Inflation Trend in Tanzania March 2026 | TICGL Economic Analysis
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TICGL Economic Analysis · March 2026
Inflation Trend in Tanzania March 2026 — Full Report
A detailed breakdown of Tanzania's inflation dynamics, Consumer Price Index movements, exchange rate stability, and monetary policy settings — covering January 2025 through March 2026.
📅 Published: March 16, 2026📊 Source: Bank of Tanzania & NBS🏦 TICGL Research Unit🕐 ~10 min read
3.2%
Headline Inflation
▼ Feb 2026
2.1%
Core Inflation
▼ from 2.7% (Jan 2025)
5.7%
Food Inflation
▲ Highest category
122.01
CPI Index (Feb 2026)
▲ from 118.28 (Feb 2025)
2,555
TZS/USD (Mar 2026)
▲ Mild depreciation
5.75%
Central Bank Rate
– Stable (BoT)
Executive Summary
Tanzania's macroeconomic environment in early 2026 reflects controlled price growth and relative currency stability.
Headline inflation eased to 3.2% in February 2026 — the lowest since July 2025 — comfortably within the Bank of Tanzania's (BoT) 3–5% policy target.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) climbed modestly from 118.28 (February 2025) to 122.01 (February 2026), indicating manageable cost-of-living pressures.
The Tanzania Shilling depreciated by only ~0.97–1.75% annually, supported by USD 6.3 billion in foreign reserves and robust export earnings.
Food inflation, however, remains the key pressure point at 5.7%, requiring continued vigilance.
The BoT's Central Bank Rate (CBR) is held at 5.75%, anchoring banking liquidity and investment conditions.
Section 01
Headline Inflation Trend (2025–2026)
Inflation measures the increase in prices of goods and services, directly affecting the purchasing power of the Tanzania Shilling (TZS).
Tanzania's headline inflation exhibited a modest oscillation throughout 2025 before declining to a relative low by February 2026.
The country sustained inflation within the national target range of 3–5% for the entire period reviewed. The decline from 3.6% in December 2025 to 3.3% in January 2026 signalled improved price stability, with further easing to 3.2% in February 2026. This trajectory reflects the effectiveness of BoT's monetary tools and moderating food price pressures.
Headline Inflation Rate — Monthly Trend (%)
Tanzania, January 2025 – February 2026 | Source: NBS / Bank of Tanzania
Table 1.1 — Headline Inflation Rate (%), Tanzania 2025–2026
Period
Inflation Rate (%)
Monthly Change
Policy Status
Notes
January 2025
3.1%
—
Within Target
Stable start to the year
December 2025
3.6%
▲ +0.5pp
Within Target
Peak — seasonal food price surge
January 2026
3.3%
▼ –0.3pp
Within Target
Decline following Dec peak
February 2026 ★
3.2%
▼ –0.1pp
Within Target
Lowest since July 2025
✅
Policy Target Met
Inflation stayed within the BoT's 3–5% target throughout the entire reviewed period, demonstrating effective monetary governance.
📉
Downward Trajectory
Inflation declined from the December 2025 peak of 3.6% to 3.2% in February 2026 — a positive signal for purchasing power protection.
⚠️
Seasonal Risks
The December 2025 spike to 3.6% highlights exposure to seasonal food price surges, requiring proactive supply-side management.
Section 02
Consumer Price Index (CPI) Trend
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures the cost of a standardised basket of goods and services purchased by Tanzanian households. With a base year of 2020 = 100, the CPI provides a consistent benchmark for tracking cost-of-living changes over time.
Tanzania's national CPI increased from 118.28 in February 2025 to 122.01 in February 2026 — a 3.15-point (2.7%) increase over 12 months. This moderate growth reflects a relatively stable price environment in the economy, consistent with the low single-digit inflation rates observed during this period.
National CPI Index (Base 2020 = 100)
Feb 2025 – Feb 2026 | NBS Tanzania
CPI Growth vs. Headline Inflation
Overlay comparison | 2025–2026
Table 2.1 — National Consumer Price Index (Base 2020 = 100), Tanzania
Period
CPI Index
Year-on-Year Change
Interpretation
February 2025
118.28
—
Baseline for comparison
January 2026
121.41
▲ +3.13 pts
Moderate cost-of-living increase
February 2026 ★
122.01
▲ +3.73 pts (+3.15%)
Stable growth, purchasing power preserved
✅
Stable CPI Growth Supports the Tanzania Shilling
The narrow, predictable movement of Tanzania's CPI (only +3.15% over 12 months) indicates controlled purchasing power erosion, reinforcing confidence in the Tanzania Shilling's domestic value.
Section 03
Composition of Inflation — January 2026
Inflation is not a monolithic measure — it is shaped by price changes across multiple household spending categories. Understanding the sectoral composition of inflation allows policymakers, investors, and households to identify which sectors are driving cost pressures and which remain contained.
In January 2026, food and non-alcoholic beverages exerted the largest inflationary force at 5.7%, reflecting the dominant share of food in household expenditure for most Tanzanian families. Transport came in second at 4.2%, influenced by fuel costs and logistics. Clothing, health, and restaurant categories remained well-contained below 2%.
Inflation by Category (January 2026)
Horizontal bar chart | NBS Tanzania
Category Share — Inflation Distribution
Relative contribution | January 2026
Visual Breakdown — Category Inflation Rates vs. 5% Target Line
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages
5.7%
Transport
4.2%
Housing, Water, Electricity & Gas
2.3%
Clothing & Footwear
1.2%
Health
1.1%
Restaurants & Accommodation
1.1%
Table 3.1 — Inflation by Major Category (%), Tanzania — January 2026
Category
Inflation Rate (%)
Status
Key Driver
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages
5.7%
Above Target
Seasonal supply constraints, staple food prices
Transport
4.2%
Elevated
Fuel costs, logistics chain pressures
Housing, Water, Electricity & Gas
2.3%
Moderate
Utility tariffs, urban housing demand
Clothing & Footwear
1.2%
Contained
Import prices, domestic textile production
Health
1.1%
Contained
Pharmaceutical costs, medical services
Restaurants & Accommodation
1.1%
Contained
Service sector competition, food input costs
⚠️
Food Inflation Remains the Primary Pressure Point
At 5.7%, food inflation exceeds the BoT's 5% ceiling for sub-components and disproportionately affects lower-income households in Tanzania, where food spending constitutes 50–60% of total household expenditure.
Section 04
Core Inflation & Energy Inflation
Core inflation strips out volatile food and energy prices to reveal the underlying demand-driven price trend in the economy. It is a critical indicator for central bank policy decisions, as it reflects persistent structural price pressures rather than temporary supply-side shocks.
In January 2026, core inflation fell to 2.2% from 2.7% in January 2025 — a significant 0.5 percentage point decline indicating reduced underlying price pressures and successful demand management. By February 2026, core inflation eased further to approximately 2.1–2.2%.
Conversely, energy and utilities inflation surged to 5.2%, driven primarily by rising prices of charcoal and firewood — key energy sources for the majority of Tanzanian households, particularly in rural areas. This presents a targeted structural challenge that cannot be addressed by monetary policy alone.
Table 4.1 — Key Inflation Indicators Comparison, Tanzania 2025–2026
Indicator
Jan 2025
Dec 2025
Jan 2026
Feb 2026
Trend
Notes
Headline Inflation
3.1%
3.6%
3.3%
3.2%
▼ Declining
Lowest since July 2025
Core Inflation
2.7%
2.5%
2.2%
2.1–2.2%
▼ Declining
Reduced underlying pressures
Food Inflation
—
6.7%
5.7%
5.7%
▲ Elevated
Peaked in Dec 2025
Energy & Utilities Inflation
—
—
5.2%
2.8%
▼ Easing
Charcoal/firewood key drivers
Inflation Decomposition — Headline vs. Core vs. Food vs. Energy (%)
Multi-indicator comparison across key periods | NBS / BoT Tanzania
📉
Core Inflation Under Control
Core inflation declining from 2.7% to 2.2% shows BoT's interest rate discipline is working — fundamental demand pressures are easing.
🔥
Energy Inflation at 5.2%
Charcoal and firewood price increases drive energy inflation — a structural issue tied to deforestation pressures and limited clean energy access in rural Tanzania.
🌾
Food Price Persistence
Food inflation remains elevated at 5.7% despite easing from 6.7% in December 2025, requiring agricultural supply chain interventions beyond monetary tools.
🎯
Policy Divergence Challenge
The gap between low core inflation (2.2%) and high food/energy inflation (5–6%) presents a targeting challenge: a single interest rate cannot address supply-side sectoral shocks.
Section 05
Tanzania Shilling Exchange Rate Stability
The exchange rate of the Tanzania Shilling (TZS) against major currencies — particularly the US Dollar (USD) — is a critical macroeconomic variable that influences import costs, external debt servicing, investor sentiment, and inflationary dynamics (through imported inflation).
Data shows the TZS experienced a mild and manageable depreciation trajectory from December 2025 through March 2026. The average rate moved from TZS 2,452.76 per USD in December 2025 to approximately TZS 2,554.67 per USD in March 2026 (up to March 14). On an annual basis, depreciation stands at only 0.97–1.75%, reflecting considerable relative stability given global economic pressures.
This stability is underpinned by Tanzania's USD 6.3 billion in foreign exchange reserves, consistent export earnings from gold and agriculture, and the BoT's active market interventions.
TZS/USD Exchange Rate — Monthly Average Trend
December 2025 – March 2026 | Source: Bank of Tanzania
Table 5.1 — TZS/USD Exchange Rate Trend, December 2025 – March 2026
Period
Avg Rate (TZS/USD)
Monthly Change (%)
Annual Depreciation
Notes
December 2025
2,452.76
—
—
End-year low; strong close
January 2026
2,477.94
+1.0%
0.97%
Seasonal FX demand pressures
February 2026 (avg)
2,581.04
+4.2%
—
Slight upward pressure
March 2026 (up to 14th) ★
2,554.67 (avg) High: 2,609.85 on 13th
–0.09% (monthly)
0.95–1.75%
Stable amid global pressures; reserves buffer absorbing shock
🛡️
Reserve Buffer: USD 6.3 Billion
Tanzania's substantial foreign exchange reserves provide strong insulation against external shocks and seasonal FX demand pressures.
📊
Annual Depreciation: ~1%
At only 0.97–1.75% annual depreciation, the TZS demonstrates remarkable stability relative to many peer African currencies facing 5–15% annual depreciation.
📈
February Spike Watch
The 4.2% monthly move in February 2026 warrants monitoring. Sustained TZS weakness could increase import costs and add to domestic inflation pressures.
ℹ️
Low Inflation Supports Exchange Rate Stability
Tanzania's controlled inflation (3.2%) reduces currency erosion risk. Countries with lower inflation relative to trading partners generally see their currencies appreciate or hold value more effectively — a virtuous cycle the BoT is actively cultivating.
📚 TICGL Economic Research — Related Resources
Explore more in-depth economic intelligence from the TICGL Research Unit
📋 Data Sources: Bank of Tanzania (BoT), National Bureau of Statistics Tanzania (NBS), TICGL Research Unit. |
📅 Period Covered: January 2025 – March 14, 2026. |
⚠️ Disclaimer: This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. TICGL — Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd.
Section 06
Monetary Policy & Inflation Control
The Bank of Tanzania (BoT) is the primary institution responsible for managing inflation and preserving currency stability through its monetary policy framework. The BoT deploys a combination of interest rate tools, open market operations, and liquidity management instruments to keep inflation within the national target range of 3–5%.
In early 2026, the BoT maintained its Central Bank Rate (CBR) at 5.75% — a deliberate decision to balance inflation control against the need to sustain credit growth and economic activity. The interbank market rate settled at approximately 6.40%, reflecting efficient monetary transmission within Tanzania's banking system.
Notably, the BoT injected TZS 976.4 billion in reverse repo liquidity support to ensure adequate banking sector liquidity. This action prevented a credit squeeze while keeping the shilling and inflation trajectory anchored within policy bounds — a calibrated dual mandate operation.
Table 6.1 — Key Monetary Policy Indicators, Bank of Tanzania — Early 2026
Indicator
Value
Function
Impact on Economy
Status
Central Bank Rate (CBR)
5.75%
Signals monetary policy stance; benchmark for all lending rates
Reflects real-time liquidity conditions in the banking system
Near Target
Reverse Repo Liquidity Support
TZS 976.4 Billion
BoT injects liquidity into the banking system via reverse repurchase agreements
Prevents credit contraction; supports SME and private sector lending
Active
Government Securities — 10-Year Bond Yield
~11.30%
Reflects long-term borrowing cost for government; benchmark for private credit
Low yields attract domestic investors; fund infrastructure without inflating money supply
Moderately Elevated
Credit Growth (Private Sector)
16–20% (target)
Rate of new credit extended to businesses and households
Enables SME expansion, investment; risks inflation if excessive
On Track
Monetary Policy Rates Comparison — Tanzania Early 2026
CBR vs. Interbank Rate vs. 10-Year Bond Yield vs. Headline Inflation | Bank of Tanzania
Liquidity Injection Impact — Reverse Repo Support (TZS Billion)
BoT reverse repo operations and their role in maintaining banking sector stability
🏦
CBR Steady at 5.75%
The BoT's decision to hold the CBR at 5.75% signals confidence in Tanzania's inflation trajectory while supporting continued economic activity and private sector credit growth.
💧
TZS 976.4 Bn Liquidity Injection
Reverse repo support of nearly TZS 1 trillion ensures commercial banks maintain sufficient lending capacity, preventing the kind of credit squeeze that could stall economic momentum.
📐
Transmission Gap: CBR to Interbank
The ~0.65pp spread between the CBR (5.75%) and the interbank rate (6.40%) indicates normal monetary transmission — though persistent gaps can signal liquidity stress.
🎯
Dual Mandate Balance
The BoT is simultaneously managing price stability (3.2% inflation) and financial stability (credit growth 16–20%) — a complex balancing act underpinned by adequate reserve buffers.
ℹ️
Securities Market Connection
Low inflation and the stable CBR environment have enabled Tanzania's government bond auctions to be oversubscribed by up to 34%, with bids reaching TZS 840 billion in January 2026 — reflecting strong domestic investor confidence and providing low-cost financing for national infrastructure development.
Section 07
Relationship Between Shilling Stability & Inflation
The relationship between inflation and currency value is one of the most fundamental dynamics in macroeconomics. For Tanzania, understanding this interplay is essential for investors, importers, exporters, and policymakers — as movements in either variable directly affect the other through multiple transmission channels.
When domestic inflation remains low and stable, the Tanzania Shilling retains its domestic purchasing power, reduces imported inflation risk, and supports investor confidence in TZS-denominated assets. Conversely, persistent inflation — particularly in food and energy — erodes household purchasing power, puts downward pressure on the shilling, and can create a self-reinforcing depreciation cycle if unchecked.
Since Tanzania's inflation remains around 3–4%, the Shilling has maintained moderate stability despite significant global economic pressures — including elevated global commodity prices, USD strength, and supply chain disruptions that have severely destabilised currencies in peer African economies.
Table 7.1 — Inflation–Currency Transmission Matrix, Tanzania
Economic Factor
Mechanism
Impact on TZS
Current Status (2026)
Low Headline Inflation (3.2%)
Preserves real interest rate differential; attracts portfolio investment
✅ Supports Stability
Active — inflation within BoT target
High Food Inflation (5.7%)
Increases import food demand; strains FX reserves; reduces rural purchasing power
⚠️ Depreciation Risk
Persistent pressure — supply-side challenge
Stable Exchange Rate (~0.97% annual depreciation)
Limits pass-through of import prices into domestic CPI; controls imported inflation
✅ Inflation Anchor
Active — rate stable, reserves buffer strong
Energy Inflation (5.2%)
Raises production costs; increases demand for USD to fund fuel imports
⚠️ Modest Pressure
Easing — fell to 2.8% in Feb 2026
USD 6.3 Bn FX Reserves
BoT can intervene to smooth excessive TZS volatility; signals creditworthiness
✅ Strong Buffer
Robust — covers 4–5 months of imports
CBR at 5.75%
Keeps real rates positive relative to inflation; reduces speculative TZS selling
✅ Supports Shilling
Stable — no change expected near-term
Inflation Rate vs. TZS/USD Exchange Rate — Parallel Trend
Raises input costs; increases USD demand for fuel imports
→ Mild TZS Pressure
Section 08
Key Indicators of Shilling Stability vs. Inflation (2026)
This section consolidates all major macroeconomic indicators into a unified dashboard view, enabling investors, researchers, and policymakers to assess Tanzania's economic health at a glance. Together, these metrics paint a picture of an economy that is maintaining macroeconomic discipline while navigating residual pressures from food prices, energy costs, and a gradually depreciating currency.
The interconnection between these indicators is critical: the CBR anchors inflation expectations, stable inflation supports bond auction oversubscription, low yields fund infrastructure without fiscal pressure, and robust GDP growth sustains export capacity — reinforcing Shilling stability in a virtuous cycle that BoT is actively cultivating.
Table 8.1 — Comprehensive Macroeconomic Dashboard, Tanzania — 2026
Indicator
Value
Period
Benchmark / Target
Assessment
Headline Inflation
3.2%
Feb 2026
BoT Target: 3–5%
✅ Within Target
Core Inflation
2.1–2.2%
Feb 2026
Below Headline (healthy)
✅ Declining
Food Inflation
5.7%
Jan–Feb 2026
Below 5% (goal)
⚠️ Elevated
Energy & Utilities Inflation
2.8% (Feb) / 5.2% (Jan)
Feb 2026
Below 5% (goal)
⚡ Easing
CPI Index (Base 2020=100)
122.01
Feb 2026
Moderate growth pace
✅ Stable Growth
TZS/USD Exchange Rate (avg)
~TZS 2,554.67
Mar 2026 (to 14th)
Low annual depreciation
✅ Relatively Stable
Annual TZS Depreciation
0.97–1.75%
2025–2026
<5% (peer benchmark)
✅ Well Contained
Central Bank Rate (CBR)
5.75%
Early 2026
Aligned with inflation target
✅ Appropriate
Interbank Market Rate
~6.40%
Early 2026
Near CBR (efficient transmission)
✅ Normal
FX Reserves
USD 6.3 Billion
2026
>3 months import cover
✅ Adequate Buffer
10-Year Government Bond Yield
~11.30%
Jan 2026
Below 12% (stable)
📊 Moderate
GDP Growth Forecast
6.0–6.3%
2026
SSA average: ~4%
✅ Above Regional Average
Agriculture Sector Growth
+10%
2025–2026
Key inflation moderator
✅ Strong
FDI Target
USD 15 Billion
2026
Stability-driven
📈 Under pursuit
Macroeconomic Health Radar — Tanzania 2026
Composite stability index across 6 dimensions | Score: 0 (poor) → 10 (excellent)
3.2%
Headline Inflation
✅ Within 3–5% Target
2.1%
Core Inflation
✅ Below Headline
5.7%
Food Inflation
⚠️ Key Risk Factor
122.01
CPI Index
📊 Moderate Growth
2,478
TZS/USD Rate
🔒 Stable Trajectory
5.75%
Central Bank Rate
🏦 Steady BoT Stance
Section 09
Economic Implications for Growth & Development
Tanzania's inflation and currency dynamics in early 2026 have far-reaching implications that extend well beyond price levels. The interplay between low inflation, a relatively stable Shilling, government securities market performance, and long-term development goals creates a complex web of opportunity and risk that investors, policymakers, and development practitioners must carefully navigate.
Low inflation preserves household purchasing power and stimulates consumer spending — a key engine for Tanzania's 6.0–6.3% GDP growth forecast in 2026. Shilling stability reduces FX risk for foreign direct investors, helping Tanzania pursue its USD 15 billion FDI target. Meanwhile, oversubscribed government bond auctions (e.g., 34% oversubscription in January 2026 with TZS 840 billion in bids) provide the government with low-cost domestic financing for Vision 2050 infrastructure priorities — including hydropower projects expected to contribute 1–1.5% to GDP growth.
However, if food inflation (5.7%) and energy pressures remain unchecked, the risks of purchasing power erosion among lower-income households, increased external borrowing costs, and crowding out of private investment could slow the pace of inclusive growth needed to achieve Tanzania's poverty reduction targets (below 20% by 2030).
The interplay of stable prices, a managed Shilling, and active BoT policy fosters a resilient medium-term growth trajectory of 6.5–6.9%. Vigilant policy — particularly BoT's liquidity management tools — will be key to sustaining securities market appeal and preserving Shilling stability as global conditions evolve in 2026.
Conclusion
Summary & Outlook
🎯 Key Findings — Tanzania Inflation Trend, March 2026
Headline inflation eased to 3.2% in February 2026 — the lowest level since July 2025 — remaining firmly within the Bank of Tanzania's 3–5% policy target, reflecting effective monetary governance and moderating price pressures.
Core inflation declined from 2.7% (January 2025) to 2.1–2.2% (February 2026), indicating reduced underlying demand pressures and successful interest rate transmission through the banking system.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose modestly from 118.28 to 122.01 over 12 months — a 3.15% increase that confirms stable, predictable cost-of-living growth rather than disruptive price volatility.
Food inflation (5.7%) remains the single largest inflationary pressure and the primary risk to inclusive growth, disproportionately affecting lower-income households where food spending constitutes the majority of budgets.
The Tanzania Shilling depreciated by only 0.97–1.75% annually against the USD — a testament to Tanzania's strong USD 6.3 billion FX reserve buffer, robust export performance, and credible BoT monetary policy.
The Central Bank Rate (CBR) held at 5.75% with TZS 976.4 billion in reverse repo liquidity support, maintaining an accommodative credit environment that supports the 16–20% private sector credit growth target.
Tanzania's macroeconomic stability is enabling oversubscribed government bond auctions (up to 34% oversubscription), providing low-cost domestic financing for Vision 2050 infrastructure — without fuelling inflation or currency volatility.
The medium-term GDP growth potential of 6.5–6.9% positions Tanzania as one of East Africa's strongest-performing economies, though sustained vigilance on food and energy inflation is required to ensure growth is sufficiently inclusive.
Tanzania Macro Stability Scorecard — Full Indicator Overview
All key metrics plotted against their respective benchmarks | TICGL Research, March 2026
Tanzania continues to demonstrate remarkable economic stability with low and controlled inflation. As of January 2026, the headline inflation rate stands at 3.3%, reflecting a moderate decrease from 3.6% recorded in December 2025. This positive trajectory underscores the effectiveness of Tanzania's monetary policy framework and macroeconomic management.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) has risen from 117.57 in January 2025 to 121.41 in January 2026, representing a year-on-year increase of 3.3%. Tanzania's inflation has remained consistently below the 5% threshold since 2021, demonstrating strong price stability even amid global economic uncertainties.
Key Highlights:
Inflation methodology follows UN COICOP 2018 classification with 2020 as the base year (2020=100)
Core inflation at 2.2% indicates effective control of underlying price pressures
Food inflation (5.7%) remains the highest category but shows improvement from 6.7%
Energy inflation (4.6%) has eased significantly from peaks of 9%+ in 2022-2024
Understanding Tanzania's inflation journey over the past five years provides crucial context for current economic conditions. The period from 2021 to 2026 has witnessed significant global economic events, including the COVID-19 recovery, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and worldwide commodity price volatility. Tanzania has navigated these challenges with notable resilience.
Table 1: Historical Annual Average Inflation Rates (2021-2026)
Year
Headline Inflation
Core Inflation
Non-Core Inflation
Food & Beverages
Energy/Fuel
Key Drivers
2021
3.7%
4.1%
2.5%
~3-4%
3.1%
Transport, Food
2022
4.3%
3.0%
8.2%
7.3%
9.1%
Global Commodity Shocks
2023
3.8%
~3.5%
~2.2%
2.1%
9.3%
Easing Food Prices
2024
3.1%
3.4%
2.2%
2.1%
9.3%
Continued Downward Trend
2025
3.3%
2.2%
6.2%
6.4%
4.3%
Food Price Rebound
2026 (Jan)
3.3%
2.2%
6.0%
5.7%
4.6%
Stabilizing
📊 Key Insight: Inflation Peak and Recovery
Inflation peaked at 4.3% in 2022 due to unprecedented global economic shocks, including supply chain disruptions, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and soaring energy prices. However, Tanzania's proactive monetary policy and effective macroeconomic management led to a swift decline to 3.1% in 2024. The slight increase to 3.3% in 2025-2026 is primarily attributed to food price rebounds, while energy inflation has moderated significantly.
Historical Inflation Trends (2021-2026)
Detailed Historical Analysis
2021: Post-Pandemic Recovery
The year 2021 marked Tanzania's economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. With headline inflation at 3.7%, the economy demonstrated resilience. Core inflation stood at 4.1%, slightly higher than the headline rate, indicating some underlying demand pressures. Transport and food sectors were the primary drivers during this period.
2022: Global Shocks and Peak Inflation
2022 witnessed the highest inflation rate in the five-year period at 4.3%, primarily driven by global commodity shocks following the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Energy/fuel inflation surged to 9.1%, while food inflation reached 7.3%. Non-core inflation spiked to 8.2%, reflecting the volatile nature of global commodity markets. Despite these challenges, Tanzania's inflation remained moderate compared to many global economies that experienced double-digit inflation.
2023-2024: Stabilization and Decline
The period from 2023 to 2024 marked a significant stabilization phase. Food inflation eased dramatically from 7.3% (2022) to just 2.1% (2023-2024), contributing to the overall decline in headline inflation to 3.1% by 2024. Core inflation remained stable around 3.4-3.5%, while energy/fuel inflation, though still elevated at 9.3%, represented a persistent challenge from global energy markets.
2025-2026: Food Price Rebound with Overall Stability
The most recent period shows food inflation rebounding to 6.4% (2025) and 5.7% (January 2026), likely due to weather patterns and agricultural production cycles. However, this has been offset by significant improvement in energy inflation (down to 4.3-4.6%) and exceptionally strong core inflation control at 2.2%, resulting in headline inflation remaining stable at 3.3%.
Core vs Non-Core Inflation Comparison (2021-2026)
💡 Policy Success Indicator
Core inflation at 2.2% is a critical indicator of effective monetary policy. Core inflation excludes volatile items like food and energy, measuring underlying price pressures in the economy. The current low core inflation demonstrates that the Bank of Tanzania's monetary policy has successfully controlled demand-driven inflation, even as certain categories like food experience temporary price increases.
Tanzania's Monetary Policy and Its Economic Impact: Comprehensive Analysis 2026 | TICGL
Tanzania's Monetary Policy and Its Economic Impact
A Comprehensive Integrated Analysis of the Bank of Tanzania's Monetary Framework, Policy Evolution, and Economic Performance (1961-2026)
Home / Research / Tanzania's Monetary Policy Analysis
Executive Summary
This comprehensive research analyzes Tanzania's monetary policy framework and its impact on economic growth and stability. The analysis reveals that Tanzania has achieved remarkable macroeconomic stability through prudent monetary policy implementation, with inflation consistently maintained within the 3-5% target range and GDP growth averaging around 5-6% annually.
The Bank of Tanzania's transition from reserve money targeting to an interest rate-based framework in January 2024 marks a significant evolution in monetary policy implementation, aligning Tanzania with regional best practices and international standards. This shift from the earlier era of fiscal dominance (1960s-1980s), where government deficits were financed through money printing leading to chronic high inflation, represents a profound institutional transformation.
5.75%
Lowest Policy Rate in EAC
3-5%
Inflation Target Range
20.3%
Credit Growth (2025)
4.9+
Months Import Cover
Key Economic Indicators Overview (2025)
Key Challenges and Opportunities
Challenges: Weak monetary transmission mechanisms, government domestic borrowing crowding out private sector credit, exchange rate volatility from external shocks, and limited financial inclusion (28.2% of households remain financially excluded).
Opportunities: Current conditions in early 2026 are highly favorable with low assessed inflation risks, but vigilant monitoring of external shocks, domestic factors, and structural issues will be critical to sustaining Tanzania's impressive macroeconomic performance.
1. Historical Evolution of Monetary Policy in Tanzania
Tanzania's monetary policy journey spans over six decades, evolving from colonial-era currency arrangements to a modern, sophisticated interest rate-based framework. This evolution reflects the country's broader economic transformation and growing integration into the global financial system.
1961-1966
Pre-Independence and Early Years
Before the establishment of the Bank of Tanzania, the country was part of the East African Currency Board, which administered the East African Shilling. This arrangement meant Tanzania lacked independent monetary policy until 1967. The Currency Board system operated as a passive institution that simply issued currency backed by foreign reserves, limiting the country's ability to respond to domestic economic conditions or pursue independent development objectives.
1965-1967
Bank of Tanzania Formation
The Bank of Tanzania was chartered through the Bank of Tanzania Act of 1965 following the dissolution of the East African Currency Board. The bank commenced operations on June 14, 1966, inaugurated by President Mwalimu Julius Kambarage Nyerere. This marked the beginning of Tanzania's independent monetary policy and the country's ability to use monetary instruments to support national development goals.
1967-1985
Socialist Era and Fiscal Dominance
Following the Arusha Declaration in 1967, the Bank of Tanzania's role evolved significantly within a socialist economic framework. However, this period was characterized by severe fiscal dominance, where the central bank faced political pressure to finance government deficits through money printing.
Chronic high inflation exceeding 20-30% in some years during the 1970s-1980s
Economic instability and severe erosion of purchasing power
Loss of central bank independence in monetary policy formulation
Undermined credibility of monetary authorities both domestically and internationally
Foreign exchange shortages and parallel market premiums
Key Institutional Developments:
The Annual Credit and Finance Plan (1971) granted the bank control over interest rates
The Foreign Exchange Plan gave control over foreign exchange allocation and use
The 1978 Bank of Tanzania Act amendment increased the bank's authority in financial planning
1986-1995
Economic Liberalization Era
The mid-1980s to 1990s witnessed significant economic reforms as Tanzania moved away from socialist policies toward market-oriented approaches:
Rapid inflation and severe currency devaluation, highlighting the urgent need for focused monetary policy
Structural adjustment programs initiated with IMF and World Bank support
Liberalization of the economy in the early 1990s, which removed exchange controls and opened doors to foreign banks
Accelerated use of foreign currency in the domestic economy (dollarization pressures)
These reforms laid the groundwork for the fundamental transformation that would come in 1995.
1995
Modern Monetary Framework: The 1995 Transformation
The Bank of Tanzania Act of 1995 fundamentally transformed the central bank's mandate and represents the most important institutional reform in Tanzania's monetary policy history.
Key Reforms of the 1995 Act
Ended fiscal dominance through legal and institutional mechanisms prohibiting direct central bank financing of government deficits
Restored Bank of Tanzania operational independence with clear mandate and accountability
Established a single, clear objective: to formulate and implement monetary policy directed at maintaining domestic price stability conducive to balanced and sustainable economic growth
Introduced monetary targeting framework focused on reserve money aggregates
Adopted broad money supply (M3) as intermediate target for inflation control
Created fiscal-monetary accord establishing framework for policy coordination without dominance
This reform marked Tanzania's commitment to modern central banking principles, emphasizing price stability as the primary goal while supporting overall economic development. The success of this framework is evident in the subsequent decline in inflation from double-digit levels in the 1990s to the current 3-4% range.
2024
Transition to Interest Rate-Based Framework
On January 19, 2024, the Bank of Tanzania made a historic shift from quantity-based monetary targeting (reserve money) to an interest rate-based monetary policy framework. This transition represents the latest evolution in Tanzania's monetary policy journey and aligns the country with:
International best practices in modern central banking
Regional peers in the East African Community (Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda already using interest rate frameworks)
Enhanced policy transmission mechanisms through clearer market signals
This framework change builds on the solid foundation established in 1995 and reflects Tanzania's economic maturation and financial market development.
Tanzania's Inflation Journey: From High Volatility to Stability
Evolution of Monetary Policy Frameworks in Tanzania
Period
Framework
Primary Objective
Key Characteristics
1961-1966
Currency Board
Currency Stability
Passive issuance backed by foreign reserves
1967-1985
Fiscal Dominance
Development Financing
Direct government financing, high inflation (20-30%)
1986-1995
Transition Period
Stabilization
Structural reforms, liberalization
1995-2023
Reserve Money Targeting
Price Stability
Independent central bank, M3 targeting
2024-Present
Interest Rate-Based
Price Stability & Growth
Policy rate at 5.75%, inflation 3-5% target
💡 Key Insight: The Power of Institutional Reform
The 1995 Bank of Tanzania Act represents one of Africa's most successful monetary policy reforms. By ending fiscal dominance and establishing central bank independence, Tanzania transformed from an economy with chronic 20-30% inflation to one maintaining stable 3-5% inflation for over two decades. This achievement demonstrates that strong institutions and clear mandates are fundamental to macroeconomic stability and sustainable growth.
2. Current Monetary Policy Framework
Tanzania's current monetary policy framework represents the culmination of decades of institutional evolution and reform. The transition to an interest rate-based system in January 2024 marks a significant milestone, aligning Tanzania with international best practices and regional peers in modern central banking.
2.1 Framework Architecture and Objectives
🎯 Primary Objective: Price Stability
The Bank of Tanzania's overarching goal is maintaining price stability to support sustainable economic growth. The framework specifically targets:
Medium-term inflation target: 5% over a 3-5 year horizon
Operational target band: 3-5% for annual inflation
This medium-term approach provides flexibility to respond to short-term shocks while maintaining focus on sustained price stability and creates a predictable environment for investment, credit growth, and overall economic activity.
Supporting Objectives
While prioritizing price stability, the framework also supports:
Adequate liquidity provision to the financial system
Stable short-term interest rates
Exchange rate stability (managed float regime)
Sustainable economic growth
Financial system stability
2.2 The Interest Rate-Based Framework (Since January 2024)
On January 19, 2024, the Bank of Tanzania made a historic transition from quantity-based monetary targeting (reserve money) to an interest rate-based monetary policy framework. This represents a fundamental shift in how monetary policy is conducted.
Central Bank Rate Operating Corridor
Central Bank Rate (CBR) as Main Policy Instrument
The CBR serves as the key policy signal, influencing financial conditions throughout the economy. The framework operates through:
Component
Rate
Description
Upper Bound (Lombard Rate)
7.75%
Maximum rate for overnight lending to banks
Central Bank Rate (CBR)
5.75%
Key policy rate - signals monetary stance
Operating Target
5.75%
7-day Interbank Cash Market (IBCM) rate
Lower Bound (Deposit Facility)
3.75%
Rate paid on excess bank reserves
📐 Operating Corridor: CBR ± 2 Percentage Points
With the CBR at 5.75%, the corridor is designed to keep the 7-day IBCM rate within a band of 3.75% to 7.75%. This provides a clear framework for market expectations and limits excessive interest rate volatility.
Complete Policy Instrument Suite
🔄 Open Market Operations
Primary Tool
Repurchase agreements (repos) and reverse repos
Treasury bill auctions
Regular liquidity operations to steer IBCM rate
🏦 Standing Facilities
Automatic Access
Lombard lending facility (7.75%)
Deposit facility (3.75%)
Available to commercial banks automatically
💰 Reserve Requirements
Structural Tool
Statutory reserve ratios for banks
Used for liquidity management
Less frequently adjusted than before
💱 FX Interventions
Stability Support
Smooth excessive volatility
Maintain adequate reserves
Not for targeting specific rate levels
2.3 Current Policy Stance (January 2026)
Accommodative Stance Maintained
The Bank of Tanzania held the Central Bank Rate at 5.75% in January 2026, marking the third consecutive hold after a 25 basis point cut in July 2025. This represents the lowest policy rate in the East African Community and reflects highly favorable macroeconomic conditions.
3.4%
Headline Inflation (Nov 2025)
2.1%
Core Inflation
5.9%
GDP Growth (2025 Proj.)
5.4%
Q1 2025 Growth
Inflation Performance Analysis
Headline inflation: 3.4% (November 2025), well within 3-5% target band
Average inflation 2025: ~3.5%, consistent with medium-term 5% target
Core inflation: 2.1% (November 2025), indicating no underlying price pressures
Food inflation: 6.6% (November 2025), seasonal but manageable
Growth Momentum
GDP growth projected: 5.9% for full year 2025
Strong Q1 performance: 5.4% in Q1 2025 (up from 5.0% Q1 2024)
External position comfortable with stable exchange rate
No immediate pressures requiring policy tightening
Well-anchored inflation expectations
Policy Rationale
The accommodative stance balances multiple objectives:
Supporting sustained economic expansion
Maintaining inflation within target range
Providing predictable interest rate environment for investment
Responding appropriately to favorable macroeconomic conditions
2.4 Central Bank Rate Evolution (2024-2026)
Date
Policy Decision
Central Bank Rate
Change
Rationale
January 19, 2024
Framework Launch
6.00%
Initial
Transition to interest rate-based framework
March-June 2024
Hold
6.00%
0 bps
Monitor framework effectiveness
July 2024
Hold
6.00%
0 bps
Inflation within target, growth stable
October 2024
Hold
6.00%
0 bps
Maintain accommodative stance
January 2025
Hold
6.00%
0 bps
Favorable inflation outlook
July 2025
Cut
5.75%
-25 bps
Low inflation risks, support growth
October 2025
Hold
5.75%
0 bps
Monitor cut impact
January 2026
Hold
5.75%
0 bps
Continued favorable conditions
Source: Bank of Tanzania Monetary Policy Statements, 2024-2026
The pattern shows prudent, gradual adjustment with extended periods of stability, allowing the economy to adjust to policy signals while maintaining credibility. The single 25 basis point cut in July 2025 demonstrates the Bank's responsiveness to favorable conditions without aggressive easing.
Central Bank Rate Evolution (2024-2026)
3. Economic Performance Data (2015-2026)
Tanzania's economic performance over the past decade demonstrates the effectiveness of the monetary policy framework in supporting sustainable growth while maintaining price stability. This section presents comprehensive data analysis covering GDP growth, inflation trends, sectoral performance, and credit expansion.
3.1 GDP Growth Trends - Comprehensive Analysis
Tanzania has maintained robust economic growth over the past decade, with GDP expansion averaging 5-6% annually despite global challenges including the COVID-19 pandemic. The economy demonstrated remarkable resilience, with only a brief slowdown to 1.99% in 2020 before recovering strongly.
Year
GDP Growth Rate (%)
Key Characteristics
2015
6.2%
Strong pre-pandemic growth
2016
6.9%
Peak growth period
2017
6.4%
Sustained momentum
2018
5.8%
Broad-based expansion
2019
6.0%
Pre-COVID stability
2020
1.99%
COVID-19 impact
2021
4.3%
Recovery begins
2022
4.7%
Continued recovery
2023
5.1%
Strengthening trajectory
2024
6.3%
Strong rebound
2025
5.9% (projected)
Sustained strong growth
2026
5.5-6.0% (projected)
Stable outlook
Sources: World Bank, IMF, Bank of Tanzania, Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics
📊 Key Observations
Average growth 2015-2019: 6.2% (pre-COVID)
COVID impact: Sharp but brief drop to 1.99% in 2020
Current phase 2024-2026: Return to 5.5-6.3% growth trajectory
Regional performance: Consistently above Sub-Saharan Africa average
Tanzania GDP Growth Rate (2015-2026)
3.2 Inflation Performance - Remarkable Stability
One of the most significant achievements of Tanzania's monetary policy has been maintaining inflation within the target range. The transformation from the high inflation era of the 1980s-1990s to current price stability represents a major macroeconomic success.
Year
Headline Inflation (%)
Core Inflation (%)
Food Inflation (%)
Status
2015
5.6%
4.2%
7.8%
Near target
2016
5.2%
3.8%
7.1%
Within target
2017
5.3%
3.5%
7.4%
Within target
2018
3.5%
2.8%
5.2%
Within target
2019
3.4%
2.5%
5.0%
Within target
2020
3.3%
2.3%
4.9%
Within target
2021
3.7%
2.6%
5.3%
Within target
2022
4.1%
3.0%
5.8%
Within target
2023
3.8%
2.7%
5.5%
Within target
2024
3.2%
2.2%
4.8%
Within target
2025
3.5% (avg)
2.1%
6.6%
Within target
Nov 2025
3.4%
2.1%
6.6%
Well within target
Sources: Bank of Tanzania, Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics, IMF
🎖️ Critical Achievement
Since 2018, inflation has remained consistently below the 5% medium-term target
Average inflation 2018-2025: ~3.5%
This represents a dramatic improvement from 20-30%+ rates in the 1980s
External shocks (2022 commodity crisis) managed well with limited pass-through
Stable exchange rate contributing to low imported inflation
3.3 Sectoral Growth Drivers - Diversified Economy
Tanzania's economy is well-diversified, with growth driven by multiple sectors. The first quarter of 2025 data shows exceptionally strong performance across industrial activities, demonstrating the broad-based nature of economic expansion.
Sector
Q1 2025 Growth (%)
Key Drivers
Electricity
19.0%
Julius Nyerere Hydropower Dam (2,115 MW)
Mining
16.6%
High gold prices, credit expansion (+30%)
Financial Services
15.4%
Financial deepening, credit growth (+20.3%)
Manufacturing
7.2%
Lower energy costs, infrastructure improvements
Construction
6.8%
Infrastructure projects, urban development
Wholesale & Retail
5.6%
Rising consumer demand
Transport & Storage
4.9%
Trade facilitation, logistics improvements
Agriculture
3.0%
Credit growth (+29.8%), mechanization
Source: Bank of Tanzania, October 2025 (constant 2015 prices)
Sectoral GDP Growth Rates (Q1 2025)
Sectoral Highlights
⚡ Electricity (19.0% growth)
Largely attributed to Julius Nyerere Hydropower Dam (commenced operations 2024)
Capacity: 2,115 MW, transforming Tanzania's energy landscape
One of the clearest indicators of accommodative monetary policy effectiveness is the robust credit expansion achieved without triggering inflation. This demonstrates healthy financial intermediation and effective policy transmission.
Credit expansion is broad-based, not concentrated in risky sectors
Monitoring required to ensure credit quality is maintained
Banking sector capitalization adequate to support growth
Financial stability indicators remain within acceptable ranges
The combination of strong credit growth (+20.3%), low inflation (3.4%), and robust GDP growth (5.9%) represents a "Goldilocks" scenario where monetary policy is achieving its objectives across all dimensions without trade-offs.
4. Impact on Economic Growth and Stability
The Bank of Tanzania's monetary policy framework has delivered tangible benefits across multiple dimensions of economic performance. This section analyzes how price stability, accommodative policy, and sound external sector management have supported Tanzania's development objectives.
4.1 Price Stability Achievement - Foundation for Growth
The Bank of Tanzania's primary mandate of maintaining price stability has been successfully achieved with exceptional consistency. This achievement provides multiple benefits that extend far beyond simply keeping inflation low.
🏆 Price Stability Success
Tanzania has maintained inflation consistently within the 3-5% target range since 2018, representing a dramatic transformation from the 20-30%+ inflation rates of the 1980s. This stability provides the foundation for all other economic achievements.
Direct Benefits of Low, Stable Inflation
📊 Predictable Business Environment
Companies can plan investments with confidence
Long-term contracts viable without excessive inflation risk premiums
Capital budgeting more accurate
Multi-year planning feasible
💰 Purchasing Power Protection
Real incomes preserved for wage earners
Savings maintain value
Particularly important for fixed-income households
Poverty reduction supported through stable food prices
🌍 Competitive Advantage for FDI
Tanzania's 3.4% inflation attractive vs. regional peers
Central bank independence (1995 reform) - ending political interference
End of fiscal dominance - prohibiting direct government financing
Professional monetary policy management - technical expertise and training
Credible commitment to price stability - consistent policy implementation
Gradual institutional learning - building credibility over time
Tanzania's Inflation Transformation: A Four-Decade Journey
4.2 Growth Performance - Supporting Development
Tanzania's GDP growth has averaged approximately 6.0% over the last decade (excluding COVID year), significantly above the Sub-Saharan African average of ~3-4%. The accommodative monetary policy stance has supported this growth through multiple channels.
6.0%
Avg. Growth (Pre-COVID)
5.75%
Policy Rate (Lowest in EAC)
20.3%
Credit Expansion (2025)
16-18%
Lending Rate Range
Transmission Channels to Growth
💵 Lower Borrowing Costs
Policy rate at 5.75%, lowest in EAC
Supports business investment decisions
Enables infrastructure financing
Encourages productive sector expansion
📈 Private Sector Credit Expansion
+20.3% credit growth in 2025
Mining, agriculture, construction 20%+
Working capital available for businesses
Consumer credit supporting demand
🏦 Competitive Lending Environment
Commercial lending rates 16-18% range
Competitive regionally
Supports domestic investment vs. imports
Enables SME financing
🏗️ Infrastructure Investment Support
Government finances projects at manageable rates
Public-private partnerships viable
Julius Nyerere Dam completed
Transport corridors developed
Growth Quality Assessment
✅ High-Quality, Sustainable Growth
Broad-based: Not dependent on single sector - diversified across agriculture, mining, services, manufacturing
Employment-generating: Agriculture, construction, services are labor-intensive sectors
Productivity-enhancing: Infrastructure and electricity improvements boost efficiency
Sustainable: Not fueled by credit bubbles or excessive debt accumulation
Inclusive potential: Multiple sectors providing opportunities across income levels
Tanzania's external position has improved significantly, reflecting the positive impact of monetary policy on external balances through multiple channels including export competitiveness, reserve accumulation, and capital flow management.
Indicator
2022
2023
2024
2025
Trend
Current Account (% of GDP)
-7.3%
-4.9%
-3.2%
-2.4%
✅ Improving
Foreign Reserves (months of imports)
4.2
4.5
4.8
4.9+
✅ Strong
Export Growth (%)
8.5%
11.2%
13.8%
9.4%
✅ Robust
FDI Inflows (USD billion)
1.2
1.4
1.6
1.8
✅ Growing
External Debt (% of GDP)
38.2%
39.1%
39.8%
40.2%
⚠️ Manageable
Sources: Bank of Tanzania, IMF Country Reports 2024-2025
External Sector Performance Trends (2022-2025)
Key Achievements in External Sector
📉 Current Account Improvement
Deficit narrowed from 7.3% to 2.4% of GDP (2022-2025)
Growing export earnings from gold, tourism, and agriculture
Sustainable financing through FDI and concessional loans
💎 Reserve Adequacy
4.9+ months of import cover - exceeds IMF benchmark of 3 months
Provides substantial buffer against external shocks
Supports exchange rate stability and market confidence
Enables intervention capacity when needed
Demonstrates prudent reserve management
📦 Export Performance
Gold exports: Benefiting from high prices ($2,000-2,400/oz) and increased production
Tourism: Recovery exceeding pre-COVID levels with strong visitor numbers
Agricultural exports: Coffee, cotton, and cashew growing steadily
Diversification: Efforts beginning to show results across multiple sectors
💼 Capital Flows
FDI: Attracted by macroeconomic stability and growth prospects
Portfolio flows: Increasing with sovereign bond market development
Remittances: Stable and growing diaspora contributions
Concessional financing: Development partner support for infrastructure
4.4 Fiscal-Monetary Coordination - Improved but Challenged
The fiscal-monetary accord established in the mid-1990s enhanced the Bank of Tanzania's independence and created a framework for policy coordination without dominance. Recent performance shows both notable successes and ongoing challenges that require attention.
Fiscal Performance Highlights
💰 Revenue Mobilization Success
Domestic revenue exceeded targets by 4.2% in Q1 2025/26, demonstrating significant improvements in tax administration and collection efficiency.
Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) reforms proving effective
Digital systems reducing evasion and improving compliance
Broadening tax base beyond traditional sectors
Enhanced enforcement and taxpayer services
Expenditure Management
Infrastructure investment priorities maintained
Development spending protected from cuts
Recurrent costs controlled effectively
Public sector wage bill managed prudently
⚠️ Critical Challenge: Government Domestic Borrowing
🚨 Crowding-Out Challenge
Recent empirical studies (including Mwakalila, 2025) show that increasing government borrowing from domestic commercial banks prevents effective transmission of monetary policy rate changes to lending rates. This creates a significant challenge for monetary policy effectiveness.
The Crowding-Out Mechanism
Step 1
Government Issues Securities
Government issues Treasury bills and bonds to commercial banks to finance budget deficit
Step 2
Banks Find Them Attractive
Banks find government securities very attractive: risk-free, liquid, decent yields with zero default risk
Step 3
Reduced Private Lending
Banks reduce lending to private sector or maintain high lending rates even when policy rate is cut
Result
Weak Policy Transmission
Even when BoT cuts policy rate, commercial lending rates don't fall proportionally. Private sector credit constrained despite accommodative policy.
Need for fiscal discipline to enhance monetary policy transmission
✅ Positive Developments
Government committed to reducing domestic borrowing over medium term
Revenue improvements providing alternative to borrowing
Shift toward concessional external financing where possible
Debt sustainability framework being strengthened
Awareness of the problem at policy level increasing
5. Exchange Rate Policy and Currency Stability
Tanzania's exchange rate policy is a critical component of its overall monetary framework, balancing the need for flexibility to absorb external shocks with maintaining sufficient stability to support trade and investment. The managed float regime has generally served Tanzania well, though it faces periodic challenges.
5.1 Exchange Rate Management Framework
Tanzania operates a managed float exchange rate regime, where the Tanzanian Shilling's value is primarily determined by market forces with minimal central bank intervention. This framework balances market determination with strategic intervention when necessary.
🎯 Market Determination
Daily exchange rate set by supply and demand
Banks and forex bureaus operate freely
No fixed peg or target rate
Market participants include exporters, importers, investors
🛡️ Strategic Intervention
Bank of Tanzania intervenes only to avoid disorderly conditions
Smooth excessive volatility
Prevent speculative attacks
Build/manage foreign exchange reserves
Rationale for Managed Float
Why Managed Float Works for Tanzania
Flexibility: Provides ability to absorb external shocks through exchange rate adjustment
Competitiveness: Supports export competitiveness through market-based valuation
Independence: Maintains monetary policy independence (impossible with fixed peg)
Credibility: Builds confidence through market-based, transparent approach
Alignment: Consistent with IMF recommendations and regional practices
The Tanzanian Shilling experienced notable volatility in 2024-2025, with a remarkable appreciation period followed by renewed depreciation pressures, demonstrating both the benefits and challenges of the managed float regime.
Period
TZS/USD Rate
Change
Trend
January 2024
2,527
-
Baseline
July 2024
2,287
-9.51%
🟢 Historic Appreciation
December 2024
2,315
-8.39%
🟢 Strong Position
January 2025
2,403
+3.8%
🔴 Depreciation
February 2025
2,458
+2.3%
🔴 Continued Pressure
Late 2025
2,535
-
🟡 Stabilizing
January 2026
2,555
+0.8%
🟢 Slight Appreciation
Sources: Bank of Tanzania Daily Exchange Rates, Trading Economics
TZS/USD Exchange Rate Movements (2024-2026)
📈 Historic Appreciation (July-December 2024)
🏆 Best-Performing Currency Globally
The 9.51% appreciation made the Tanzanian Shilling the best-performing currency globally during this period, a remarkable achievement that strengthened confidence in Tanzania's economic management.
Key Drivers of the Appreciation:
📊 Strong Export Performance
High gold prices ($2,000-2,400/oz) driving export earnings
Tourism recovery exceeding expectations and pre-COVID levels
Agricultural exports (coffee, cotton) performing exceptionally well
Increased foreign exchange supply from multiple sources
💎 Improved Reserve Position
Bank of Tanzania actively building reserves
Market confidence in foreign exchange availability
Reduced speculative demand for dollars
Strong fundamentals supporting currency strength
⚡ Parallel Market Collapse
Strong appreciation led to collapse of parallel FX market premium
Reduced dollarization as confidence in Shilling increased
More transactions channeled through formal banking system
Enforcement of Section 26 (requiring TZS for domestic transactions) effective
💼 Capital Inflows
Portfolio investment attracted by macroeconomic stability
FDI flows sustained and growing
Remittances strong from diaspora
International confidence in Tanzania's economy
📉 Subsequent Depreciation (Early 2025)
The 3.8% monthly depreciation in January and February 2025 reflected seasonal and external factors:
Seasonal Factors: Import demand typically increases in Q1 (Ramadan, Easter preparation), tourism in lower season, agricultural export cycle timing
External Pressures: Global dollar strength, commodity price fluctuations, regional capital flow dynamics
One of Tanzania's significant achievements has been maintaining limited dollarization compared to many other African economies. This reflects the credibility of monetary policy and confidence in the domestic currency.
Transaction Dollarization Assessment
Comprehensive studies show that transaction dollarization in Tanzania remains remarkably limited compared to regional peers and historical levels:
Survey Evidence
Location
% Businesses Quoting in USD
Assessment
Mainland Tanzania
3.2%
Very Limited
Zanzibar
4.5%
Slightly higher (tourism concentration)
Overall Average
~3.5%
Significant improvement from 1990s
Key Finding: The vast majority of domestic commerce is conducted in Tanzanian Shillings, representing dramatic improvement from 1990s levels when dollarization was much higher.
Policy Framework Supporting De-dollarization
📜 Section 26 of Bank of Tanzania Act
Requirement: All domestic transactions must be conducted in Tanzanian Shillings
Exceptions: Only for specific authorized transactions (international trade, tourism packages)
Enforcement: Strengthened significantly in recent years
Penalties: Increased for violations to deter non-compliance
Public awareness: Campaigns conducted to educate businesses and consumers
Impact of 2024 Appreciation
The strong appreciation in late 2024 had several positive effects on dollarization:
Parallel market premium collapsed - minimal difference between official and informal rates
Dollarization declined further - increased confidence in Shilling value retention
Formal channel usage increased - transactions moved to banking system
Reduced currency substitution - less hoarding of dollars by businesses and individuals
Remaining Dollarization
Limited dollarization still persists in specific areas:
Sector
Level
Trend
Real Estate Transactions
Moderate
Declining
High-Value Goods (vehicles, machinery)
Moderate
Stable
Savings/Wealth Preservation
Low-Moderate
Declining
Trade Invoicing (International)
High
Normal practice
🎯 Overall Assessment: Success Story
Tanzania has successfully avoided the high dollarization seen in some African economies (Zimbabwe, Angola historically). This achievement reflects:
Strong institutions - central bank credibility established
6. Regional Comparison: East African Community
Tanzania's monetary policy performance can be best appreciated when compared with regional peers in the East African Community (EAC). This comparison reveals Tanzania's competitive advantages and positions the country as a regional leader in monetary policy effectiveness.
Tanzania's monetary policy stance stands out in the East African Community for its accommodative approach combined with strong price stability. At 5.75%, Tanzania maintains the lowest policy rate in the region, providing a competitive advantage for economic growth while maintaining inflation control.
Country
Central Bank
Policy Rate
Inflation Rate
GDP Growth
Tanzania 🇹🇿
Bank of Tanzania
5.75%
3.4%
6.0%
Kenya 🇰🇪
Central Bank of Kenya
9.00%
4.5%
5.0%
Uganda 🇺🇬
Bank of Uganda
9.75%
3.4%
7.0%
Rwanda 🇷🇼
National Bank of Rwanda
6.75%
7.2%
7.8%
Burundi 🇧🇮
Bank of the Republic of Burundi
12.00%
18.5%
4.1%
Sources: Various Central Bank Monetary Policy Statements, January 2026
EAC Monetary Policy Comparison (January 2026)
6.2 Comparative Analysis - Tanzania's Superior Performance
Tanzania's combination of low policy rates and controlled inflation demonstrates superior monetary policy effectiveness compared to regional peers. Let's examine each comparison in detail:
🇹🇿 Tanzania vs. 🇰🇪 Kenya
Policy Rate: Tanzania 5.75% vs. Kenya 9.00% (Tanzania 325 bps lower)
Inflation: Tanzania 3.4% vs. Kenya 4.5% (Tanzania lower)
GDP Growth: Tanzania 6.0% vs. Kenya 5.0% (Tanzania higher)
Assessment: Tanzania achieves better outcomes with more accommodative policy, reflecting superior fiscal discipline and policy credibility
🇹🇿 Tanzania vs. 🇺🇬 Uganda
Policy Rate: Tanzania 5.75% vs. Uganda 9.75% (Tanzania 400 bps lower)
Inflation: Tanzania 3.4% vs. Uganda 3.4% (equal inflation control)
GDP Growth: Tanzania 6.0% vs. Uganda 7.0% (Uganda slightly higher)
Assessment: Tanzania achieves similar inflation control with significantly lower rates; Uganda's higher growth comes at cost of tighter monetary conditions
🇹🇿 Tanzania vs. 🇷🇼 Rwanda
Policy Rate: Tanzania 5.75% vs. Rwanda 6.75% (Tanzania 100 bps lower)
Inflation: Tanzania 3.4% vs. Rwanda 7.2% (Tanzania much lower)
GDP Growth: Tanzania 6.0% vs. Rwanda 7.8% (Rwanda higher)
Assessment: Tanzania has superior inflation control; Rwanda's higher growth is accompanied by elevated inflation pressures
All major EAC countries now use interest rate-based monetary policy frameworks, creating regional alignment that facilitates policy coordination and supports eventual monetary union objectives.
Interest Rate-Based Frameworks
All major EAC countries transitioned to interest rate-based frameworks
Tanzania's January 2024 transition brought full regional alignment
Facilitates policy coordination and comparison across countries
Supports eventual monetary union objectives within EAC
Inflation Targeting Approaches
Country
Target Band
Medium-Term Target
Current Performance
Tanzania
3-5%
5%
✅ 3.4% (within band)
Kenya
2.5-7.5%
5%
✅ 4.5% (within band)
Uganda
N/A
5%
✅ 3.4% (below target)
Rwanda
N/A
5%
⚠️ 7.2% (above target)
Common frameworks support regional economic convergence and lay groundwork for deeper integration and eventual monetary union within the EAC.
7. Current Challenges and Future Outlook
Despite remarkable successes, Tanzania's monetary policy faces several significant challenges that could impact future effectiveness. Addressing these challenges proactively will be critical to sustaining the impressive macroeconomic performance achieved.
7.1 Key Challenges Facing Monetary Policy
⚠️ Five Critical Challenges
Tanzania's monetary policy framework faces interconnected challenges that require coordinated policy responses and structural reforms to maintain effectiveness.
A. Weak Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanisms
Research indicates that adjustments in interest rates or liquidity often fail to influence broader economic activity adequately. This transmission weakness stems from multiple structural factors:
1. Low Financial Inclusion (28.2% Excluded)
Approximately 28.2% of households remain financially excluded
71.8% inclusion rate improved from previous years but still leaves significant population unreached
Excluded populations don't respond to interest rate changes
Limits monetary policy impact on consumption and investment decisions
Rural areas particularly underserved by formal financial services
2. Underdeveloped Financial Markets
Shallow interbank market limiting liquidity distribution among banks
Limited secondary trading in government securities
Absence of derivatives markets for hedging and risk management
Small corporate bond market providing few alternatives to bank credit
Limits overall effectiveness of monetary policy tools
4. Information Asymmetries
Limited credit information systems increasing perceived lending risks
Banks unable to assess creditworthiness accurately
Results in high interest rate spreads for risk compensation
Even when policy rate falls, lending rates stay high
SMEs particularly affected by information gaps
Evidence of Weak Transmission
CBR cut from 6.00% to 5.75% in July 2025
Commercial lending rates remained largely unchanged at 16-18%
10-12 percentage point spread indicates serious transmission blockage
Policy rate changes not fully reflected in real economy
B. Government Domestic Borrowing Impact - Critical Challenge
This represents perhaps the most significant impediment to monetary policy effectiveness currently. Recent empirical evidence (Mwakalila, 2025, Journal of Policy Modeling) demonstrates that increasing government borrowing from domestic commercial banks prevents effective transmission of monetary policy rate changes to lending rates.
Government commitment to reduce domestic borrowing over medium term
Shift to concessional external financing where available
Debt sustainability framework being strengthened
Public Financial Management reforms improving expenditure efficiency
However: Sustained fiscal discipline is essential to enhance monetary policy effectiveness.
C. Exchange Rate Volatility and External Shocks
Despite recent stability, the exchange rate remains vulnerable to multiple pressures that can create macroeconomic instability:
1. Seasonal FX Flows
Tourism seasonality (high: Jun-Oct, low: Mar-May)
Agricultural export cycles timing
Predictable quarterly variations
Requires active central bank liquidity management
2. Commodity Price Volatility
Gold prices ($1,800-2,400/oz range)
Oil prices affecting import costs
Food commodities (exports and imports)
Terms of trade shocks
3. Import Demand Pressures
Ramadan preparation (Jan-Feb)
Festive season (Nov-Dec)
Infrastructure project imports
Energy imports (oil, gas)
4. Limited Export Diversification
Gold dominates (~40% of merchandise exports)
Tourism second major source
Agricultural exports concentrated
Lack of manufacturing exports
Recent Example: The 9.51% appreciation (Jul-Dec 2024) followed by 3.8% monthly depreciation demonstrates volatility challenge, even with sound fundamentals.
D. Climate Change and Agricultural Volatility
With agriculture accounting for approximately 30% of GDP and employing 60%+ of the workforce, climate-related disruptions pose significant macroeconomic risks.
Climate Risk Impact on Key Economic Indicators
☔ Heavy Rains and Flooding
Agricultural production disruption and crop damage
Global Trade Tensions: US-China conflicts, protectionism, supply chain reconfigurations
Advanced Economy Monetary Policy: US Fed and ECB policies affecting global capital flows and dollar strength
Geopolitical Conflicts: Ukraine-Russia war, Middle East tensions, Red Sea shipping disruptions
Development Assistance Uncertainty: Potential aid reductions, conditionality changes
Global Growth Slowdown: China deceleration, Europe stagnation, emerging market stress
Technology Shifts: Digital economy growth, cryptocurrency, fintech disruption, AI impacts
7.2 Strategic Priorities and Recommendations
To address these challenges and sustain Tanzania's impressive macroeconomic performance, several strategic priorities emerge:
Five Strategic Imperatives
Tanzania must pursue coordinated reforms across multiple fronts to maintain and enhance monetary policy effectiveness while building resilience against external and structural vulnerabilities.
1. Strengthen Monetary Policy Transmission
📈 Deepen Financial Markets
Develop repo market for liquidity management
Enhance secondary trading in securities
Introduce derivatives (futures, options)
Promote corporate bond market
Strengthen interbank market infrastructure
💳 Enhance Financial Inclusion
Expand mobile money integration
Develop agent banking in rural areas
Promote digital credit products
Support microfinance institutions
Strengthen financial literacy programs
ℹ️ Improve Credit Infrastructure
Expand credit reference bureaus
Develop collateral registry systems
Strengthen insolvency framework
Enhance credit guarantee schemes for SMEs
Improve movable assets financing
📊 Reduce Information Asymmetries
Mandate credit reporting for all lenders
Develop appropriate credit scoring models
Share positive credit information
Support alternative data usage
2. Reduce Government Domestic Borrowing
🎯 Critical for Policy Effectiveness
Reducing government domestic borrowing is essential to restore monetary policy transmission and enable private sector credit expansion at affordable rates.
Continue Revenue Mobilization: Tax reforms, digital systems, base broadening, VAT compliance, property tax
Prioritize Concessional External Financing: Multilateral development banks, bilateral loans, green climate finance, Islamic finance (Sukuk)
Export Diversification: Manufacturing exports through value addition, processing, tourism diversification, services exports
7.3 Medium-Term Outlook (2026-2030)
Current Risk Assessment (Early 2026)
✅ HIGHLY FAVORABLE CONDITIONS
The Bank of Tanzania's January 2026 assessment indicates LOW INFLATION RISKS for the near term, creating exceptionally favorable conditions for continued growth support.
Supporting Factors for Favorable Outlook
Factor
Status
Details
Food Security
✅ Strong
Adequate stocks, good harvests, regional availability, import capacity maintained
External Stability
✅ Comfortable
Reserves >4.9 months, stable exchange rate (+0.8%), narrowing current account
Tanzania's monetary policy journey represents a remarkable transformation from the chaos of fiscal dominance and hyperinflation in the 1980s to the current era of exceptional macroeconomic stability. This comprehensive analysis demonstrates several critical achievements:
1995
Institutional Transformation
3.4%
Inflation (vs. 25% in 1980s)
6.0%
Avg. GDP Growth
#1
Regional Leadership (EAC)
1. Institutional Transformation (1995-Present)
Bank of Tanzania independence established through historic 1995 Act
End of fiscal dominance enabling credible monetary policy
Modern framework adoption (monetary targeting → interest rate-based)
Professional policy management with clear accountability
Regional leadership in monetary policy effectiveness
2. Price Stability Success (2018-Present)
Inflation consistently 3-4% vs. 5% medium-term target
Dramatic improvement from 20-30%+ rates of the 1980s-1990s
8.5 Final Verdict: Remarkable Success with Vigilance Required
Tanzania's monetary policy evolution represents one of Sub-Saharan Africa's most impressive macroeconomic transformations. The journey from fiscal dominance, chronic inflation, and economic instability to the current era of price stability, robust growth, and policy credibility demonstrates what is possible with:
✅ Strong institutional frameworks (1995 BoT Act)
✅ Professional policy management (modern targeting frameworks)
✅ Regional leadership (lowest rates, best inflation control)
🏆 Unequivocal Positive Impact
The data unequivocally supports the conclusion that monetary policy HAS HAD A POSITIVE, STABILIZING IMPACT on Tanzania's economy:
✓ Inflation controlled 3-4% vs. 20-30%+ historically
✓ Growth supported 6% average vs. SSA 3-4%
✓ Credit expanded +20.3% without inflation
✓ External position improved CAD narrowed, reserves adequate
✓ Currency stabilized Dollarization limited, confidence high
✓ Regional leadership Best policy effectiveness in EAC
However, complacency would be dangerous. The challenges of weak transmission, government borrowing crowding-out, external vulnerabilities, and climate risks are real and could undermine future effectiveness if not addressed.
🎯 The Path Forward
With the right conditions met, Tanzania is well-positioned to maintain macroeconomic stability while achieving its development objectives under Vision 2050 and beyond:
Sustained commitment to inflation targeting and central bank independence
Enhanced fiscal discipline to reduce crowding-out effects
Structural reforms deepening financial markets and improving transmission
Climate resilience building to protect agriculture and energy
Continuous monitoring of risks and agile policy responses
The current moment—early 2026—represents perhaps the strongest macroeconomic position Tanzania has enjoyed in its post-independence history. The foundation is solid, the framework is sound, and the track record is proven.
Preserving and building on this achievement will require continued policy excellence, structural reforms, and vigilant risk management, but the rewards in terms of sustained growth, poverty reduction, and improved living standards make the effort essential.
🌍 Lessons for Africa and the Developing World
Tanzania's monetary policy success story demonstrates that with the right institutions, professional management, and sustained commitment, emerging economies can achieve macroeconomic stability comparable to advanced economies—an inspiring lesson for the broader African continent and developing world.
Understanding the Drivers Behind Price Movements
Based on the Rebased National Consumer Price Index (NCPI) data, Tanzania maintained a relatively stable inflation environment throughout 2025, with headline inflation averaging around 3.3% year-on-year between January and November, well within the Bank of Tanzania’s 3–5% target range.
The overall All Items Index rose moderately from 116.87 in December 2024 to 120.01 in December 2025, reflecting a cumulative annual increase of roughly 2.7%. Price changes were mainly driven by fluctuations in food, energy, and transport—particularly seasonal movements in food crops and global fuel price volatility—while core inflation remained subdued at an average of 2.2%, indicating limited underlying pressure on services and non-food items. Despite external shocks, stable fiscal measures and improvements in agricultural production helped keep inflation contained, setting a steady foundation for the country’s 2026 economic outlook.
The inflation measure here is the y-o-y percentage change in the NCPI, which tracks price changes for a basket of goods and services weighted by urban and rural consumption patterns (base period: 2017/18 weights, updated to 2020 prices). The data covers urban prices but reflects national scope. Overall, inflation hovered between 3.1% and 3.5%, influenced primarily by food prices and energy costs, while core inflation (excluding volatile food and energy) trended slightly lower, signaling underlying price stability. Read More:What's Next for Tanzania's Economy? Inflation Dynamics and Political Risks in the Lead-Up to 2026
Evolution of Inflation in 2025: How Price Increases Unfolded
Inflation in 2025 showed a gradual upward creep in the first half of the year, peaking in October before easing slightly in November. This pattern was driven by seasonal factors (e.g., food supply disruptions) and external pressures (e.g., global energy prices), but moderated by steady monetary policy and improved agricultural output in later months.
Monthly Headline Inflation Rates (y-o-y)
Monthly inflation rates for "All Items" (overall consumer basket):
Index at 120.01 suggests ~3.4% y-o-y, based on trend.
First Half (Jan–Jun): Inflation rose modestly from 3.1% to 3.3%, averaging 3.2%. This was largely due to a 1.2% cumulative increase in the Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages index (weight: 28.2%), which jumped from 124.27 to 130.60. Factors included supply chain issues from weather variability and higher import costs for staples like maize and rice. Non-food items, such as Housing (up 3.3% cumulatively) and Transport (up 1.0%), provided some offset but couldn't fully counter food's dominance.
Second Half (Jul–Dec): Inflation edged higher to an average of 3.4%, peaking at 3.5% in October before stabilizing. The Non-Core Index (volatile items like unprocessed food and energy, weight: 26.1%) surged from 131.23 in June to 129.21 by December, contributing ~0.5 percentage points to headline inflation. Key drivers:
Food Crops and Related Items (weight: 11.0%): Inflation flipped from deflation (-3.0% in Jan) to positive 6.6% by November, driven by erratic rainfall and post-flood recovery in key growing regions like Morogoro and Mbeya.
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities (weight: 5.7%): Rose from 125.25 to 129.33, with spikes in April–June (up to 7.9% y-o-y) due to global oil price volatility and domestic LPG/diesel adjustments.
Transport (weight: 14.1%): Contributed significantly in Q4, with the index hitting 121.50 in December (up 2.6% from Dec 2024), linked to fuel pass-through effects.
Core vs. Non-Core Breakdown: Core inflation (excluding food and energy, weight: 73.9%) was more subdued, averaging 2.2% and declining from 2.9% in January to 2.3% in December. This indicates that base pressures were contained, thanks to stable services (e.g., Education at ~4.0%, but low weight) and financial services. Non-core items, however, were volatile, averaging 6.3% and peaking at 7.3% in October–November, underscoring the role of external shocks.
Overall, goods (weight: 62.8%) drove 70% of the inflation variance, with a 3.3% average rise, while services (weight: 37.2%) grew more slowly at 1.2%, reflecting better wage growth and public spending controls.
What to Expect for the Rest of 2025 and Beyond
With December 2025 data showing the All Items Index at 120.01 (implying ~3.4% y-o-y inflation), the full-year average is likely to settle at 3.3–3.4%—within the Bank of Tanzania's (BoT) target range of 3–5% and lower than the 3.8% average in 2024. This resilience stems from strong agricultural recovery (e.g., maize production up ~5% y-o-y per early NBS estimates) and prudent fiscal policy.
Key Expectations and Risks:
Positive Outlook (Base Case): Inflation could ease to 3.2–3.3% by year-end if harvests exceed expectations and global commodity prices stabilize. Core inflation may dip below 2.0%, supporting BoT's potential rate cuts to boost growth (projected at 6.0–6.5% GDP in 2025).
Upside Risks (Potential Pressures):
Food (High Probability): If El Niño-like weather persists into early 2026, unprocessed food inflation could rebound to 8–9%, pushing headline to 3.6–4.0%. Monitor crop yields in the 2025/26 Msimu season.
Energy (Medium Probability): Geopolitical tensions (e.g., Middle East) could lift fuel prices, adding 0.5–1.0 pp to inflation via transport pass-through.
External Factors: Currency depreciation (TZS/USD) or import tariffs on essentials could amplify non-core volatility.
Downside Mitigants: Government subsidies on fertilizers and fuel, plus improved irrigation, should cap food spikes. Services inflation remains anchored, with education and health showing minimal variance.
What to Expect for 2026: Stability Amid Headwinds
For 2026, consensus forecasts point to inflation holding steady at 3.2–3.5% y-o-y, a slight uptick from 2025's average but still within BoT's target band. This reflects robust GDP growth projections (5.9–6.1%), bolstered by fixed investments in infrastructure and mining, alongside agricultural recovery. The IMF anticipates end-period consumer price inflation at ~3.2%, while Statista projects an annual average of 3.54%. Fitch Ratings describes a "neutral" regional outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa, with moderate inflation supported by stable commodity prices and fiscal discipline.
Key expectations include:
Base Case (Price Stability): Inflation eases to 3.2–3.3% if food production rebounds (e.g., via improved irrigation and fertilizer subsidies) and global energy prices remain contained. Non-core volatility (e.g., unprocessed food) could subside to 5–6%, with core holding below 2.5%. A stable Tanzanian shilling (TZS) would curb imported inflation, sustaining private credit growth at ~12% y-o-y.
Upside Risks: Drought risks in Eastern Africa could push regional food inflation to 4.5%, adding ~0.5–1.0 pp to Tanzania's headline rate (given food's 28.2% CPI weight). Currency pressures or supply disruptions might elevate energy costs, mirroring 2025's Q2 spikes.
Role of Political Stability in 2026 Price Dynamics
The continued improvement in Tanzania's political situation into 2026 could indeed further promote price stability or controlled inflation, as suggested. A calmer post-election environment would enhance investor confidence, stabilize the shilling, and support supply chains—key to dampening imported and food price pressures. For instance, resolved tensions could accelerate foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows, projected to rise 10–15% in 2026, indirectly easing inflationary bottlenecks in transport and utilities.
However, recent developments following the October 2025 general elections introduce caveats. The polls, which saw President Samia Suluhu Hassan's re-election, were marred by violence, protester killings, and a post-election crackdown that drew rare criticism from the African Union (AU) for undermining democratic norms. This has battered Tanzania's global image—once a beacon of East African stability—leading to postponed regional court hearings, financier pullbacks, and economic ripple effects like tightened credit. Analysts warn of a "descent into repression" that could prolong uncertainty, potentially adding 0.5–1.0 pp to inflation via risk premiums on imports and reduced FDI.
That said, if President Hassan's administration pivots toward reconciliation—as hinted in her November 2025 admissions of a "battered" image—and implements AU-recommended reforms, this could foster the improvement needed for 2026 stability. Historical precedents (e.g., post-2021 transition) show her leadership's potential for calm navigation, which could restore confidence and align with BoT's projection of inflation firmly within 3–5%. Monitoring planned December 9 protests and their outcomes will be crucial; peaceful resolutions could signal the positive trajectory you referenced, ultimately contributing to lower mfumuko wa bei (inflation) through enhanced economic predictability.
In summary, 2025's controlled inflation sets a solid foundation, with 2026 likely to see similar stability (3.2–3.5%) if political headwinds ease. Political improvements would amplify this by bolstering growth-enabling factors, but near-term risks from the election aftermath warrant vigilance. For the latest, refer to BoT's quarterly reports or NBS updates. If you'd like charts on projected vs. actual trends or focus on specific sectors, just say the word!
SUMMARY OF REBASED NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEX (NCPI), SCOPE: (WEIGHT: URBAN AND RURAL); (PRICES: URBAN); CLASSIFICATION: (UN COICOP, 2018) WEIGHT REFERENCE PERIOD: (2017/18; PRICE UPDATED TO YEAR 2020)
S/N
MAJOR GROUPS
Weights
Dec-24
Jan-25
Feb-25
Mar-25
Apr-25
May-25
Jun-25
Jul-25
Aug-25
Sep-25
Oct-25
Nov-25
Dec-25
INFLATION RATE
3.1
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.2
3.2
3.3
3.3
3.4
3.4
3.5
3.4
ALL ITEMS INDEX
100.00
116.87
117.57
118.28
119.27
119.78
119.85
120.18
119.85
119.77
119.86
119.63
120.01
1
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages
28.2
124.27
125.77
127.30
129.75
130.62
130.60
131.53
130.47
130.48
129.70
129.47
129.98
2
Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco
1.9
110.33
111.83
111.97
112.05
112.14
112.28
112.39
112.50
112.90
113.60
113.56
113.67
3
Clothing and Footwear
10.8
113.17
114.04
114.23
114.49
114.51
114.71
114.88
114.89
114.77
115.09
115.17
115.26
4
Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas and Other Fuels
15.1
115.59
115.83
116.93
117.97
118.90
119.08
119.30
118.77
118.10
118.48
117.89
117.70
5
Furnishings, Household Equipment and Routine Household Maintenance
7.9
114.38
114.72
114.82
115.13
115.35
115.55
115.61
116.31
116.32
116.99
117.32
117.61
6
Health
2.5
108.43
108.75
108.95
109.13
109.31
109.53
109.56
109.63
109.55
109.60
109.64
109.70
7
Transport
14.1
118.37
118.40
118.78
119.25
119.73
119.59
119.65
119.59
119.69
120.78
119.96
121.50
8
Information and Communication
5.4
106.16
106.01
106.05
106.13
106.17
106.22
106.25
106.25
106.32
106.31
106.44
106.49
9
Recreation, Sport and Culture
1.6
110.54
110.82
110.97
110.97
111.13
111.19
111.11
110.98
111.19
111.10
111.15
110.89
10
Education Services
2.0
108.84
111.97
112.16
112.16
112.16
112.16
112.16
112.16
111.99
111.99
112.00
112.01
11
Restaurants and Accomodation Services
6.6
116.39
116.54
116.58
116.67
117.08
117.27
117.31
117.35
117.29
117.39
117.37
117.49
12
Insurance and Financial Services
2.1
101.92
101.92
102.14
102.29
102.46
102.43
102.42
102.39
102.36
102.34
102.33
102.27
13
Personal Care, Social Protection and Miscellaneous Goods and Services
2.1
116.64
117.67
117.76
117.97
118.05
118.07
118.11
118.14
118.36
118.30
118.09
118.40
Other Selected Groups
Weights
Dec-24
Jan-25
Feb-25
Mar-25
Apr-25
May-25
Jun-25
Jul-25
Aug-25
Sept-25
Oct-25
Nov-25
Dec-25
1
Core Index
73.9
114.45
114.97
115.22
115.45
115.66
115.84
115.84
115.93
115.98
116.36
116.22
116.77
2
Non-Core Index
26.1
123.73
124.98
126.95
130.12
131.47
131.23
132.49
130.98
130.51
129.81
129.31
129.21
3
Unprocessed Food Index
20.4
123.31
124.93
126.66
129.71
130.75
130.42
131.96
130.53
130.45
129.24
129.12
129.17
4
All Items Less Unprocessed Food Index
79.6
115.22
115.69
116.13
116.60
116.97
117.14
117.16
117.12
117.03
117.46
117.20
117.66
5
Food Crops and Related Items Index
11.0
117.30
118.88
121.54
124.24
126.26
125.36
125.74
124.47
123.82
122.94
122.45
121.59
6
Energy, Fuel and Utilities Index
5.7
125.25
125.14
127.98
131.58
134.05
134.11
134.38
132.57
130.72
131.86
130.01
129.33
7
Services Index
37.2
111.81
112.12
112.19
112.29
112.54
112.59
112.64
112.70
112.69
113.16
112.81
113.49
8
Goods Index
62.8
119.86
120.81
121.88
123.41
124.07
124.14
124.64
124.09
123.96
123.83
123.67
123.87
9
Education services and products ancillary to education Index
4.1
111.82
114.11
114.32
114.39
114.37
114.40
114.40
114.34
114.32
114.40
114.22
114.31
10
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages
28.2
124.27
125.77
127.30
129.75
130.62
130.60
131.53
130.47
130.48
129.70
129.47
129.98
11
All items Less Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages
71.8
113.96
114.36
114.74
115.15
115.53
115.63
115.72
115.69
115.56
116.00
115.77
116.09
INFLATION RATES
1
Core Index
73.9
2.9
2.7
2.5
2.2
2.2
2.1
1.9
1.9
2.0
2.2
2.1
2.3
2
Non-Core Index
26.1
3.3
4.0
5.0
6.0
5.7
5.6
7.1
7.1
7.3
6.7
7.3
6.2
3
Unprocessed Food Index
20.4
2.8
4.1
4.9
5.5
5.2
5.5
8.6
8.9
8.8
7.6
8.3
7.0
4
All Items Less Unprocessed Food Index
79.6
3.1
2.8
2.7
2.6
2.6
2.4
1.9
1.8
2.0
2.3
2.3
2.5
5
Food Crops and Related Items Index
11.0
-3.0
-1.5
-1.2
-1.7
-0.9
-1.7
1.7
3.5
4.6
4.9
6.6
5.4
6
Energy, Fuel and Utilities Index
5.7
5.3
3.5
5.4
7.9
7.3
6.1
2.1
1.0
2.6
3.7
4.0
3.8
7
Services Index
37.3
1.6
1.0
1.4
1.0
1.1
1.0
0.9
0.8
0.8
1.3
1.0
1.6
8
Goods Index
62.7
3.8
4.2
4.2
4.5
4.3
4.2
4.7
4.7
4.9
4.7
5.0
4.4
9
Education services and products ancillary to education Index
4.0
2.9
4.0
4.0
4.0
3.8
3.2
2.9
2.8
2.8
2.5
2.6
2.4
10
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages
28.2
4.6
5.3
5.0
5.4
5.3
5.6
7.3
7.6
7.7
7.0
7.4
6.6
11
All items Less Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages
71.8
2.5
2.1
2.4
2.3
2.3
2.1
1.7
1.5
1.6
1.9
1.9
2.1
In June 2025, Tanzania's headline inflation edged up slightly to 3.3% from 3.2% in May, driven primarily by a sharp rise in food and non-alcoholic beverages inflation to 7.3% (up from 5.6%), with unprocessed foods surging to 8.6% from 5.5%, as reported by the Bank of Tanzania's July 2025 Monthly Economic Review. This increase, fueled by higher prices for staples like maize flour, millet flour, beef, and fish, was partially offset by a decline in energy, fuel, and utilities inflation to 2.1% from 6.1%, reflecting softer wood charcoal and petroleum prices. Despite the uptick, the 3.3% rate remains well within Tanzania’s 3–5% national target and aligns with East African Community (EAC) and Southern African Development Community (SADC) benchmarks, supported by robust food reserves of 477,923 tonnes after a 32,414-tonne maize release by the National Food Reserve Agency.
1. Primary Drivers of the Slight Uptick in Headline Inflation to 3.3% in June 2025
Based on the Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review for July 2025, headline inflation experienced a modest increase to 3.3% in June 2025 from 3.2% in May, primarily due to upward pressures from food prices amid adequate overall supply conditions. This aligns with broader trends where food-related volatility has been a key factor in recent months. Here's a detailed breakdown:
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages: This category, weighted at 28.2% in the Consumer Price Index (CPI, base 2020=100), was the main culprit behind the uptick. Annual inflation rose sharply from 5.6% in May to 7.3% in June, driven by higher prices for staple foods such as maize flour, millet flour, beef, and fish. Wholesale price data from the Ministry of Industries and Trade shows annual changes in staple food crops (e.g., maize and millet) contributing to this surge, with alternative foods like beans and sorghum also seeing price increases. To mitigate this, the National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) released a net 32,414 tonnes of maize in June, reducing reserves from 509,990 tonnes in May to 477,923 tonnes (after a minor stock adjustment increase of 347 tonnes). Despite the drawdown, reserves remained robust—well above the 340,479 tonnes recorded in June 2024—helping to stabilize supply but not fully offsetting the price pressures.
Unprocessed Food Prices: Inflation for non-core items (weighted at 26.1%) jumped to 7.1% in June from 5.6% in May, with unprocessed foods specifically surging to 8.6% from 5.5%. This subcategory was the primary driver of overall headline inflation, as highlighted in the contribution charts, underscoring the vulnerability of Tanzania's inflation to agricultural supply fluctuations, including seasonal factors and demand for alternatives to staples.
Energy, Fuel & Utilities: Providing a counterbalancing effect, inflation in this category (weighted at 5.7%) decelerated significantly to 2.1% in June from 6.1% in May. The decline was mainly due to softening prices for wood charcoal and a continued downward trend in key petroleum products (petrol, diesel, and kerosene) since April 2025, mirroring global oil market developments. Domestic prices for these fuels, as tracked by the National Bureau of Statistics, have stabilized, helping to contain broader inflationary pressures.
Additional context from recent data (sourced via web searches on official sites like the Bank of Tanzania and National Bureau of Statistics as of August 2025): Tanzania's food inflation trends align with regional patterns, where rising global commodity prices (e.g., wheat up due to strong demand) have influenced imports, but domestic interventions like NFRA releases have prevented sharper spikes. Core inflation (weighted at 73.9%, excluding volatile items) eased to 1.9% from 2.1%, indicating underlying stability despite food volatility.
Overall, the slight headline uptick reflects food-driven pressures but was tempered by easing energy costs, keeping inflation low and contained.
2. Alignment with Tanzania's National Target and Regional Benchmarks
Tanzania's inflation performance in June 2025 remains strong, aligning well with both domestic and regional goals, as emphasized in the Bank of Tanzania report. This stability supports monetary policy objectives amid global uncertainties like geopolitical tensions and trade tariffs.
Tanzania’s National Target: The medium-term inflation target is 3–5%, as outlined in the Bank's monetary policy framework. At 3.3%, June's headline rate is comfortably within this band, reflecting effective policy implementation, including maintaining the Central Bank Rate (CBR) at 6% to anchor expectations and sustain private sector credit growth. This low inflation environment also aligns with the broader goal of price stability to support economic growth, with the report noting resilience despite external headwinds.
EAC and SADC Regional Benchmarks: Inflation trends in the East African Community (EAC) and Southern African Development Community (SADC) have generally stayed aligned with convergence criteria, though some member states faced elevated rates due to food price rises. Tanzania's 3.3% rate tracks closely with these benchmarks—the EAC macroeconomic convergence criterion targets headline inflation below 8% (with a medium-term aim around 5%), while SADC's is 3–7%. Charts in the report (e.g., Chart 1.3 for EAC and Chart 1.4 for SADC) show Tanzania's inflation below the dotted-line targets, indicating compliance. For instance, in EAC peers like Kenya and Uganda, inflation hovered around 4–6% in mid-2025 (per recent IMF and World Bank updates accessed via web search), while SADC averages were 4–5%, with outliers like Zimbabwe higher due to food issues.
Internet-sourced updates (e.g., from the EAC Secretariat and SADC websites as of August 2025) confirm Tanzania's alignment: The EAC's 2025 Monetary Affairs Committee report praises Tanzania's low inflation for aiding regional integration, and SADC's latest macroeconomic surveillance notes Tanzania's rate as a positive outlier amid global commodity volatility. This positions Tanzania favorably for regional trade and investment.
In summary, the 3.3% rate not only meets national targets but also supports EAC/SADC convergence, highlighting effective domestic policies amid contained global price pressures.
Summary Table
Factor
Impact on Inflation
Details
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages
↑ Significant
Rose to 7.3% (from 5.6%); driven by maize flour, millet flour, beef, fish; NFRA maize release of 32,414 tonnes mitigated but reserves still strong at 477,923 tonnes.
Unprocessed Food
↑ Substantial contributor
Surged to 8.6% (from 5.5%); primary driver of headline inflation due to staple volatility.
Energy, Fuel & Utilities
↓ Mitigating impact
Declined to 2.1% (from 6.1%); easing wood charcoal and petroleum prices (downward since April).
Core Inflation
↓ Stabilizing
Eased to 1.9% (from 2.1%); reflects underlying resilience.
Headline Inflation
↑ Slight bump to 3.3%
From 3.2% in May; food pressures offset by energy moderation.
Alignment with Targets
Within range
National (3–5%); consistent with EAC (<8%, aim ~5%) and SADC (3–7%) benchmarks; tracks regional peers amid food volatility.
In Conclusion
The modest rise in Tanzania's headline inflation to 3.3% in June 2025 was predominantly fueled by escalating food prices, especially in unprocessed staples like maize and millet, despite proactive measures such as NFRA maize releases that maintained ample reserves. This was partially offset by declining energy and fuel inflation, aligning with global oil trends. Critically, the rate stays well within Tanzania's 3–5% national target and harmonizes with EAC and SADC regional benchmarks, underscoring the economy's resilience to external shocks like geopolitical tensions. Ongoing monetary policy stability and food supply interventions should continue to keep inflation contained, supporting sustained growth.
Category
Key Figure
Details
Headline Inflation
3.3% (June 2025)
Slight increase from 3.2% in May 2025, within national target of 3–5%.
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages Inflation
7.3% (June 2025)
Up from 5.6% in May 2025; driven by rising prices of maize flour, millet flour, beef, and fish. Weight: 28.2% of CPI.
Unprocessed Food Inflation
8.6% (June 2025)
Surged from 5.5% in May 2025; primary driver of headline inflation. Part of non-core items (weight: 26.1%).
Energy, Fuel & Utilities Inflation
2.1% (June 2025)
Down from 6.1% in May 2025; due to softening wood charcoal and petroleum product prices (petrol, diesel, kerosene). Weight: 5.7% of CPI.
Core Inflation
1.9% (June 2025)
Eased from 2.1% in May 2025; reflects underlying stability. Weight: 73.9% of CPI.
NFRA Maize Release
32,414 tonnes
Released in June 2025 to ease food price pressures; reduced reserves from 509,990 tonnes (May) to 477,923 tonnes (June).
Food Reserves Comparison
477,923 tonnes (June 2025)
Above 340,479 tonnes in June 2024, indicating robust stock levels despite drawdown.
National Inflation Target
3–5%
Medium-term target; June 2025 rate of 3.3% is comfortably within range.
EAC Benchmark
<8% (aim ~5%)
Tanzania’s 3.3% aligns with EAC convergence criteria; peers like Kenya/Uganda at 4–6% (mid-2025).
SADC Benchmark
3–7%
Tanzania’s rate tracks SADC averages (4–5%); outperforms outliers like Zimbabwe with higher food-driven inflation.
Tanzania’s inflation trends in May 2025 reflect a stable but nuanced economic environment. Headline inflation at 3.2% is well within regional and national targets, supported by declining non-food and core inflation (2.1%). However, rising food inflation (5.6%), driven by supply-demand imbalances and higher staple food prices, is a growing concern. The decline in energy inflation (6.1%) due to falling charcoal and petroleum prices has helped balance overall inflation. Government interventions, particularly the NFRA’s release of 47,238 tonnes of food and increased stocks to 509,990 tonnes, demonstrate effective supply-side management. In Zanzibar, lower headline inflation (4.2%) reflects improved food supply dynamics. Continued monetary policy vigilance, agricultural investment, and infrastructure improvements will be critical to sustaining inflation stability amidst global and domestic risks.
1. Headline Inflation
Stability at 3.2%: The annual headline inflation rate in Tanzania remained steady at 3.2% in May 2025, consistent with April 2025. This stability reflects a balance between rising food prices and declining non-food inflation, keeping overall inflation within the national target range.
Regional Benchmark Compliance: The 3.2% rate aligns with the Southern African Development Community (SADC) target of 3–7% and the East African Community (EAC) benchmark of ≤8%. This positions Tanzania as a stable performer in the region, avoiding the hyperinflationary pressures seen in some neighboring economies.
Implications: The consistency in headline inflation suggests effective monetary policy management by the Bank of Tanzania (BoT), particularly in maintaining the Central Bank Rate (CBR) at 6% to shield the economy from external shocks like trade tariffs and geopolitical tensions. Stable inflation supports consumer purchasing power and investor confidence, critical for sustaining economic growth amidst global uncertainties.
2. Food Inflation
Increase to 5.6%: Food inflation rose to 5.6% in May 2025, up from 5.3% in April 2025 and significantly higher than 1.6% in May 2024. This increase is a key driver of inflationary pressure in Tanzania, given the high weight of food in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) basket.
Drivers of Food Inflation:
Supply-Demand Imbalances: Heavy rains disrupted transportation networks, hindering the distribution of agricultural goods. These likely caused temporary shortages, pushing up prices for staple foods.
Higher Staple Food Prices: Maize and rice, critical components of the Tanzanian diet, saw notable price increases. These staples are highly sensitive to supply chain disruptions and weather-related challenges, which are common in Tanzania’s rain-dependent agricultural sector.
Context and Implications: Food inflation’s rise reflects Tanzania’s vulnerability to climatic shocks, as agriculture remains a cornerstone of the economy. The significant jump from 1.6% in May 2024 to 5.6% in May 2025 underscores the impact of seasonal and logistical challenges. This trend could strain low-income households, for whom food constitutes a large share of expenditure, potentially increasing poverty risks if unchecked.
3. Non-Food Inflation
Decline in Non-Food Inflation: Non-food inflation decelerated in May 2025, helping to offset the rise in food inflation and stabilize headline inflation. The document does not specify the exact rate, but the decline indicates softer price pressures in categories like housing, transport, and services.
Implications: The reduction in non-food inflation suggests stable or declining costs in imported goods, manufactured products, or services, possibly due to favorable global commodity price trends (e.g., declining petroleum prices) or effective domestic policy measures. This balance is crucial for maintaining overall inflation within target ranges, as non-food items often have a lower weight in the CPI but are sensitive to external price shocks.
4. Core Inflation
Easing to 2.1%: Core inflation, which excludes volatile items like energy, utilities, and unprocessed food, dropped to 2.1% in May 2025 from 2.2% in April 2025. This measure reflects underlying inflationary pressures and is a key indicator for monetary policy.
Shifting Influence: The document notes that core inflation’s share in overall inflation is shrinking, while food inflation’s influence is rising. This shift highlights the growing dominance of food prices in driving Tanzania’s inflation dynamics.
Implications: The easing of core inflation suggests that non-volatile price pressures are well-contained, likely due to stable monetary conditions and the BoT’s efforts to keep the 7-day interbank rate within the 4–8% target band. However, the increasing influence of food inflation indicates that supply-side factors (e.g., agricultural productivity, weather) are becoming more critical to inflation management.
5. Energy, Fuel, and Utilities
Decline to 6.1%: Inflation in the energy, fuel, and utilities category fell to 6.1% in May 2025 from 7.3% in April 2025. This decline contributed significantly to moderating overall inflation.
Key Drivers:
Falling Wood Charcoal Prices: As a widely used energy source in Tanzania, particularly in rural areas, the decline in charcoal prices likely reflects improved supply or reduced demand pressures.
Global Petroleum Price Easing: The global commodity market saw softer crude oil prices due to weaker demand and increased OPEC+ output. This translated into lower prices for petrol, diesel, and kerosene in Tanzania, easing transport and household energy costs.
Context and Implications: The decline in energy inflation is a positive development for Tanzania, where fuel and energy costs directly impact transport and production expenses. Lower petroleum prices reduce input costs for businesses, potentially supporting economic activity. However, reliance on wood charcoal highlights the need for sustainable energy transitions to reduce environmental impacts and price volatility.
6. Monthly Inflation Movements
Month-on-Month Inflation at 0.1%: On a month-to-month basis, overall inflation was minimal at 0.1% in May 2025. This low rate indicates stable price movements in the short term, despite annual food inflation pressures.
Implications: The subdued month-on-month inflation suggests that price spikes are not accelerating rapidly, giving policymakers room to monitor trends without immediate intervention. However, the annual food inflation increases warrants vigilance to prevent broader price pressures.
7. Inflation by Key Categories (Annual, May 2025)
Category
Annual Inflation
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages
5.6%
Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas
3.4%
Transport
1.7%
Education
3.2%
Services (Overall)
1.0%
Goods (Overall)
4.2%
Analysis:
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages (5.6%): The highest inflation rate among categories, driven by supply chain disruptions and higher staple food prices. This category’s weight in the CPI basket makes it a dominant factor in headline inflation.
Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas (3.4%): Moderate inflation reflects stable utility costs, supported by declining energy prices. This category benefits from global petroleum trends and domestic infrastructure investments.
Transport (1.7%): Low inflation is likely due to falling fuel prices, which reduce transport costs. This is significant for Tanzania’s economy, where transport costs influence goods distribution.
Education (3.2%): Stable inflation suggests controlled fee increases, possibly due to government subsidies or regulated private sector pricing.
Services (1.0%): The lowest inflation rate indicates subdued price pressures in service sectors like telecommunications and personal services, possibly due to competition or technological efficiencies.
Goods (4.2%): Higher than services, reflecting the impact of food and imported goods prices on overall goods inflation.
Implications: The divergence between goods (4.2%) and services (1.0%) inflation highlights the supply-side pressures on physical goods, particularly food, compared to more stable service sectors. Policymakers may prioritize addressing food supply constraints to balance inflation across categories.
8. Government Intervention
National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) Actions:
Release of 47,238 Tonnes: In May 2025, the NFRA released 47,238 tonnes of food to stabilize food prices. This intervention aimed to counter supply shortages caused by heavy rains and transportation challenges.
Stock Increase to 509,990 Tonnes: NFRA food stocks grew to 509,990 tonnes in May 2025, up by 170,000 tonnes from May 2024. This increase was driven by:
Good Harvest: Favorable agricultural output in the 2024/25 season boosted food supply.
Increased Funding: Enhanced government funding for grain procurement strengthened NFRA reserves.
Implications: The NFRA’s proactive measures demonstrate a robust response to food inflation pressures. The significant stock increase provides a buffer against future supply shocks, potentially mitigating price volatility in 2025/26. However, sustained investment in agricultural infrastructure (e.g., irrigation, storage, and transport) is needed to address structural supply chain issues.
9. Zanzibar-Specific Inflation Trends
Decline in Headline Inflation: In Zanzibar, annual headline inflation fell to 4.2% in May 2025 from 4.3% in April 2025 and 5.3% in May 2024. This decline was primarily driven by:
Easing Food Inflation: Food inflation dropped to 3.9% in May 2025 from 4.1% in April 2025 and 8.9% in May 2024, attributed to improved domestic production and stable imports, particularly for sugar, rice, and yellow cooking bananas.
Monthly Increase: Month-on-month inflation rose to 1.0% in May 2025 from 0% in April 2025, indicating short-term price pressures.
Implications: Zanzibar’s lower inflation rate compared to May 2024 reflects successful supply-side interventions and stable import flows. The region’s reliance on tourism and imports makes it sensitive to global price trends, but improved agricultural output has helped moderate food prices. The month-on-month increase suggests ongoing monitoring is needed to prevent renewed inflationary pressures.
10. Broader Economic Context
Global Influences: The document highlights global factors impacting Tanzania’s inflation, such as declining crude oil prices due to weaker demand and increased OPEC+ output. These trends have lowered energy costs, supporting the decline in energy and fuel inflation. However, geopolitical tensions and trade protectionism pose risks to global commodity prices, which could indirectly affect Tanzania’s import-dependent sectors.
Monetary Policy Support: The BoT’s decision to maintain the CBR at 6% and keep the 7-day interbank rate within 4–8% has helped anchor inflation expectations. This stability is critical in a context of global economic uncertainty, as noted in the document’s discussion of the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index and Trade Policy Uncertainty Index.
External Sector Performance: The narrowing of Tanzania’s current account deficit to USD 2,117.5 million in the year ending May 2025, driven by strong export performance (e.g., gold, cashew nuts), supports foreign exchange stability. This stability helps moderate imported inflation, particularly for fuel and manufactured goods.
11. Potential Risks and Outlook
Risks:
Food Supply Volatility: Continued reliance on rain-fed agriculture makes Tanzania vulnerable to weather shocks, which could exacerbate food inflation.
Global Commodity Price Fluctuations: While petroleum prices have eased, any reversal due to geopolitical events or OPEC+ policy changes could increase energy inflation.
Logistical Challenges: Transportation disruptions, as seen with heavy rains, highlight the need for improved infrastructure to ensure stable food distribution.
Outlook:
The BoT’s proactive monetary policy and NFRA interventions should help keep inflation within target ranges in the near term. The 509,990-tonne food stock provides a strong buffer against short-term supply shocks.
Investments in agriculture, as outlined in the proposed 2025/26 budget, could enhance food security and reduce inflation volatility.
Continued global easing of petroleum prices and stable export performance (e.g., gold, cashew nuts) will support low non-food and energy inflation, provided global uncertainties do not escalate.
Below is a structured table summarizing the key figures related to Tanzania’s inflation trends as of May 2025, drawn from the provided Bank of Tanzania. The table focuses on data from relevant sections and the narrative. The table is organized to clearly present the inflation metrics and related government interventions.
Tanzania Inflation Trends (May 2025) - Key Figures
Category
Key Figures
Headline Inflation (Annual)
3.2% in May 2025, unchanged from April 2025
Food Inflation (Annual)
5.6% in May 2025, up from 5.3% in April 2025 and 1.6% in May 2024
Non-Food Inflation (Annual)
Declined in May 2025 (exact rate not specified due to truncation)
Core Inflation (Annual)
2.1% in May 2025, down from 2.2% in April 2025
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities Inflation (Annual)
6.1% in May 2025, down from 7.3% in April 2025
Month-on-Month Inflation (Overall)
0.1% in May 2025
Inflation by Key Categories (Annual, May 2025)
- Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages
5.6%
- Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas
3.4%
- Transport
1.7%
- Education
3.2%
- Services (Overall)
1.0%
- Goods (Overall)
4.2%
NFRA Food Stocks (May 2025)
509,990 tonnes, up by 170,000 tonnes from May 2024
NFRA Food Released (May 2025)
47,238 tonnes (to stabilize food prices)
Zanzibar Headline Inflation (Annual)
4.2% in May 2025, down from 4.3% in April 2025 and 5.3% in May 2024
Zanzibar Food Inflation (Annual)
3.9% in May 2025, down from 4.1% in April 2025 and 8.9% in May 2024
Zanzibar Month-on-Month Inflation
1.0% in May 2025, up from 0% in April 2025
Notes
Context:
Mainland Tanzania: The 3.2% headline inflation is within the SADC (3–7%) and EAC (≤8%) benchmarks, reflecting effective monetary policy (e.g., Central Bank Rate at 6%).
Food Inflation Drivers: The rise to 5.6% is due to supply-demand imbalances from heavy rains affecting transportation and higher prices for staples like maize and rice.
Zanzibar: The decline in inflation (4.2%) is driven by improved food supply, particularly for sugar, rice, and yellow cooking bananas.
NFRA Intervention: The release of 47,238 tonnes and increased stocks to 509,990 tonnes highlight proactive measures to curb food price volatility.
In May 2025, the Bank of Tanzania’s medium-term inflation target of 5% remains a cornerstone for fostering sustainable economic development, balancing price stability with robust growth. According to the "Monthey Economic Review," headline inflation stood at a stable 3.2% in April 2025, down from 3.3% in March, aligning well within the 5% target and regional benchmarks of the East African Community (EAC) and Southern African Development Community (SADC). However, challenges persist with food inflation rising to 5.3% due to weather-induced supply volatility, prompting the National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) to bolster food stocks to 557,228 tonnes, up from 340,102 tonnes in April 2024, and release 29,834 tonnes of maize to stabilize markets. The Central Bank Rate (CBR) held steady at 6%, supporting economic activity while addressing global uncertainties, such as a projected 2.8% global growth rate and a 6.7% decline in crude oil prices. This introduction explores how these figures reflect Tanzania’s efforts to maintain economic stability and the challenges in sustaining the 5% inflation target.
Alignment with Sustainable Economic Development Objectives
The Bank of Tanzania’s monetary policy objectives, are to maintain price stability (defined as a low and stable inflation rate over time) and support economic growth. The 5% medium-term inflation target aligns with these goals in the following ways:
Price Stability for Economic Predictability:
A stable inflation rate of around 5% fosters predictability in the economy, which is critical for sustainable development. Low and stable inflation ensures that businesses and consumers can plan investments and expenditures without the uncertainty of volatile price changes.
Figure: The document notes that headline inflation in April 2025 was 3.2%, well within the 5% target. This indicates that the Bank’s policy has been effective in maintaining inflation below the medium-term goal, creating a stable environment for economic planning.
By keeping inflation within the East African Community (EAC) and Southern African Development Community (SADC) benchmarks, Tanzania enhances its regional competitiveness, attracting investment and supporting trade integration, which are vital for long-term growth.
Supporting Economic Growth:
The 5% target strikes a balance between controlling inflation and allowing room for economic expansion. Excessively low inflation could stifle growth by limiting monetary flexibility, while high inflation erodes purchasing power and deters investment.
Figure: The Monetary Policy Committee’s decision to maintain the Central Bank Rate (CBR) at 6% in April 2025 reflects a strategy to support economic activities while keeping inflation in check. The document states this decision aims to maintain inflation within the 3.5% medium-term target (short-term adjustment) and smooth exchange rate volatility, which supports growth by stabilizing the cost of imports and exports.
Stable inflation supports consumer purchasing power, as evidenced by the decline in core inflation to 2.2% in April 2025 from 3.9% in April 2024. This reduction in underlying price pressures enhances affordability, boosting consumption and economic activity.
Food Security and Cost of Living:
Sustainable economic development requires affordable access to basic goods, particularly food. The 5% inflation target helps manage food inflation, which rose to 5.3% in April 2025, driven by high staple food crop prices due to weather-induced supply volatility. By aiming to keep overall inflation at 5%, the Bank mitigates the risk of runaway food prices, which could disproportionately affect low-income households.
Figure: The National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) increased food stocks to 557,228 tonnes by April 2025 from 340,102 tonnes in April 2024, supporting food price stabilization. This aligns with the inflation target by ensuring supply-side interventions complement monetary policy, fostering inclusive growth.
Exchange Rate Stability and External Sector:
A stable inflation rate supports exchange rate stability, which is crucial for Tanzania’s external sector performance and economic development. The document highlights the Bank’s focus on smoothing exchange rate volatility, which reduces uncertainty for exporters and importers.
Figure: The global economic context, including a 6.7% decline in crude oil prices, could ease pressure on Tanzania’s import bill, supporting the external sector. Maintaining inflation at 5% ensures that exchange rate stability translates into predictable costs for trade, fostering export-led growth and foreign exchange reserve accumulation (e.g., leveraging gold exports, with prices at USD 3,000 per troy ounce in April 2025).
Challenges in Maintaining the 5% Inflation Target
Despite the alignment with sustainable development, maintaining the 5% inflation target poses several challenges, as inferred from the document’s data and context:
Food Price Volatility:
Challenge: Food inflation rose to 5.3% in April 2025, exceeding the 5% target. The document attributes this to weather-induced supply volatility and logistics challenges, which are difficult to control through monetary policy alone.
Impact: High food inflation, as a significant component of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), could push headline inflation above the target, undermining purchasing power and economic stability. For example, Non-core inflation (including food) rising to 5.7% in April 2025, indicating persistent pressure from volatile components.
Mitigation: The NFRA’s release of 29,834 tonnes of maize helps stabilize supply, but sustained weather disruptions could require structural agricultural investments beyond monetary policy.
Global Economic Uncertainties:
Challenge: The document notes a projected global growth slowdown to 2.8% in 2025 and trade uncertainties due to U.S. tariffs. These external shocks could affect Tanzania’s export markets and commodity prices (e.g., tea and sugar prices rose by 8.2% and 3.9%, respectively), indirectly influencing domestic inflation.
Impact: External price pressures could make it challenging to maintain the 5% target, especially if import costs rise or export revenues decline, affecting the balance of payments and exchange rate stability.
Mitigation: Diversifying export markets and strengthening foreign exchange reserves (e.g., through gold exports) could help, but global volatility remains a significant risk.
Energy and Fuel Price Fluctuations:
Challenge: Although energy, fuel, and utilities inflation eased to 7.3% in April 2025 from 9.3% in April 2024 month-on-month fluctuations (e.g., 2.4% in April 2024, 1.9% in April 2025). These fluctuations could destabilize inflation if global oil prices reverse their 6.7% decline.
Impact: Energy price spikes could increase production and transportation costs, pushing inflation above the 5% target and hindering industrial development.
Mitigation: The Bank’s data-dependent monetary policy adjustments can respond to such shocks, but reliance on global commodity markets limits control.
Balancing Growth and Inflation Control:
Challenge: The document emphasizes the Bank’s dual mandate of price stability and supporting economic growth. Tightening monetary policy to curb inflation (e.g., raising the CBR above 6%) could slow economic activity, while loosening it risks inflation exceeding 5%.
Impact: For example, core inflation’s decline to 2.2% suggests room for accommodative policy, but rising non-core inflation (5.7% in April 2025, could force tighter measures, potentially constraining investment and growth.
Mitigation: The Bank’s use of instruments like repurchase agreements and the Lombard facility allows flexibility, but aligning these tools with growth objectives requires precise calibration.
Structural Constraints:
Challenge: Logistics challenges and supply-side issues, as noted in the document, contribute to price volatility. These structural factors are not directly addressed by monetary policy, limiting the Bank’s ability to maintain the 5% target.
Impact: Persistent supply chain inefficiencies could keep food and non-core inflation elevated, as seen in the 5.3% food inflation rate, challenging the target and affecting living standards.
Mitigation: Complementary fiscal policies, such as infrastructure investments, are needed to address these constraints, but coordination between monetary and fiscal authorities can be complex.
Conclusion
The Bank of Tanzania’s 5% medium-term inflation target aligns with sustainable economic development by fostering price stability, supporting economic growth, ensuring food affordability, and stabilizing the external sector. Figures from the document, such as the 3.2% headline inflation, 2.2% core inflation, and 557,228 tonnes of NFRA food stocks in April 2025, demonstrate the Bank’s success in maintaining a stable economic environment conducive to development. However, challenges like food price volatility (5.3% food inflation), global economic uncertainties (2.8% global growth forecast), energy price fluctuations (7.3% energy inflation), and structural constraints could push inflation above the target, risking economic stability. Addressing these challenges requires a combination of monetary policy precision, supply-side interventions, and regional cooperation to ensure sustainable development.
The table includes critical data points on inflation, monetary policy, food security, and external sector performance, as these are central to understanding the alignment and challenges discussed in the previous response.
Table: Key Economic Figures for Tanzania (May 2025 Economic Review)
Category
Indicator
Value
Inflation
Headline Inflation (April 2025)
3.2%
Headline Inflation (March 2025)
3.3%
Headline Inflation (April 2024)
3.1%
Food Inflation (April 2025)
5.3%
Food Inflation (April 2024)
1.4%
Core Inflation (April 2025)
2.2%
Core Inflation (April 2024)
3.9%
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities Inflation (April 2025)
7.3%
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities Inflation (April 2024)
9.3%
Non-Core Inflation (April 2025)
5.7%
Monetary Policy
Central Bank Rate (CBR, April 2025)
6.0%
Medium-Term Inflation Target
5.0%
Short-Term Inflation Target (April 2025)
3.5%
Food Security
NFRA Food Stocks (April 2025)
557,228 tonnes
NFRA Food Stocks (April 2024)
340,102 tonnes
Maize Released by NFRA (April 2025)
29,834 tonnes
Global Economic Context
Global Growth Forecast (2025)
2.8%
Global Growth Projection (January 2025)
3.3%
Gold Price (April 2025)
USD 3,000 per troy ounce
Gold Price (March 2025)
USD 2,983.25 per troy ounce
Crude Oil Price Change (April 2025)
-6.7%
Tea Price Increase (April 2025)
8.2%
Sugar Price Increase (April 2025)
3.9%
Notes on the Table
Inflation Figures: These highlight the stability of headline inflation (3.2% in April 2025) within the 5% medium-term target, but food inflation (5.3%) and non-core inflation (5.7%) exceed the target, posing challenges.
Monetary Policy: The CBR at 6% and the 5% medium-term target reflect efforts to balance price stability and growth, with the short-term target of 3.5% indicating flexibility in policy adjustments.
Food Security: The significant increase in NFRA food stocks (from 340,102 to 557,228 tonnes) and maize releases (29,834 tonnes) underscore efforts to stabilize food prices, supporting economic development.
Global Context: Global growth slowdown (2.8%) and commodity price changes (e.g., crude oil -6.7%, gold USD 3,000) highlight external factors that could influence Tanzania’s inflation and external sector performance.