TICGL

| Economic Consulting Group

TICGL | Economic Consulting Group
Tanzania Employment & Earnings Survey
January 6, 2026  
Tanzania Employment & Earnings Survey 2023/24 | Comprehensive Labor Market Analysis | TICGL Tanzania Employment & Earnings Survey 2025/26 Are Rising Wages and Job Creation Keeping Pace with Tanzania's Expanding Workforce? 4.07M Total Formal Employment +9.6% Employment Growth Rate TZS 609K Average Monthly Wage 6.0% GDP Growth 2025 Home / Insights / Tanzania Employment Survey […]
Tanzania Employment & Earnings Survey 2023/24 | Comprehensive Labor Market Analysis | TICGL

Tanzania Employment & Earnings Survey 2025/26

Are Rising Wages and Job Creation Keeping Pace with Tanzania's Expanding Workforce?

4.07M Total Formal Employment
+9.6% Employment Growth Rate
TZS 609K Average Monthly Wage
6.0% GDP Growth 2025

Introduction

Tanzania's economy recorded sustained GDP growth of 5.5-6.0% between 2023 and 2025, with formal sector employment increasing from 3.72 million in 2022/23 to 4.07 million in 2023/24—a remarkable 9.6% annual growth. However, with 800,000 to 1,000,000 young people entering the labor market annually and only 450,000-500,000 formal jobs created, a persistent employment gap of 300,000-550,000 jobs per year remains a critical challenge.

Key Findings at a Glance

  • Formal employment grew 9.6% from 3.72M to 4.07M workers in 2023/24
  • Average wages increased 70% in four years (TZS 393,861 to TZS 609,354)
  • 71.8% of workforce remains informal (25.95 million workers) without social protection
  • Youth dominate formal employment at 61%, yet youth unemployment stands at 10%
  • Manufacturing leads growth with 44.4% employment expansion
  • Skills mismatch critical: 83.2% of vacancies require technical/professional qualifications

Employment Growth Trajectory (2022-2026)

Formal Employment Growth Trend

3.72M
2022/23
4.07M
2023/24
4.49M
2025 Est.
4.88M
2026 Fcst.
Category2022/232023/242025 (Est.)Growth Rate
Total Employment3,717,9804,073,8874,485,000+9.6%
Private Sector2,540,0292,853,5663,175,000+12.4%
Public Sector1,095,7261,220,3221,310,000+11.4%
Regular Employees3,216,4253,572,3313,925,000+11.1%
Casual Employees501,556501,556560,000+11.7%

Sectoral Employment Distribution

Manufacturing emerged as the largest formal employer with 17.7% of total employment, followed by education at 15.9%. The most explosive growth occurred in transportation (+69.5%), construction (+50.7%), and manufacturing (+44.4%).

Top Employing Sectors (2023/24)

Manufacturing
721,386 (17.7%)
Education
649,733 (15.9%)
Public Admin
484,858 (11.9%)
Agriculture
189,849 (4.7%)
Transport
136,686 (3.4%)
Construction
119,569 (2.9%)
IndustryEmployment 2023/24% of TotalGrowth Rate
Manufacturing721,38617.7%+44.4%
Education649,73315.9%+23.1%
Public Administration484,85811.9%
Agriculture, Forestry & Fishing189,8494.7%+22.6%
Transportation & Storage136,6863.4%+69.5%
Construction119,5692.9%+50.7%
Mining & Quarrying79,1601.9%+15.1%

Wage Trends and Earnings Analysis

Average monthly cash earnings rose from TZS 393,861 in 2020/21 to TZS 609,354 in 2023/24—a nominal increase of over 70% in four years. Public sector wages remain significantly higher at TZS 1.27 million compared to TZS 549,373 in the private sector.

July 2025 Minimum Wage Increase: The public sector minimum wage was raised by 35% from TZS 370,000 to TZS 500,000, representing a landmark adjustment to support workers' purchasing power.
Sector/IndustryAverage Monthly Wage (TZS)Annual Change
Overall Average609,354+8.2%
Public Sector1,273,395+4.1%
Private Sector549,373+8.2%
Financial & Insurance1,346,772+3.6%
Professional & Technical1,018,201+10.8%
Education931,557+4.3%
Mining & Quarrying796,485
Human Health & Social Work637,127+25.4%
Manufacturing482,166
Accommodation & Food350,448

Wage Distribution by Sector (Monthly TZS)

Financial
1,346,772
Public Sector
1,273,395
Professional
1,018,201
Education
931,557
Private Sector
549,373

Youth Employment Dynamics

Youth aged 15-35 constitute 61% of formal employment (2.17 million workers), yet youth unemployment remains elevated at 10%—nearly double the national average of 6.2%. This reflects a critical skills mismatch and insufficient job creation relative to demographic pressure.

Demographic Challenge: With 800,000-1,000,000 youth entering the labor market annually but only 450,000-500,000 formal jobs created, Tanzania faces a persistent employment gap of 300,000-550,000 jobs per year.
Age GroupPrivate SectorPublic SectorTotal% of Total
Youth (15-35 years)1,625,823545,9962,171,81961.0%
Male Youth632,880303,205936,08534.9%
Female Youth459,161246,573705,73426.1%
Adult (36+ years)767,534632,9791,400,51339.0%

Critical Policy Challenges

Challenge 1: High Informality (71.8%)

The Problem: Only 4.1 million formal sector jobs exist versus 30+ million total employed, leaving 25.95 million workers (71.8%) in informal employment without social protection, limited productivity, and minimal contribution to the tax base.

Impact: Revenue collection gap limits government fiscal capacity for infrastructure and social services.

Challenge 2: Skills Mismatch

The Problem: 83.2% of advertised job vacancies require technical or professional skills, yet the education system doesn't adequately supply these competencies.

Impact: Employers struggle to fill positions despite high unemployment, creating structural unemployment.

Challenge 3: Regional Disparities

The Problem: Dar es Salaam accounts for 33.7% of formal employment, with uniform 27.96% formalization rate across ALL regions indicating systemic structural barriers.

Impact: Rural-urban migration pressure, unbalanced development, and limited economic opportunities outside major cities.

ChallengeCurrent Status2026 TargetKey Actions Required
Informal Employment Rate71.8%68.0%Simplify registration, tax incentives, social security expansion
Youth Unemployment10.0%8.5%Vocational training, apprenticeships, startup grants
Annual Job Creation450,000-500,000550,000-650,000Tax reforms, SEZs, manufacturing expansion
Skills Gap (vacancies needing tech skills)83.2%70.0%Curriculum reform, industry partnerships, TVET expansion

2025 Performance & 2026 Outlook

Tanzania's economy grew 6.0% in 2025 (Q1-Q3: 5.8%), significantly outperforming global (2%) and Sub-Saharan Africa (3.8%) averages. The IMF projects 6.1-6.3% GDP growth for 2026 with stable inflation at 3.5% and declining public debt to 48.3% of GDP.

Mining Sector Boom

The mining sector experienced explosive growth from 3.5% (2024) to 16.6% (2025), with gold production up 16.1%, contributing 15.4% to GDP growth and creating 15,000-20,000 new jobs. This sector is projected to maintain strong momentum in 2026.

Sectoral GDP Growth Contributors (2025)

16.6%
Mining
15.4%
Finance
10.4%
Manufacturing
9.3%
Transport
3.0%
Agriculture
Indicator2024 Actual2025 Actual2026 ForecastTrend
GDP Growth Rate5.5%6.0%6.1-6.3%
Formal Employment4.07M4.49M4.88M
Inflation Rate3.6%3.4%3.5%Stable
Unemployment Rate6.2%3.8%3.5%
FX Reserves (USD B)5.86.176.5
Public Debt (% GDP)47.2%49.6%48.3%

Strategic Recommendations for 2026-2030

Immediate Priorities (2026)

  • Formalization Accelerator: Reduce informal employment from 71.8% to 68% by simplifying business registration (26 days → 7 days) and providing tax amnesty for transitioning businesses
  • Skills Revolution: Train 150,000 youth annually in demand-driven technical skills (fintech, manufacturing, mining) to reduce the 83% skills mismatch
  • Youth Employment Compact: Create 600,000+ jobs through National Youth Service expansion, startup incubation fund (TZS 50B), and apprenticeship schemes
  • Regional Development: Decentralize 20,000 public sector jobs, establish 10 agro-processing zones, and invest USD 500M in rural infrastructure

Investment Requirements 2026-2030 (USD)

Infrastructure
$5.0B
Agriculture
$2.0B
Education & Skills
$1.2B
SME Development
$800M
Technology
$500M

Total Investment: USD 9.5 Billion | Expected Jobs: 1,010,000+

Key Takeaways

Tanzania stands at a crossroads in 2026. The data shows robust macroeconomic performance (6% GDP growth, stable inflation, strong reserves) but three critical structural challenges threaten inclusive development:

  1. Informality at 71.8% – nearly 26 million workers without social protection or contributing to tax base
  2. Job creation deficit – 300-550K annual shortfall versus demographic needs
  3. Skills mismatch – 83% of vacancies need technical skills, education system can't supply
Key Metric2025 Baseline2026 Target2030 Vision
Formal Employment Rate28.2%30.5%38-40%
Annual Job Creation450,000550,000750,000-800,000
Youth Unemployment10.0%8.5%6.0%
Average Formal Wage (TZS)672,000742,0001,200,000-1,500,000
Informal Employment Rate71.8%68.0%60-62%
Manufacturing Employment820,000920,0001,400,000-1,600,000

Subscribe to TICGL Insights

Stay informed and gain the crucial information you need to make strategic decisions in Tanzania's vibrant market.
Subscription Form
crossmenu linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram