TICGL

| Economic Consulting Group

TICGL | Economic Consulting Group

TICGL’s Economic Research Centre has published a discussion paper authored by Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza PhD, FMVA, CP3P (braviouskahyoza5@gmail.com) and Amran Bhuzohera, which explores how digital entrepreneurship and policy reforms can transform Tanzania’s Generation Z (Gen Z) into a driving force for inclusive economic growth.

The paper highlights the emerging role of youth innovation, technology adoption, and digital skills development in shaping Tanzania’s economic future. Drawing on Dr. Kahyoza’s expertise in financial modeling, investment strategy, and development policy, the study emphasizes the need for adaptive policy frameworks that empower young entrepreneurs and foster sustainable, technology-driven growth.

With over 30% of Tanzania’s population falling within the Gen Z cohort (ages 13–28), this generation represents the country’s most digitally fluent and innovation-oriented demographic. The paper argues that Tanzania’s young people are uniquely positioned to drive digital transformation, job creation, and economic diversification—if supported by inclusive policies and strategic investments.

Key Findings and Insights

Policy Gaps and Opportunities

While Tanzania’s Digital Economy Strategic Framework (2024–2034) and National Youth Development Policy (2024) provide a strong foundation, implementation gaps persist—particularly in access to funding, digital infrastructure, and gender inclusion.

Key structural constraints include:

Policy Recommendations

To unlock Gen Z’s digital potential, the paper proposes a comprehensive set of reforms:

  1. Digital Literacy Subsidy Program: Public-private partnerships (PPPs) should provide subsidized digital training for 2 million youth by 2028, reducing NEET rates by 15%.
  2. Fintech and Agritech Start-up Fund: Local grant mechanisms and gender-inclusive finance to support 500,000 Gen Z entrepreneurs.
  3. PPP-Led Broadband Expansion: Extend rural connectivity to 80% of households under UNESCO’s Digital Agenda Initiative.
  4. AI and Innovation Hubs: Establish at least five national digital innovation hubs linked to universities to incubate youth-led ventures.
  5. Tax Reforms for Digital Enterprises: Incentivize tech startups with 0–5% tax brackets for early-stage growth phases.

Conclusion

Tanzania’s Gen Z holds the key to the nation’s digital and economic future. With policy coherence, infrastructure development, and public-private collaboration, Gen Z can evolve from digital consumers into creators of sustainable wealth and innovation.

The authors emphasize that digital entrepreneurship is not merely an economic strategy—it is a pathway to equity, inclusion, and intergenerational transformation. By 2030, with well-implemented reforms, Tanzania could emerge as one of Africa’s leading hubs for youth-led digital innovation.


📘 Read the Full Discussion Paper:
“Empowering Tanzania’s Gen Z: Economic Inclusion Through Digital Entrepreneurship and Policy Reforms”
Authored by Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza PhD, FMVA, CP3P (braviouskahyoza5@gmail.com) and Amran Bhuzohera
Published by TICGL | Economic Research Centre
🌐 www.ticgl.com

Empowering Tanzania's Gen Z, Economic Inclusion Through Digital Entrepreneurship and Policy ReformsDownload
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