In the Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review for August 2025, inflation remained stable at 3.3% in July 2025, within the 3-5% target, while national debt exhibited modest growth (1% increase to USD 46,586.6 million in June 2025), driven by balanced inflows and prudent management. These factors have collectively supported the stability and recent appreciation of the Tanzanian Shilling (TZS) against the US Dollar (USD). Stable inflation preserves purchasing power and enables accommodative monetary policy, reducing depreciation pressures, while controlled debt enhances fiscal credibility, attracting foreign inflows and bolstering reserves (USD 6,194.4 million in July 2025, covering 5 months of imports). This has contributed to a narrowed current account deficit (USD 2,079.2 million in the year to July 2025, down 23.4%), easing external vulnerabilities. However, broader pressures like import demands and global USD strength have led to a net annual depreciation, though recent data shows stabilization and mild appreciation by September 2025 (around TZS 2,488 per USD).
Key Impacts on TZS Value
1. Stable Inflation's Positive Influence
Low and predictable inflation (3.3%) anchors expectations, supporting the TZS by maintaining relative purchasing power parity with trading partners. This stability allowed the Bank of Tanzania to lower the Central Bank Rate (CBR) to 5.75% in July 2025, stimulating credit growth (15.9%) and economic activity without fueling inflationary pressures that could erode currency value.
Decelerating energy inflation (1.0% from 2.1%) and core inflation (1.9%), amid global commodity moderation (e.g., crude oil at USD 69.2 per barrel), reduced import costs, alleviating downward pressure on the TZS. This contributed to the shilling's monthly depreciation slowing to 0.11% annually in July 2025 (from 0.21% in June).
Overall, stable inflation has fostered investor confidence, with foreign exchange reserves rising to support interventions (e.g., USD 17.5 million sold in July 2025), helping stabilize the TZS at an average of TZS 2,666.79 per USD in July.
2. Debt Developments' Stabilizing Role
The modest debt increase (external: +0.1% to USD 32,955.5 million; domestic: -0.4% to TZS 35,351.4 billion) reflects fiscal discipline, with disbursements (USD 868.4 million) outpacing services (USD 234.4 million). This sustainability reduces risk premiums, making Tanzania more attractive for foreign investment and remittances, which bolster TZS inflows.
A shift toward domestic financing (79.7% Treasury bonds) and concessional multilateral debt (58.7% of external) minimizes forex exposure, mitigating depreciation from debt servicing. Strong revenue (TZS 3,753.4 billion in June, +5.1% above target) further supports this, narrowing borrowing needs.
Combined with export growth (goods and services up 14.4% to USD 16,655 million), stable debt has narrowed the current account deficit, reducing TZS sell-off pressures. However, high external debt (70.7% of total) remains a vulnerability if global rates rise.
3. Net Impact on TZS Value
The TZS depreciated annually by about 9.6% through mid-2025 due to import surges and debt-financed infrastructure, but inflation and debt stability have driven recent appreciation (e.g., from TZS 2,666.79/USD in July to ~TZS 2,488/USD by September 6, 2025). This reflects improved external balances and policy credibility.
Projections indicate moderate depreciation (3.7% for 2025 overall), but sustained low inflation could further strengthen the TZS if debt remains manageable. Risks include global uncertainties (e.g., trade policy index spikes) potentially reversing gains.
Key Figures
Indicator
Value (July 2025)
Change/Comparison
Headline Inflation
3.3%
Stable from June; within 3-5% target
External Debt Stock
USD 32,955.5 million
+0.1% from May 2025
National Debt Stock
USD 46,586.6 million
+1% from May 2025
Current Account Deficit (Year to July)
USD 2,079.2 million
-23.4% from 2024
Foreign Reserves
USD 6,194.4 million
Covers 5 months of imports
TZS/USD Average Rate
TZS 2,666.79
Depreciated 0.11% annually
TZS/USD (September 6, 2025)
TZS 2,488
Appreciated from July
In February 2025, the Tanzania shilling remained broadly stable against the US dollar, with only a slight depreciation from TZS 2,560/USD in January to TZS 2,566/USD, marking a modest 0.23% change. Despite this, the interbank foreign exchange market saw a significant increase in activity, with traded volumes rising by 27.4% from USD 57.2 million to USD 72.9 million. This indicates growing demand for foreign currency—likely for imports or external payments—yet the limited impact on the exchange rate reflects strong macroeconomic management, sufficient forex reserves, and sustained confidence in the Tanzanian economy.
Tanzania Monthly Economic Review – March 2025, the Tanzania shilling (TZS) remained relatively stable against the US dollar (USD) in February 2025, with only slight depreciation observed.
Tanzania Shilling Stability Against the USD – February 2025
Exchange Rate Movement:
February 2025: ➤ TZS 2,566.00 per USD
January 2025: ➤ TZS 2,560.00 per USD
Change: ➤ The shilling depreciated by TZS 6.00, equivalent to 0.23% over the month.
💡Interpretation: What Does This Mean?
The Tanzania shilling experienced only marginal depreciation, suggesting strong overall currency stability.
The interbank foreign exchange market was active, with trading volumes increasing from:
USD 57.2 million (Jan 2025) to
USD 72.9 million (Feb 2025) ➤ Increase of 27.4%, indicating rising demand for USD (possibly for imports or debt servicing).
Despite increased forex demand, the shilling held relatively firm, implying:
Sufficient foreign exchange reserves by the Bank of Tanzania
Tight monetary and fiscal coordination
Controlled inflation and disciplined currency management
Summary Table: Shilling vs. USD
Month
TZS/USD Exchange Rate
Monthly Change
Forex Market Volume
January 2025
2,560.00
—
USD 57.2 million
February 2025
2,566.00
+0.23%
USD 72.9 million
The Tanzania shilling remains broadly stable against the US dollar, with only slight depreciation in February 2025 despite increased foreign exchange market activity. This reflects confidence in macroeconomic fundamentals and effective monetary policy management by the Bank of Tanzania.
Tanzania shilling's stability against the US dollar:
What It Tells Us:
The Tanzania Shilling Is Stable – The exchange rate changed only slightly from TZS 2,560/USD in January to TZS 2,566/USD in February 2025, a depreciation of just 0.23%. ➤ This signals that the shilling is not under heavy pressure and is being well-managed by the Bank of Tanzania.
Market Demand for USD Is Growing – Foreign exchange trading in the interbank market increased from USD 57.2 million to USD 72.9 million—a 27.4% increase. ➤ This could reflect rising imports, seasonal corporate demand, or external obligations (like debt service or payments for goods and services).
Despite Demand, the Currency Held Steady – Even with the increased demand for dollars, the shilling did not weaken significantly. ➤ This shows strong supply-side support, likely through foreign reserves or intervention by the central bank.
Investor and Market Confidence Remains High – A stable exchange rate in the face of higher forex demand typically means:
Inflation is under control
Interest rates are appropriate
The external sector is resilient
✅ Bottom Line:
The slight movement in the exchange rate tells us the Tanzania shilling is stable and well-supported, even as demand for USD rises. This reflects sound economic management, confidence in the local currency, and a resilient foreign exchange system.