In 2024, global debt surged to an alarming USD 250 trillion, equal to 237% of global GDP, as reported by the IMF’s 2024 Global Debt Monitor. Of this, USD 98 trillion was public debt (94% of GDP), and over USD 150 trillion was private debt (143% of GDP). These high levels of global debt—especially in public finances—create ripple effects for low-income countries like Tanzania, which recorded a public debt of 43.3% of GDP in the same year. While Tanzania’s debt remains below the average for Low-Income Developing Countries (50% of GDP), increasing global borrowing costs, tighter financial conditions, and slowing global growth (expected to fall from 2.7% to 2.2% over the next five years) pose challenges. These pressures may raise Tanzania’s external debt servicing costs, limit access to affordable financing, and affect government spending and private sector credit growth.
1. Rising Global Public Debt Creates External Pressure
Implication:
As more countries compete for external financing, borrowing costs could rise for Tanzania, especially for external commercial debt. This could lead to higher debt servicing costs and reduce fiscal space for development spending.
2. Reduced Private Sector Borrowing Globally — Credit Squeeze Risk
Implication:
If global banks and investors become more risk-averse, Tanzania's private sector may face tighter access to credit — especially SMEs and startups that depend on microfinance or external funding.
3. Tight Global Financial Conditions — Impact on Debt Sustainability
Implication:
Tanzania may need to shift more toward concessional financing or domestic sources to avoid debt distress. Already, the country spends about 14–16% of government revenue on debt service, a figure that could increase if global rates stay high.
4. Risk of Slower Global Growth — Impacts on Tanzania’s Exports and Revenue
Implication:
Lower global demand could mean slower foreign exchange earnings, potentially weakening the shilling, reducing government revenue, and making external debt more expensive to repay.
Impact Area | What’s Happening Globally | Potential Effect on Tanzania |
Public Debt | ↑ USD 98T globally, 94% of GDP | ↑ Risk of tighter borrowing space, higher rates |
Private Sector Credit | ↓ Private debt globally to 143% of GDP | ↓ Credit access, especially for SMEs |
Interest Rates | ↑ Debt servicing costs rising globally | ↑ Tanzania’s external debt servicing burden |
Global Growth | ↓ Expected growth from 2.7% to 2.2% | ↓ Export demand, ↓ forex, ↑ fiscal pressure |
Category | Global Figures | Tanzania Figures |
Total Debt | USD 250 trillion (237% of global GDP) | — |
Public Debt | USD 98 trillion (94% of global GDP) | TZS 89.3 trillion (approx. USD 36B)¹ |
Private Debt | >USD 150 trillion (143% of global GDP) | — |
• Household Debt | USD 58.5 trillion (54% of global GDP) | — |
• Corporate Debt | USD 91.5 trillion (90% of global GDP) | — |
Tanzania Public Debt-to-GDP | — | 43.3% of GDP |
LIDC Average Public Debt | — | 50% of GDP |
Global Medium-Term Growth | ↓ from 2.7% to 2.2% (5-year forecast) | Risk of lower export demand |
Tanzania External Debt Service | — | ~USD 1.5 billion (FY2022/23) |
As of February 2025, Tanzania’s total public debt reached TZS 109.92 trillion (approximately USD 42.68 billion), with external debt accounting for 73.4% (TZS 80.73 trillion) and domestic debt 26.6% (TZS 29.19 trillion). Given a population of around 69–70 million, this translates to an average debt burden of TZS 1.57–1.59 million per citizen. The high proportion of external debt—largely denominated in USD—underscores the importance of prudent fiscal management to ensure long-term sustainability amid exchange rate and global interest rate fluctuations.
Tanzania’s Total Public Debt Profile – February 2025
🔸 1. Total Public Debt
🔹 2. Breakdown of Public Debt
Debt Type | Amount (USD) | Amount (TZS) | % Share |
External Debt | $31.31 billion | TZS 80.73 trillion | 73.4% |
Domestic Debt | $11.37 billion | TZS 29.19 trillion | 26.6% |
Total | $42.68 billion | TZS 109.92 trillion | 100% |
Debt per Citizen Estimate
Assuming a population between 69 million and 70 million, here’s how much debt is effectively held per Tanzanian:
Population | Total Debt (TZS) | Debt per Citizen (TZS) |
69 million | TZS 109.92 trillion | ~TZS 1.59 million |
70 million | TZS 109.92 trillion | ~TZS 1.57 million |
What This Tells Us
What It Tells Us