank alone is projected to add +8–10 percentage points to the realisation rate over a 24-month window as land-stalled projects unblock.

🏛️ MLHHSD / TISEZA / BOT / MoF ⏱️ 12–24 months 📈 +11–15 ppts (combined)
🔋 Year 3 — 2028–2029: Infrastructure & Finance (24–36 months)
5. TANESCO SEZ Grid Programme & 6. TIB Blended Finance Facility

Dedicated TANESCO connection team for SEZ and industrial park projects with a 90-day grid SLA. Scale-up of TIB Development Bank blended finance facility with PROPARCO, DEG, and BII co-lending at concessional rates, targeting US$2 billion in local currency project finance by 2029. These reforms catalyse conversion of the large pipeline of energy and manufacturing projects that are shovel-ready but stalled on finance and power.

🏛️ TANESCO / TIB / MoF / DFIs ⏱️ 24–36 months 📈 +5–8 ppts (combined)
Estimated Realisation Rate Uplift per Reform Initiative
Percentage point contribution to overall realisation rate improvement (midpoint estimates)

5.2 Cumulative Impact Projection (2026–2031)

Sequenced reform implementation against the Dira 2050 annual FDI requirement of US$11B.

YearReforms ActiveRealisation RateActual FDI (US$B)FDI Gap vs. US$11B TargetCoverage (%)
2026 (Base)None~20%~2.2US$8.8B20%
2027SLAs + Aftercare~28%~3.1US$7.9B28%
2028+ Land Bank + FX Facility~38%~4.2US$6.8B38%
2029+ Grid + Blended Finance~50%~5.5US$5.5B50%
2030Full Reform Maturation~62%~6.8US$4.2B62%
2031 (Target)Dira 2050 Steady State~70%~7.7US$3.3B70%
Reform Trajectory: Actual FDI & Realisation Rate to 2031
Projected under the sequenced reform programme vs. business-as-usual, against the Dira 2050 US$11B annual target
🏆 Headline Finding
A coherent, sequenced reform programme targeting the six structural constraints identified above could raise Tanzania's FDI realisation rate from approximately 20% (2025) to 70% by 2031 — generating US$7.7 billion in annual actual FDI inflows. This would close approximately 70% of the annual FDI shortfall relative to the Dira 2050 target, representing the highest-leverage investment climate reform available to Tanzania's policymakers.

Regional Benchmarking: Sub-Saharan Africa Comparators

To contextualise Tanzania's realisation rate performance, the following table compares key investment climate and FDI metrics across Sub-Saharan African economies with comparable investment promotion frameworks. Data sourced from UNCTAD, World Bank B-READY 2024, and respective central bank publications.

Country2024 Actual FDI (US$B)Est. Realisation RateAvg. Approval Time (days)WB B-READY Score (2024)Key Differentiator
🇹🇿 Tanzania1.72~20%~240 days52.1Pipeline exists; conversion weak
🇪🇹 Ethiopia3.9~42%~180 days54.3Dedicated IPA; industrial parks
🇷🇼 Rwanda0.9~68%~28 days72.6🏆 Regulatory efficiency; land reform (Regional Gold Standard)
🇰🇪 Kenya0.7~45%~90 days58.8Digital registry; Nairobi IFC
🇲🇿 Mozambique3.1~35%~210 days44.2LNG anchor; SEZ expansion
🇿🇲 Zambia1.0~38%~150 days48.9Copper sector; mining reform
Realisation Rate Comparison: SSA Peers (%)
Tanzania vs. regional comparators — Rwanda leads at 68%
Average Approval Time: Days to Clear Investment
Tanzania's 240-day average is 8.6× Rwanda's 28-day process
Investment Climate Competitiveness Radar: Tanzania vs. Rwanda vs. Kenya
Scores normalised 0–100 across six dimensions. Sources: World Bank B-READY 2024, UNCTAD, BOT, central bank publications
🌍 Regional Gold Standard — Rwanda Model
Rwanda's 68% realisation rate — achieved through a mandatory 6-hour company registration process, a digitalised land registry, and dedicated investor aftercare embedded in the Rwanda Development Board — represents the regional gold standard and the most directly applicable model for Tanzania given the two countries' broadly similar economic structures. Tanzania's One-Stop Facilitation Centre and TISEZA Aftercare programme are architected along comparable lines but require full legal backing and dedicated staffing to replicate Rwanda's execution quality.

Conclusions & Policy Recommendations

The evidence assembled across eleven years of FDI data, six structural drivers, and regional peer comparisons leads to a clear and actionable policy conclusion. Tanzania's investment gap is not a demand problem — it is a conversion problem. The pipeline exists. What is needed is the institutional machinery to convert approvals into disbursements.

7.1 Summary of Findings

📌
Tanzania's FDI registration pipeline has grown impressively — from US$2.1B (2015) to US$10.95B (2025) — but the realisation rate has declined from 73% to approximately 15%, creating an absolute registration-to-disbursement gap of US$9.3 billion per year.
🚨
Actual FDI inflows (US$1.4–1.7 billion per year, 2021–2025 average) are only 13–17% of the US$10–12 billion annual FDI required to meet the private-sector share of the Dira 2050 / FYDP IV US$170 billion financing gap.
🔬
The gap is structural, not cyclical. It is driven by land acquisition delays (28% of gap), multi-agency regulatory bottlenecks (22%), FX uncertainty (18%), infrastructure deficits (16%), local finance gaps (10%), and investment protection uncertainty (6%).
📉
Under a business-as-usual scenario, cumulative FDI over 2026–2031 would cover only 9–11% of the US$119 billion private-sector financing requirement — a severe shortfall against Dira 2050 ambitions.
A coherent reform programme addressing the six structural constraints identified can realistically raise the realisation rate to 62–70% by 2031, generating annual FDI of US$6.8–7.7 billion — sufficient to cover 60–70% of the annual FDI requirement.

7.2 Priority Policy Actions

⚡ Immediate Implementation (0–12 months)
1
Establish a Pre-titled Industrial Land Bank
Within TISEZA SEZs, targeting 5,000 hectares across three zones by end-2026. All plots to have completed environmental impact assessments, gazette notices, compensation payments, and title deeds — enabling investors to ground-break within 60 days of project approval rather than waiting 18–24 months for land to clear.
2
Legislate Binding Service-Level Agreements for All Investment Approvals
Through the One-Stop Facilitation Centre, with a maximum 60-day approval window for all investment-related licences, permits, and clearances. Non-compliance to trigger automatic escalation to PMO level, with mandatory reporting to Cabinet quarterly. Modelled on Rwanda's 6-hour company registration standard.
3
Launch Mandatory TISEZA Aftercare Service
For all registered projects with committed capital above US$5 million. Each project to be assigned a dedicated TISEZA aftercare officer responsible for tracking disbursement milestones, identifying stall points, and coordinating inter-agency resolution. Quarterly investor satisfaction surveys to be institutionalised.
🏗️ Medium-Term Implementation (12–36 months)
4
Establish a BOT-Backstopped FX Forward Facility
To provide investors with 5-year currency repatriation certainty. The facility should cover 100% of declared annual dividend repatriation amounts for approved projects, priced at a modest spread above the BOT benchmark rate. This addresses the single most commonly cited bankability concern in IMF and IFC investor surveys.
5
Create a Dedicated TANESCO SEZ Connection Team
With a 90-day grid connection SLA for SEZ and industrial park projects. The team should have pre-approved capital expenditure authority for distribution infrastructure up to TZS 5 billion and dedicated connection slots in the annual TANESCO capital plan — eliminating the current 14–18 month average wait time.
6
Scale the TIB Development Bank Blended Finance Facility
With DFI co-lending from PROPARCO, DEG, and British International Investment (BII) to provide local currency project finance at concessional rates (targeting 10–12% in TZS, versus commercial market rates of 18–22%). Initial facility size of US$500 million, scaling to US$2 billion by 2029, covering manufacturing, renewable energy, and agribusiness priority sectors.

7.3 Monitoring Framework — Annual KPI Targets

The realisation rate should be adopted as a Key Performance Indicator in the FYDP IV monitoring framework, published quarterly by TISEZA in collaboration with BOT. Investor satisfaction surveys — modelled on the Rwanda Development Board tracker — should be institutionalised to identify emerging bottlenecks before they crystallise into cancelled projects.

2026 (Base)
~20%
Realisation Rate
2027 Target
28%
Realisation Rate
2028 Target
38%
Realisation Rate
2029 Target
50%
Realisation Rate
2030 Target
62%
Realisation Rate
2031 Dira Target
70%
Realisation Rate
KPI Dashboard: Realisation Rate Trajectory & Annual FDI Milestone Targets (2026–2031)
FYDP IV monitoring targets vs. reform programme projection
📌 Final Takeaway — TICGL Research April 2026
The registration-to-disbursement gap is Tanzania's most actionable macro-fiscal lever. The investment pipeline — US$10.95 billion per year in approved commitments — already exists. Policymakers do not need to generate new investor interest; they need to convert existing commitments into disbursed capital.

Every 10-percentage-point improvement in the realisation rate adds approximately US$1.1 billion to annual FDI inflows. This is a conversion challenge, not an attraction challenge — and it is solvable within Tanzania's existing institutional architecture with focused, sequenced reform.
+US$1.1B
Per 10 ppt realisation gain
US$7.7B
Target annual FDI by 2031
70%
Dira 2050 realisation target
US$121B
GDP target by 2030/31

Data Sources & Bibliography

This research is grounded exclusively in authoritative public-sector, multilateral, and official institutional data sources. All figures are drawn from the most recently published editions as of April 2026.

🏛️
Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC) / TISEZA — Annual Investment Reports 2015–2025. Primary source for registered FDI project counts and approved capital values.
🏦
Bank of Tanzania (BOT) — Annual Reports 2015–2025; Balance of Payments Statistics 2024. Primary source for actual FDI inflows, FX data, and reinvested earnings composition.
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UNCTAD — World Investment Report 2015–2025; Global FDI Statistics Database. Used for global and regional benchmarking of FDI flows and realisation rates.
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International Monetary Fund (IMF) — Tanzania Article IV Consultation Reports 2022, 2023, 2024. Used for macroeconomic projections, FX framework analysis, and investor survey data.
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World Bank — B-READY Report 2024; Tanzania Economic Update 2025; Africa's Pulse 2025. Used for regulatory quality benchmarking and approval time data across SSA comparators.
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Government of Tanzania — Dira 2050 (Tanzania Development Vision 2050). Primary source for GDP targets, investment requirements, and long-term structural transformation goals.
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Government of Tanzania — FYDP IV (Fourth Five-Year Development Plan 2021/22–2025/26). Primary source for annual investment targets, sectoral allocation frameworks, and monitoring indicators.
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Ministry of Finance — Budget Speech 2025/26 (Hon. Dr. Mwigulu L. Nchemba, MP). Used for fiscal resource envelope estimates and reform commitment cross-referencing.
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Tanzania Investment Bank (TIB) — Development Finance Annual Report 2024. Used for local currency project finance capacity assessment and blended finance structuring.
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IFC / MIGA — Tanzania Investment Climate Assessment 2023. Used for investor perception data, binding constraint identification, and sector-level disbursement analysis.
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Rwanda Development Board — Annual Report 2024. Used as regional benchmarking reference for investor aftercare, land registry digitalisation, and approval time standards.
Disclaimer: This research report is produced by the TICGL Research Division for analytical and informational purposes. All data are drawn from publicly available official sources as cited above. Estimates marked with asterisks or described as "indicative" represent TICGL analytical derivations from the underlying source data and are subject to revision as official figures become available. This report does not constitute investment advice. © 2026 Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd (TICGL). All rights reserved.
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