Tanzania's fiscal trajectory reflects a strategic balance between ambitious development objectives and macroeconomic stability. The budget deficit has been managed within prudent thresholds, declining from 3.4% of GDP in 2024/25 to a targeted 3.0% in 2025/26 and projected to be maintained at 3.0% in 2026/27 despite a record budget expansion of 9.6%.
Key Findings
The 2026/27 budget expansion of TZS 61.93 trillion (9.6% increase) is primarily revenue-financed, with domestic revenue growing 20% to TZS 46.69 trillion
Borrowing remains stable at TZS 15.5 trillion (only 1.6% increase), representing a strategic shift from debt-led to revenue-led expansion
Tanzania's debt-to-GDP ratio of 40.6% is well below international risk thresholds (55% developing economies, 60% emerging markets)
Tax revenue mobilization has improved significantly, projected to reach 13.3% of GDP in 2025/26 from 12.8% in 2024/25
Key Statistics at a Glance
Budget Deficit 2025/26
3.0%
of GDP (Down from 3.4%)
Debt-to-GDP Ratio
40.6%
Well below 55% threshold
2026/27 Budget
TZS 61.93T
9.6% increase (USD 24.2B)
GDP Growth Projection
6.3%
FY 2026/27 forecast
1. Historical Budget Overview (2015/16 – 2026/27)
Tanzania's national budget has grown consistently over the past decade, reflecting both economic expansion and increased government ambitions for infrastructure development and social services delivery. The trajectory shows a compound annual growth rate demonstrating the nation's commitment to development financing while maintaining fiscal discipline.
Fiscal Year
Budget (TZS Trillion)
Budget (USD Billion)
YoY Growth (%)
% of GDP
GDP Growth (%)
2015/16
29.51
13.2
—
~26%
7.0
2020/21
36.70
15.8
~8.5%
~24%
4.9
2024/25
49.35
18.9
10.8%
~21%
5.5
2025/26
56.49
22.1
12.3%
~23%
6.0
2026/27
61.93
24.2
9.6%
~24%
6.3
Tanzania Budget Growth Trend (2015/16 – 2026/27)
Analysis: The budget has grown from TZS 29.51 trillion in 2015/16 to a projected TZS 61.93 trillion in 2026/27, representing a 110% increase over 11 years. This expansion has been coupled with improving fiscal discipline, as evidenced by the declining budget-to-GDP ratio from 26% to 24%.
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2. Budget Deficit Analysis & Historical Trends
Tanzania has maintained fiscal discipline over the past decade, with deficits averaging 2.3% of GDP over 36 years. The recent trend shows improvement from the peak of 3.4% in 2024/25 to a targeted 3.0% in both 2025/26 and 2026/27. This section analyzes the deficit trajectory, debt sustainability metrics, and the economic context driving fiscal decisions.
2.1 Deficit as Percentage of GDP (Historical Perspective)
Period
Deficit (% GDP)
Debt-to-GDP (%)
GDP Growth (%)
Context
2013
~-2.5
32.7
7.3
Pre-infrastructure boom
2020
~-3.2
41.0
2.0
COVID-19 pandemic impact
2023
~-3.3
53.4
5.3
Peak debt-to-GDP ratio
2024/25
-3.4
47.3
5.5
Election year spending
2025/26
-3.0
40.6
6.0
Fiscal consolidation target
2026/27
-3.0
~38-40
6.3
Revenue-led expansion
Deficit and Debt-to-GDP Ratio Trends (2013-2027)
Positive Trend: The declining deficit from 3.4% to 3.0% of GDP, combined with a dramatic reduction in debt-to-GDP ratio from a peak of 53.4% (2023) to a projected 38-40% (2026/27), demonstrates Tanzania's commitment to fiscal sustainability and prudent debt management.
Critical Insights on Deficit Trajectory
36-Year Average: Tanzania's deficit has averaged 2.3% of GDP over 36 years, indicating long-term fiscal prudence
Post-COVID Recovery: The deficit peaked at 3.4% in 2024/25 due to election year spending and continued infrastructure investment
Consolidation Phase: The targeted 3.0% deficit for 2025/26 and 2026/27 reflects a deliberate fiscal consolidation strategy
Debt Reduction: Debt-to-GDP declining from 53.4% (2023) to 40.6% (2025/26) represents a reduction of 12.8 percentage points in just 3 years
The 2025/26 budget of TZS 56.49 trillion represents a 12.3% increase from the previous year, with a strategic focus on domestic revenue mobilization and controlled deficit financing. This budget demonstrates Tanzania's shift towards revenue-led growth rather than debt-financed expansion.
Budget Component
Amount (TZS Trillion)
% of Budget
% of GDP
TOTAL BUDGET
56.49
100.0%
~23%
Domestic Revenue
40.47
71.6%
16.7%
Tax Revenue
32.31
57.2%
13.3%
Non-Tax Revenue
6.48
11.5%
2.7%
Local Government Revenue
1.68
3.0%
0.7%
External Grants
1.07
1.9%
0.4%
Total Borrowing
14.95
26.5%
6.2%
Domestic Loans
6.27
11.1%
2.6%
External Loans
8.68
15.4%
3.6%
FY 2025/26 Budget Financing Composition
Revenue Components Breakdown (TZS Trillion)
Key Observation: Domestic revenue accounts for 71.6% of the total budget, with tax revenue alone contributing 57.2%. This healthy revenue-to-budget ratio indicates reduced dependency on borrowing and demonstrates improved tax administration and compliance.
Budget Financing: Year-over-Year Comparison
Tax Revenue Growth
26.5%
2025/26 to 2026/27
Domestic Revenue Share
71.6%
of Total Budget FY 2025/26
Borrowing Share
26.5%
Down from previous years
Tax-to-GDP Ratio
13.3%
Up from 12.8% in 2024/25
3. FY 2026/27 Budget Expansion & Sustainability
The proposed TZS 61.93 trillion budget for FY 2026/27 represents a strategic expansion of 9.6%, carefully calibrated to maintain fiscal sustainability while supporting Tanzania's development agenda. This budget marks a critical inflection point in Tanzania's fiscal policy—shifting from debt-led to revenue-led expansion.
3.1 Budget Growth & Financing Strategy
The 2026/27 budget expansion demonstrates a fundamental transformation in Tanzania's fiscal approach. Unlike previous years where budget growth was heavily financed by borrowing, this expansion is driven primarily by domestic revenue mobilization, representing a mature fiscal strategy that prioritizes long-term sustainability.
Financing Source
2025/26 (TZS T)
2026/27 (TZS T)
Change (Amount / Share)
Growth Rate
Domestic Revenue
40.47 (71.6%)
46.69 (75.4%)
+6.22 / +3.8pp
15.4%
Tax Revenue
32.31
36.90
+4.59
14.2%
Non-Tax Revenue
6.48
8.11
+1.63
25.2%
LGA Revenue
1.68
1.68
±0.00
0.0%
Total Borrowing
14.95 (26.5%)
15.24 (24.6%)
+0.29 / -1.9pp
1.6%
TOTAL BUDGET
56.49
61.93
+5.44
9.6%
Critical Insight: 78% of the budget expansion (TZS 4.24 trillion out of TZS 5.44 trillion increase) is financed by domestic revenue growth, while borrowing increases by only 1.6%. This represents a fundamental shift in Tanzania's fiscal strategy—demonstrating that economic growth and improved tax administration can drive budget expansion without proportional debt accumulation.
How the TZS 5.44 Trillion Budget Increase is Financed
Revenue vs Borrowing Growth: 2025/26 to 2026/27
Revenue Contribution
78%
of Budget Expansion
Domestic Revenue Growth
15.4%
TZS 6.22 Trillion Increase
Borrowing Growth
1.6%
Only TZS 0.29 Trillion
Budget Share Shift
+3.8pp
Revenue 71.6% → 75.4%
Financing Strategy Evolution (2015/16 - 2026/27)
The transformation from debt-led to revenue-led budget expansion represents one of Tanzania's most significant fiscal policy achievements. This chart illustrates the declining reliance on borrowing and increasing contribution of domestic revenues over time.
Budget Financing Composition Over Time
Strategic Implications of Revenue-Led Expansion
Fiscal Sustainability: By financing 78% of budget growth through revenue, Tanzania reduces vulnerability to debt distress and external shocks
Tax Administration Success: The 14.2% tax revenue growth demonstrates improved compliance, formalization, and collection efficiency by the Tanzania Revenue Authority
Economic Confidence: Non-tax revenue growth of 25.2% reflects increased economic activity, government service delivery, and resource extraction revenues
Debt Sustainability: Borrowing growth limited to 1.6% while maintaining 9.6% overall budget expansion creates fiscal space for future investments
Regional Leadership: This revenue-led model positions Tanzania as a fiscal leader in East Africa, contrasting with neighbors' higher debt dependencies
CAGR Analysis: The Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) shows domestic revenue growing at 14.1% compared to borrowing at 10.3%. This 3.8 percentage point differential is the mathematical foundation of Tanzania's fiscal transformation, ensuring revenues grow faster than debt obligations.
Fiscal Indicators as Percentage of GDP
Budget, Revenue, and Deficit as % of GDP (2015/16 - 2026/27)
Revenue Mobilization Achievements
Tax-to-GDP Ratio Improvement: From 12.8% (2024/25) to 13.3% (2025/26), projected to reach 14.2% by 2026/27—approaching the 15% threshold recommended for developing economies
Revenue-to-GDP Growth: Domestic revenue as % of GDP increasing from 15.3% to 16.7% to 17.9% over three years
Formalization Impact: Improved tax collection reflects broader economic formalization, bringing more businesses into the tax net
Digital Tax Systems: Implementation of electronic fiscal devices (EFDs), mobile money taxation, and digital service tax contributing to revenue growth
Compliance Enhancement: Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) modernization efforts yielding tangible results in collection efficiency
This section provides a comprehensive evaluation of the fiscal deficit's implications for Tanzania's economy, analyzing both positive developmental impacts and potential risk factors. The assessment uses international benchmarks and regional comparisons to contextualize Tanzania's fiscal position.
4.1 Positive Implications
Tanzania's managed deficit strategy, when executed effectively, creates multiple positive outcomes for economic development and macroeconomic stability. The following analysis demonstrates how the current fiscal approach supports long-term growth objectives.
Positive Implications of the Fiscal Deficit Strategy
Improved Debt Sustainability: With debt-to-GDP declining from 47.3% (2024/25) to 40.6% (2025/26) and projected to reach 38-40% by 2026/27, Tanzania is moving further from international risk thresholds (55% for developing economies, 60% for emerging markets). This creates substantial fiscal headroom for future investments.
Revenue-Led Growth Model: The 20% increase in domestic revenue for 2026/27 demonstrates Tanzania's success in broadening the tax base and improving collection efficiency. Tax-to-GDP ratio improvement from 12.8% (2024/25) to 13.3% (2025/26) represents tangible progress toward the 15% benchmark recommended for developing economies.
Macroeconomic Stability: Maintaining a 3.0% deficit while expanding the budget by 9.6% demonstrates fiscal discipline. Combined with controlled inflation (3.5%) and strong GDP growth (6.0-6.3%), this creates a favorable investment climate that attracts foreign direct investment and supports private sector expansion.
Development Financing: The deficit enables critical infrastructure investments (Standard Gauge Railway, roads, energy) that drive long-term growth. External debt remains predominantly concessional, minimizing debt servicing costs. Infrastructure projects create multiplier effects through job creation and productivity enhancements.
Regional Competitiveness: Tanzania's fiscal metrics position it favorably within East Africa. Lower deficit and debt ratios compared to neighbors enhance investor confidence and sovereign credit ratings, reducing borrowing costs and improving access to international capital markets.
Social Service Expansion: Controlled deficit financing allows continued investment in education, healthcare, and social protection without compromising fiscal sustainability. This supports human capital development essential for Vision 2050 objectives.
Debt Sustainability Indicators
Debt-to-GDP Reduction
12.8pp
From 53.4% (2023) to 40.6% (2025/26)
Below Risk Threshold
14.4pp
40.6% vs 55% threshold
Concessional Debt Share
71.3%
Of external debt (USD 34.1B)
Projected 2026/27
38-40%
Continued debt reduction
Debt-to-GDP Ratio Trajectory with International Thresholds
4.2 Risk Factors & Challenges
While Tanzania's fiscal position is strong, several risk factors require continuous monitoring and proactive management. Understanding these challenges is essential for maintaining fiscal sustainability and ensuring the deficit strategy delivers intended developmental outcomes.
Key Risk Factors and Mitigation Strategies
Revenue Collection Execution Risk: Tanzania has historically achieved 89.6% of revenue targets (2024/25). The ambitious 26.5% tax revenue growth target for 2026/27 requires exceptional execution. Shortfalls would necessitate increased borrowing or spending cuts, potentially undermining development programs. Mitigation: Enhanced TRA capacity, digital tax systems, and formalization initiatives.
External Vulnerability: 71.3% of total debt is external (USD 34.1 billion). Currency depreciation (2.6% in 2024) increases the TZS value of external obligations. Global interest rate changes or commodity price shocks could impact debt sustainability. Mitigation: Maintain forex reserves above 4 months of imports, diversify export base, hedge major forex exposures.
Debt Service Burden: Interest payments and debt servicing constitute a significant fiscal burden. For 2025/26, debt service is TZS 14.22 trillion—requiring careful management to avoid crowding out development spending. High debt servicing limits fiscal flexibility during economic shocks. Mitigation: Prioritize concessional financing, extend debt maturity profiles, improve debt management capacity.
Infrastructure Project Returns: The sustainability of deficit financing depends on whether infrastructure investments generate sufficient economic returns. Historical budget execution of only 67% means TZS 1 in every 3 allocated for development never materializes, undermining the deficit's developmental justification. Mitigation: Improve procurement processes, enhance project management, strengthen monitoring and evaluation.
Global Economic Headwinds: Rising global interest rates, potential recession in major economies, and geopolitical tensions could reduce export demand, limit foreign investment, and increase borrowing costs. Mitigation: Build fiscal buffers, diversify economic partnerships, maintain macroeconomic stability.
Inflation Pressures: While currently controlled at 3.5%, inflation could accelerate due to food price volatility, energy costs, or currency depreciation. Higher inflation erodes real revenue collection and increases expenditure pressures. Mitigation: Prudent monetary policy coordination, strategic reserves management, targeted subsidies only when necessary.
Risk Assessment Summary
Risk Category
Probability
Impact
Overall Risk
Trend
Key Mitigation
Revenue Shortfall
Medium
High
Medium-High
↓ Improving
TRA modernization, digital systems
Currency Depreciation
Medium
Medium
Medium
→ Stable
Forex reserves, export diversification
Debt Service Pressure
Low
Medium
Low-Medium
↓ Improving
Concessional financing priority
Budget Execution
High
High
High
↓ Improving
Procurement reform, capacity building
Global Economic Shock
Medium
High
Medium-High
↑ Increasing
Fiscal buffers, economic diversification
Inflation Acceleration
Low
Medium
Low-Medium
→ Stable
Monetary-fiscal coordination
Critical Challenge: The budget execution rate of 67% represents the most immediate and controllable risk. Improving this to 80%+ is essential for justifying deficit financing and achieving developmental objectives. Without better execution, even sound fiscal planning fails to translate into tangible outcomes.
4.3 International Comparisons & Benchmarks
Comparing Tanzania's fiscal metrics with regional peers and international benchmarks provides important context for assessing sustainability. Tanzania's position relative to other East African economies demonstrates the effectiveness of its fiscal consolidation strategy.
Country
Deficit (% GDP)
Debt-to-GDP (%)
GDP Growth (%)
Inflation (%)
Assessment
Tanzania (2025/26)
-3.0
40.6
6.0
3.5
Strong position
Kenya (2025)
~-4.5
~68
5.0
6.8
High debt stress
Uganda (2025)
~-4.2
~52
5.8
5.2
Moderate risk
Rwanda (2025)
~-5.0
~73
7.2
4.5
High debt, high growth
Ethiopia (2025)
~-3.8
~35
6.5
28.1
Inflation crisis
Developing Economy Avg
-3.5 to -4.0
45-50
4.5-5.5
5-7
Reference
East African Fiscal Indicators Comparison
Debt-to-GDP: Tanzania vs Regional Peers
Comparative Advantages: Tanzania's Position
Lowest Deficit in Region: Tanzania's 3.0% deficit is significantly lower than Kenya (4.5%), Uganda (4.2%), and Rwanda (5.0%), demonstrating superior fiscal discipline
Sustainable Debt Levels: At 40.6%, Tanzania's debt-to-GDP is 27.4 percentage points below Kenya (68%) and 32.4 points below Rwanda (73%)
Strong Growth-Inflation Balance: 6.0% GDP growth combined with 3.5% inflation represents optimal macroeconomic stability. Ethiopia's 28.1% inflation shows risks of poor macroeconomic management
Improved Credit Rating Outlook: Lower debt and deficit ratios enhance sovereign creditworthiness, reducing borrowing costs compared to higher-risk peers
Fiscal Space for Shocks: Tanzania's conservative fiscal stance provides headroom to respond to economic shocks without triggering debt distress
Tanzania vs International Debt Sustainability Thresholds
Tanzania Debt-to-GDP
40.6%
2025/26 Actual
Developing Economy Threshold
55%
14.4pp headroom
Emerging Market Threshold
60%
19.4pp headroom
IMF High-Risk Threshold
70%
29.4pp safety margin
International Standing: Tanzania's fiscal metrics place it in the "low risk" category for debt distress according to IMF-World Bank Debt Sustainability Framework. The country maintains substantial fiscal headroom, allowing continued investment in infrastructure and social services without compromising macroeconomic stability.
5. Conclusions & Policy Recommendations
This final section synthesizes the comprehensive analysis to provide actionable conclusions and strategic recommendations for maintaining Tanzania's fiscal sustainability while achieving development objectives. The assessment evaluates the overall fiscal position and outlines critical success factors for the medium-term outlook.
5.1 Overall Assessment
Tanzania's budget deficit is sustainable and strategically managed. The declining deficit trajectory (3.4% → 3.0%), combined with reduced debt-to-GDP ratios and revenue-led budget expansion, positions Tanzania favorably within the East African region and against international benchmarks.
The 2026/27 budget expansion is not only sustainable but represents best practice fiscal management—expanding fiscal space through domestic resource mobilization rather than debt accumulation. This approach creates a virtuous cycle: economic growth → improved tax collection → larger budgets → more infrastructure → more growth.
FINAL VERDICT: SUSTAINABLE & STRATEGICALLY SOUND
Tanzania's budget deficit is SUSTAINABLE and STRATEGICALLY SOUND. The 3.0% deficit target for both 2025/26 and 2026/27, combined with:
Declining debt-to-GDP (40.6%, well below 55% threshold)
Revenue-led budget expansion (78% of 2026/27 increase)
...demonstrates fiscal discipline and long-term planning. The central question is not affordability, but rather execution: Can Tanzania maintain revenue growth, improve budget execution, and ensure infrastructure investments deliver promised economic returns? If yes, the deficit becomes an investment in transformation. If no, it risks becoming a burden on future generations.
Fiscal Sustainability Scorecard
Indicator
Current Status
International Benchmark
Rating
Trend
Budget Deficit (% GDP)
3.0%
3.5-4.0% (Developing)
Excellent
↓ Improving
Debt-to-GDP Ratio
40.6%
55% (Threshold)
Excellent
↓ Improving
Revenue-to-Budget
75.4% (2026/27)
65-70% (Healthy)
Excellent
↑ Increasing
Tax-to-GDP Ratio
13.3%
15% (Recommended)
Good
↑ Increasing
GDP Growth
6.0-6.3%
4.5-5.5% (Developing)
Excellent
↑ Increasing
Inflation Rate
3.5%
5-7% (Developing)
Excellent
→ Stable
Budget Execution
67%
80%+ (Target)
Needs Improvement
→ Stable
Revenue Collection
89.6%
95%+ (Target)
Good
↑ Increasing
5.2 Critical Success Factors
Maintaining fiscal sustainability and achieving developmental objectives requires focused execution across five critical dimensions. These success factors represent the minimum requirements for the fiscal strategy to deliver intended outcomes.
Five Critical Success Factors for Fiscal Sustainability
1. Revenue Collection Excellence
Target: Achieve the 26.5% tax revenue growth requires exceptional execution by Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA).
Digital Tax Systems: Expand electronic fiscal devices (EFDs), mobile money taxation, and real-time reporting systems
Formalization Initiatives: Bring informal sector businesses into the tax net through simplified registration and compliance mechanisms
Compliance Enforcement: Strengthen audit capacity, prosecution of tax evasion, and cross-border tax coordination
Risk: Missing revenue targets would force increased borrowing or spending cuts, undermining the entire fiscal strategy
KPI: Achieve 95%+ of revenue targets vs historical 89.6%
2. Budget Execution Improvement
Target: Improve historical 67% budget execution to 80%+ to justify deficit financing.
Risk: Without productivity gains, deficit financing becomes unsustainable consumption rather than investment
KPI: Measure GDP growth attributable to infrastructure (target: 2-3 percentage points)
5. External Shock Resilience
Target: Build buffers to handle commodity price volatility and global economic uncertainties.
Forex Reserves: Maintain above 4 months of imports (currently sufficient)
Fiscal Buffers: Establish contingency funds for unexpected shocks
Export Diversification: Reduce dependence on gold and agricultural commodities
Risk: Global recession, commodity price crashes, or geopolitical shocks could derail fiscal plans
KPI: Maintain forex reserves at 4+ months, diversify exports to reduce concentration
5.3 Medium-Term Outlook (2027-2030)
Projecting Tanzania's fiscal trajectory through 2030 requires analyzing current trends and assessing the probability of successful execution across the critical success factors. Two scenarios illustrate potential outcomes.
OPTIMISTIC SCENARIO
Successful Execution
• Debt-to-GDP: 35-38% by 2028-2030
• Tax-to-GDP: 15-17%
• Deficit: 2.5% while maintaining development
• GDP Growth: 6-7% sustained
Conditions for Optimistic Scenario: Requires political stability, consistent policy implementation, infrastructure project completion on schedule, continued macroeconomic discipline, and favorable external conditions (stable commodity prices, no global recession, continued development partner support).
Projected Fiscal Trajectory: 2025-2030
Alignment with Tanzania Development Vision 2050
The fiscal strategy directly supports Tanzania Development Vision 2050 objectives of transforming the economy to semi-industrialized status with high-quality livelihoods. Key alignments include:
Infrastructure Development: Roads, railways, ports, and energy infrastructure create the foundation for industrialization
Human Capital: Continued investment in education and health builds the skilled workforce needed for economic transformation
Private Sector Growth: Revenue-led expansion reduces crowding out, allowing private credit to grow at 23.5%
Fiscal Sustainability: Declining debt-to-GDP creates fiscal space for future generations to invest without inherited debt burdens
Regional Integration: Strong fiscal position supports Tanzania's leadership role in EAC and SADC
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Disclaimer
This analysis is based on publicly available data as of February 2026 and represents TICGL's independent assessment. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, fiscal projections involve inherent uncertainties. Figures are subject to revisions as government releases updated statistics. This report is intended for informational purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Readers should consult relevant government ministries and departments for official budget documents and seek professional advice from TICGL for investment decisions.
About This Analysis
Published by: Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd (TICGL)