Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Tanzania Collects TZS 2.47 Trillion in March 2025, Spends TZS 3.66 Trillion with Focus on Wages and Development
May 9, 2025  
In March 2025, Tanzania’s central government collected a total of TZS 2,465.8 billion in revenue, which was 98.9% of the monthly target. Of this, TZS 2,387.5 billion came from the central government, including TZS 2,055.2 billion in tax revenue—driven by income taxes (TZS 676.1 billion), taxes on imports (TZS 755.3 billion), and local goods and […]

In March 2025, Tanzania’s central government collected a total of TZS 2,465.8 billion in revenue, which was 98.9% of the monthly target. Of this, TZS 2,387.5 billion came from the central government, including TZS 2,055.2 billion in tax revenue—driven by income taxes (TZS 676.1 billion), taxes on imports (TZS 755.3 billion), and local goods and services (TZS 490.6 billion). Non-tax revenue reached TZS 332.3 billion, meeting 99.4% of its target. On the expenditure side, the government spent TZS 3,658.3 billion, with TZS 2,372.0 billion allocated to recurrent expenses—including TZS 937.6 billion for wages and salaries—and TZS 1,286.3 billion for development projects. This spending reflects the government's commitment to public service delivery and infrastructure investment, despite operating a short-term fiscal gap of over TZS 1.19 trillion.

1. Central Government Revenue (March 2025)

  • Total revenue collected: TZS 2,465.8 billion, which was just 1.1% below the target.
  • Central government share: TZS 2,387.5 billion, which is 96.8% of total revenue.
  • Target: TZS 2,390.1 billion, indicating near-target performance.
  • Breakdown:
    • Tax revenue: TZS 2,055.2 billion (met the monthly target)
      • Income tax: TZS 676.1 billion
      • Taxes on local goods and services: TZS 490.6 billion
      • Taxes on imports: TZS 755.3 billion
      • Other taxes: TZS 133.2 billion
    • Non-tax revenue: TZS 332.3 billion vs. target of TZS 334.4 billion (99.4%)

Revenue performance remains strong, supported by tax administration improvements and steady economic activity.

2. Central Government Expenditure (March 2025)

  • Total spending: TZS 3,658.3 billion
    • Recurrent expenditure: TZS 2,372.0 billion
      • Wages and salaries: TZS 937.6 billion
      • Interest payments: TZS 366.4 billion (Domestic: TZS 240.2 billion, Foreign: TZS 126.2 billion)
      • Other recurrent expenses: TZS 1,068.0 billion
    • Development expenditure: TZS 1,286.3 billion (Target exceeded slightly)

The government maintained a fiscal discipline approach, focusing on key social services and infrastructure despite a slight revenue shortfall.

Summary Table: Government Budget Operations (March 2025)

CategoryAmount (TZS Billion)Performance
Total Revenue2,465.898.9% of target
└ Central Government Revenue2,387.596.8% of total revenue
└ Tax Revenue2,055.2Met target
└ Non-Tax Revenue332.399.4% of target
Total Expenditure3,658.3
└ Recurrent Expenditure2,372.064.8% of total expenditure
└ Wages and Salaries937.6
└ Interest Payments (Total)366.4
└ Development Expenditure1,286.335.2% of total expenditure

In March 2025, Tanzania’s central government demonstrated strong revenue performance, collecting over TZS 2.4 trillion, primarily through taxes. Despite revenue being slightly below target, government expenditure reached TZS 3.7 trillion, focusing on development and essential services, supported by prudent fiscal management.

Key Takeaways

1. trong Revenue Performance

  • The government collected TZS 2,465.8 billion, just 1.1% below target, showing strong tax collection efficiency.
  • Tax revenue (TZS 2,055.2 billion) hit its target, indicating:
    • Good tax administration,
    • Broadening tax base,
    • Resilient economic activity.
  • Non-tax revenue (TZS 332.3 billion) also performed well at 99.4% of target, reflecting enhanced collection from fees, licenses, and dividends.

What it tells: The revenue system is functioning effectively, even under economic pressure.

2. High Government Spending

  • Total expenditure reached TZS 3,658.3 billion, led by:
    • Recurrent spending: TZS 2,372.0 billion (65%) — covering wages and essential services.
    • Development spending: TZS 1,286.3 billion (35%) — invested in infrastructure, education, and health.

What it tells: The government is committed to balancing service delivery and long-term development, even if it means running a short-term fiscal deficit.

3. Fiscal Gap Suggests Borrowing

  • With revenue at TZS 2.5 trillion and spending at TZS 3.7 trillion, there's a fiscal gap of about TZS 1.2 trillion.
  • This likely requires borrowing (domestic and/or external) to bridge the deficit.

What it tells: The fiscal policy is slightly expansionary, prioritizing development, but managed under a disciplined framework.

Conclusion

The March 2025 budget performance shows a resilient fiscal system, with strong revenue collection and strategic spending priorities. Although the government is spending more than it earns in the short term, this is controlled and focused on growth-oriented sectors, supported by good tax performance and financial management.

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