TICGL

| Economic Consulting Group

TICGL | Economic Consulting Group
Tanzania Industrial & Manufacturing Sector
March 26, 2026  
Tanzania Industrial & Manufacturing Sector Analysis – FYDP IV (2026–2031) | TICGL TICGL Sector Deep-Dive  |  FYDP IV Analysis Series Tanzania Industrial & Manufacturing SectorFYDP IV (2026/27 – 2030/31) A data-rich, table-heavy reference analysis covering macroeconomic baselines, FYDP IV targets, structural challenges, flagship programmes, investment frameworks, and TICGL's independent assessment — synthesised from all relevant […]
Tanzania Industrial & Manufacturing Sector Analysis – FYDP IV (2026–2031) | TICGL
7.3%
Mfg. GDP Share
2024 Baseline
9.9%
Mfg. Growth Target
by 2030/31
TZS 16T
Liganga–Mchuchuma
Steel Flagship
36.5%
Industry GDP Share
Target 2031
15%
Mfg. Export Share
Target (from 9%)
USD 22B
FYDP IV Resource
Allocation – Industry
ES

Executive Summary

Strategic Overview & FYDP IV Transformation Blueprint

The Industrial and Manufacturing Sector is a central pillar of Tanzania's FYDP IV (2026/27–2030/31) strategy to become a competitive regional industrial hub and achieve the Dira 2050 target of a USD 1 trillion economy. As of 2024, the broader industry sector (manufacturing, construction, mining, and energy) contributes 30.4% of GDP and grew at 5.5% — but manufacturing alone accounts for only 7.3% of GDP at a growth rate of 4.8%, well below FYDP IV's ambition.

Manufactured exports represent only 9% of total export earnings, underscoring deep structural underperformance in value-added production. FYDP IV sets an ambitious transformation blueprint — targeting an overall industrial GDP share of 36.5%, manufacturing GDP growth of 9.9%, manufacturing employment at 10% of total, and manufactured goods rising from 9% to 15% of total export earnings by 2031.

This transformation is underpinned by the Liganga–Mchuchuma Iron & Steel Flagship (TZS 16 trillion), SEZ/EPZ modernisation, smart manufacturing, MSME integration, and Industry 4.0 adoption. This analysis synthesises all relevant content from the plan into a data-rich reference document.

TICGL Note: FYDP IV's most challenging numerical target is the near-doubling of manufacturing GDP real growth from 4.8% to 9.9% — a 5.1 percentage point increase. Tanzania's additional competitive advantage lies in natural resource depth: iron ore and coal at Liganga–Mchuchuma, natural gas for industrial energy, and the critical minerals base positioning the country in global battery and clean energy supply chains.

1

Sector Macro Context & Current Performance

2024/25 Baseline — NBS, Economic Survey, ILO, World Bank, MACMOD

Industry Sector GDP Share
30.4%
Includes mfg, construction, mining & energy
▲ Close to FYDP III target of 31.1%
🏭
Manufacturing GDP Share
7.3%
Narrow base, agro-processing dominant
▲ Target: 8.0% by 2031
⚙️
Manufacturing Real Growth
4.8%
Below industry average of 5.5%
▲ Target: 9.9% — requires doubling
📈
Manufactured Export Earnings
9%
Gold ~40% of exports dominates
▲ Target: 15% by 2031
📦
Industry Sub-Sector GDP Growth (2024) Source: NBS National Accounts, Economic Survey 2024/25

Construction (12.8%) and Mining (10.1%) outpace Manufacturing (4.8%) — revealing the structural growth gap FYDP IV must close.

Industry Sub-Sector GDP Share vs. Employment (2024) Source: NBS, ILO/World Bank Employment Data 2023

The industry sector generates 30.4% of GDP but only 9% of employment — a structural productivity gap requiring urgent MSME integration.

Manufacturing GDP Growth Rate — Trend & FYDP IV Target Path (2020–2031) Source: NBS, MACMOD Projections, Economic Survey | Projection: TICGL / MACMOD

The trend line shows manufacturing's historical underperformance vs. FYDP IV's ambition. The gap from 4.8% to 9.9% represents the plan's most critical challenge.

Table 1.1 — Industrial & Manufacturing Sector: Macroeconomic Footprint (2024/25 Baseline) Source: NBS, Economic Survey, ILO/World Bank, MACMOD | Section 3.3.2, FYDP IV
IndicatorValue / StatusNotes
Overall Industry Sector Share of GDP30.4% (2024)Includes manufacturing, construction, mining, and energy; close to FYDP III target of 31.1%
Overall Industry Sector GDP Growth Rate5.5% (2024)Led by construction (12.8%) and mining (10.1%); manufacturing growth lagged at 4.8%
Manufacturing GDP Share7.3% (2024)Narrow base; heavy dependence on food processing and low-value production
Manufacturing GDP Real Growth4.8% (2024)Below industry average; gap vs. FYDP IV target of 9.9% is significant
Construction Sector GDP Share12.8% (2024)Fastest growing sub-sector; large infrastructure investment driving expansion
Mining & Quarrying GDP Share10.1% (2024)Strong performer; dominated by gold, gemstones, and now critical minerals
Manufactured Goods Share of Total Goods Exports22%Exported manufactured goods; room for substantial diversification
Manufactured Goods Share of Total Export Earnings9%Gold (~40% of exports) dominates; manufactured goods severely underrepresent Tanzania's potential
Industrial Sector Share of Total Employment9% (2024)Despite 30% GDP share, industrial employment is narrow — structural productivity gap
Manufacturing Sector Share of Total Employment6% (2024)Agro-processing and food manufacturing dominant; high-tech manufacturing minimal
FYDP IV Resource Allocation — Industry & TradeUSD 22.0 billion (12% of total)3rd priority sector in FYDP IV resource allocation (LTPP 2050 framework)
Flagship Programme — Liganga–Mchuchuma SteelTZS 16 TrillionSingle largest industrial flagship; iron ore, coal, steel, and downstream manufacturing
SEZs & EPZsOperational — under expansionTanzania Investment and Special Economic Zones Authority (TISEZA); SGR corridor-aligned expansion
Manufacturing Value Added (MVA) for MSMEs12% (baseline)MSMEs contribute 12% of MVA; FYDP IV target: 22% by 2031
Export Product Diversification Index0.4 (baseline)FYDP IV target: increase to 0.52 by 2031
Tanzania Export Earnings Composition (2024) Source: NBS National Accounts 2023/24

Gold dominates at ~40%. Manufactured goods at 9% vs. a 15% target signals significant untapped diversification potential.

FYDP IV Resource Allocation by Sector Priority Source: FYDP IV LTPP 2050 Framework

Industry & Trade receives USD 22B (12% of total FYDP IV allocations), ranking 3rd among all sectors.

2

Key Performance Indicators — FYDP IV Targets

Annex II Section 3.3.2 — Outcome-Level KPIs | Baseline to 2030/31

FYDP IV KPI — Baseline vs. 2030/31 Targets: Industrial & Manufacturing Sector Source: FYDP IV Annex II Section 3.3.2 | NBS, MACMOD, ILO, World Bank

All KPIs require substantial upward movement. Manufacturing GDP Real Growth (4.8% → 9.9%) represents the steepest climb — a structural transformation challenge.

Table 2.1 — Outcome-Level KPIs: Industrial & Manufacturing Sector (Annex II, Section 3.3.2) Source: NBS, MACMOD, Economic Survey, ILO/World Bank Employment Data 2023/24
#IndicatorBaselineTarget (2030/31)Change RequiredSource
iOverall Industrial Sector Share of GDP30.4% (2024)36.5%+6.1 ppNBS; MACMOD Projections
iiOverall Industrial Sector GDP Real Growth5.5% (2024)8.0%+2.5 ppNBS; MACMOD Projections
iiiManufacturing GDP Share (%)7.3% (2024)8.0%+0.7 ppEconomic Survey; MACMOD
ivManufacturing GDP Real Growth (%)4.8% (2024)9.9%+5.1 ppEconomic Survey; MACMOD
vManufacturing Share of Total Goods Export Earnings22%30%+8 ppGrowth Diagnostics Manufacturing Study 2023
viManufacturing Share of Total Export Earnings9%15%+6 ppNBS National Accounts 2023
viiIndustrial Sector Share of Total Employment9% (2024)15%+6 ppILO / World Bank Employment Data 2023
viiiManufacturing Sector Share of Total Employment6% (2024)10%+4 ppNBS Employment & Earnings Survey 2023/24
Table 2.2 — Construction Sector KPIs (Annex II, Section 3.3.3 — Integrated Industrial Context) Source: Economic Survey, MACMOD, BOT Financial Stability Report, ILO/World Bank, NBS Labour Force Survey
#IndicatorBaselineTarget (2030/31)Change RequiredSource
iConstruction Share of GDP12.8% (2024)15.5%+2.7 ppEconomic Survey; MACMOD
iiConstruction GDP Real Growth Rate4.1% (2024)8.5%+4.4 ppEconomic Survey; MACMOD
iiiMarket Share of Domestic Companies in Construction40% (2023)50%+10 ppBOT Financial Stability Report 2023; NBS Business Survey
ivConstruction Sector Share of Total Employment4% (2023)6%+2 ppILO / World Bank; NBS Labour Force Survey
Table 2.3 — Enabling Areas & Monitoring Indicators: Industrial & Manufacturing Sector Source: FYDP IV Annex II Section 3.3.2
#Enabling AreaIndicative Enabling Indicator
iIndustrial Policy and IncentivesImplemented targeted industrial incentives; Implemented local content and import substitution policies
iiFinancing and Investment FacilitationDedicated industrial financing through TADB, TIB, and development funds; active FDI pipeline
iiiExport Market Access and Trade FacilitationEstablished SEZs and EPZs with functioning international market linkages
ivTechnological Capability and Skills DevelopmentTechnology and skills transfer through FDI partnerships; Industry 4.0 adoption in SEZs/EPZs
3

Current Status: FYDP III Achievements & Structural Gaps

FYDP IV Entry-Point Assessment | Section 3.3.2 Performance Review

Tanzania's industrial sector showed steady expansion under FYDP III (2021/22–2025/26), driven primarily by construction and mining rather than manufacturing. The following tables document both achievements and the persistent structural gaps that define FYDP IV's reform agenda.

FYDP III Industrial Sector Performance Assessment Matrix Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2, NBS, Economic Survey 2024/25

Radar chart showing performance distribution across key industrial areas — highlighting manufacturing as the outlier underperformer within an otherwise growing sector.

Table 3.1 — Industrial Sector Performance: FYDP III Achievements vs. Structural Gaps (FYDP IV Entry Point) Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2, NBS, Economic Survey, World Bank, ILO
AreaCategoryDetailAssessment
Overall Industry GDP (30.4%)Near-Target AchievementIndustry sector reached 30.4% of GDP — close to the FYDP III target of 31.1%Positive
Construction Growth (12.8%)Strong PerformanceConstruction fastest growing sub-sector, driven by SGR, road corridors, and energy infrastructure investmentPositive
Mining Growth (10.1%)Strong PerformanceMining driven by gold, gemstones, and emerging critical minerals (graphite, cobalt, lithium); became key growth driverPositive
Manufacturing Growth (4.8%)UnderperformanceManufacturing grew at only 4.8% — lowest among industry sub-sectors; FYDP IV needs 9.9%Critical
Manufacturing GDP Share (7.3%)Structural WeaknessOne of the lowest manufacturing-to-GDP ratios in Sub-Saharan Africa; agro-processing dominant; high-tech absentCritical
Manufactured Exports (9% of total)Critical GapGold dominates exports (~40%); manufactured goods share stuck at 9% — import substitution severely limitedCritical
SEZ/EPZ PerformancePartial ProgressSEZs and EPZs operational but underperforming vs. potential; limited Industry 4.0 adoption; digital infrastructure gapsHigh Priority
MSME Manufacturing ParticipationWeakMSMEs contribute only 12% of Manufacturing Value Added; financing, skills, and market access remain major barriersHigh Priority
Technology AdoptionVery LowLimited automation, digital manufacturing, and R&D investment; heavy reliance on labour-intensive low-value processesHigh Priority
Local Steel ProductionPre-OperationalLiganga–Mchuchuma Iron & Steel Complex under development but not yet operational; Tanzania imports virtually all steelHigh Priority
Pharmaceutical ManufacturingNascentSmall base; high import dependence for pharmaceuticals; policy creating space for accredited local productionHigh Priority
Industrial Skills BaseWeakEngineering, digital manufacturing, and applied innovation skills gaps persist across the sectorMedium
Value Chain IntegrationLimitedWeak linkages between manufacturing, agriculture, and services; dependence on imported intermediate and capital goodsMedium
Energy Supply for IndustryConstrainedUnreliable energy supply limits industrial productivity; energy costs high relative to regional competitorsHigh Priority

FYDP IV Industrial Sector Analysis — Continued

Structural Challenges, Strategic Objectives,
Intervention Framework & Flagship Programmes

Sections 4, 5 & 6 — Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2, Annex I 3.3.2, Chapter 4 | TICGL Analysis

4

Structural Challenges — Industrial & Manufacturing Sector

FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 — 12 Categories of Constraint & Institutional Bottleneck

FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 explicitly identifies twelve categories of structural and institutional constraints hindering industrial growth. Three are classified as Critical, five as High Priority, and four as Medium Priority. These constraints directly shape the design of FYDP IV's strategic objectives and intervention framework.

Structural Challenges by Priority Classification Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 | TICGL Classification

Three critical-level constraints — manufacturing growth deficit, infrastructure gaps, and energy unreliability — form the core FYDP IV reform mandate.

Structural Challenges by Category Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 | TICGL Categorisation

Structural/Economic and Infrastructure challenges dominate — both requiring multi-year investment commitments and cross-sector coordination.

Structural Challenge Matrix — Impact Severity vs. Policy Addressability (2026–2031) Source: TICGL Assessment based on FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 | Bubble size = resource requirement

Challenges in the upper-right quadrant (high impact, high addressability) are FYDP IV's highest-leverage intervention points. Energy and MSME integration score highest on both axes.

Table 4.1 — Structural Challenges: Industrial & Manufacturing Sector (FYDP IV) Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 — Elaborated and Prioritised by TICGL
#ChallengeCategoryDescriptionPriority
1Low Manufacturing GDP Share & GrowthEconomic StructureManufacturing at only 7.3% of GDP and 4.8% growth — among the lowest in East Africa; structural transformation incomplete; economy still commodity-dependentCritical
2Inadequate InfrastructureInfrastructureHigh transport and logistics costs; poor road-to-factory connectivity; insufficient industrial zone infrastructure; energy unreliability constrains production hoursCritical
3Unreliable & High-Cost EnergyInfrastructure / EnergyFrequent power outages and high tariffs limit industrial productivity; energy-intensive industries (steel, cement, textiles) particularly affectedCritical
4Weak Access to Long-Term Industrial FinanceFinancialRestricted access to long-term and affordable finance; commercial banks focus on short-term lending; DFI capital base below 0.4% of GDPHigh
5Low Technology Adoption & Limited R&DTechnologyLight adoption of automation, AI, IoT, and digital manufacturing; R&D below 0.58% of GDP; Industry 4.0 absent outside limited SEZ pilotsHigh
6Dependence on Imported Intermediate & Capital GoodsTrade / IndustrialHeavy import reliance for inputs suppresses competitiveness; no domestic steel industry; pharmaceutical imports near-total; capital goods all importedHigh
7Weak Industry–Agriculture–Services Value Chain IntegrationStructuralAgro-processing underutilised relative to agricultural output; services-manufacturing linkage underdeveloped; value chains fragmentedHigh
8Industrial Skills GapsHuman CapitalEngineering, digital manufacturing, automation, and applied innovation skills gaps; vocational training not aligned with industrial demandHigh
9Underdeveloped Industrial Clusters & SEZ UnderperformanceSpatial / RegulatoryIndustrial clusters nascent; SEZs and EPZs lack modern digital infrastructure and smart manufacturing incentive frameworksMedium
10MSME Marginalisation from Industrial Supply ChainsStructural / RegulatoryMSMEs excluded from large manufacturer supply chains; quality standards, certification, and market access barriers persistMedium
11Weak Global Value Chain ParticipationTrade / ExportLimited integration into regional and global value chains; export product diversification index at 0.4 — far below potentialMedium
12Inconsistent Regulatory EnforcementGovernanceRegulatory unpredictability discourages FDI; complex permit and licensing regime increases cost of doing businessMedium
5

Strategic Objectives & Intervention Framework

FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 — Targets, Milestones & Sequenced Interventions

O1
Manufacturing: Transform Tanzania into the Leading Manufacturing Hub in the EAC Region

Achieve average annual manufacturing growth of 9% and a sustained sectoral contribution of 15% to GDP — through industrial policy reform, SEZ/EPZ modernisation, smart manufacturing, technology parks, and green manufacturing standards.

SEZ/EPZ Reform Industry 4.0 Tech Parks Green Mfg. Local Content
O2
Manufacturing: Enhanced Local Content & Inclusive Economic Growth — MSME Integration

Manufacturing Value Added (MVA) for MSMEs increased from 12% to 22% by June 2031 — through regulatory reform, dedicated financing facilities, MSME-friendly industrial parks, and supply chain integration programmes.

MSME Parks Financing Facility Supply Chain Certification
O3
Construction: Sustainable, Inclusive & Regionally Competitive — Led by Local Contractors

Local contractor market share to 50%; at least 50% of large construction projects financed through PPP/bonds; 50% of local firms adopting advanced technologies; 80% of technical jobs held by local contractors by June 2031.

PPP Finance Local Contractors Green Building Skills Academy
Table 5.1a — Quantified Targets: Objective 1 — Manufacturing (EAC Hub) Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 | Deadline: June 2031
RefTarget StatementDeadline
T1.1Tanzania ranked among top 50 countries on World Bank Ease of Doing Business (Business Readiness) IndexJune 2031
T1.2SEZ and EPZ-based manufacturing exports expanded to 22% of total sectoral exportsJune 2031
T1.3Export Product Diversification Index increased from 0.4 to 0.52June 2031
T1.4Local steel, automotive, coal and electronics manufacturing scale-up to at least 40% of regional chain exportsJune 2031
T1.5At least 30% of government procurement in eligible categories reserved for certified domestic manufacturersJune 2031
T1.650% of all EPZs designated as Advanced Manufacturing Zones with specialised high-tech and mineral value-add incentive regimesJune 2031
Table 5.1b — Key Interventions: Objective 1 — Manufacturing Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 | 14 Sequenced Interventions
  • I1.1Develop a national comprehensive industrial policy and Industrialisation Strategy 2050 — regulatory framework by June 2031; priority manufacturing value chains identified by 2029
  • I1.2Establish competitive fiscal regime with targeted FDI incentives for technology transfer; one-stop investment facilitation centre to reduce business setup time and cost by June 2031
  • I1.3Create mineral-based manufacturing investment blueprint by 2027; launch targeted global investment campaign leveraging NIIMS and international roadshows; establish Mineral Manufacturing Investment Facilitation Desk by June 2031
  • I1.4Implement mandatory 30% local content quota in public procurement for eligible goods from certified domestic manufacturers by June 2031; establish supplier development programme to certify and scale local SMEs
  • I1.5Establish specialised regulatory framework for innovation and technology parks by June 2028; develop parks focused on high-potential sectors by June 2030; upgrade and expand SEZs/EPZs with modern facilities along the SGR corridor by June 2031
  • I1.6Equip all SEZs and EPZs with foundational digital infrastructure (high-speed internet, IoT platforms) to support Industry 4.0 by June 2031
  • I1.7Create conducive environment for accredited pharmaceutical industry establishment by June 2031
  • I1.8Develop smart manufacturing incentive package; establish skills training centres within SEZs to accelerate private sector automation investment by June 2031
  • I1.9Establish specialised High-Tech & Mineral Value-Add incentive regime for EPZs; designate and upgrade 50% of EPZs as Advanced Manufacturing Zones by June 2031
  • I1.10Implement mandatory energy and environmental auditing regime for all manufacturing industries with accredited compliance checks by June 2031
  • I1.11Attract Green FDI through targeted incentives for companies transferring advanced energy-efficient and clean manufacturing technologies; introduce green manufacturing tax credit programme for ISO 14001 certified firms by June 2031
  • I1.12Establish national network of internationally accredited testing and certification centres by 2028 — enabling domestic certification of high-value products to global standards
  • I1.13Develop specialised industrial clusters for steel, automotive, and electronics co-locating manufacturers with skills training centres and supply chain hubs by 2029
  • I1.14Establish national network of specialised industrial innovation hubs focused on AI and advanced manufacturing by 2028; dedicated R&D facilitation facility by 2029; Global Tech-Export initiative by 2030
Objective 1 — Key Target Comparisons: Baseline vs. 2031 Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2

Export diversification, SEZ export share, and government procurement quotas represent the most transformational shifts in Objective 1.

Objective 1 — Intervention Timeline & Sequencing Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 | TICGL Sequencing

Interventions are front-loaded in 2027–2028 to build regulatory and infrastructure foundations before scaling manufacturing activity in 2029–2031.

Table 5.2a — Quantified Targets: Objective 2 — MSME Manufacturing Integration Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 | MVA Target: 12% → 22% by June 2031
RefTarget StatementDeadline
T2.1Manufacturing Value Added (MVA) for MSMEs increased from 12% to 22%June 2031
T2.2At least one dedicated MSME-friendly industrial park with shared infrastructure established in each cityJune 2031
T2.3Dedicated manufacturing MSMEs financing facility (grants and concessional loans) operational2028
T2.4Specialised MSMEs Credit Guarantee Scheme within the facility operationalJune 2031
Table 5.2b — Key Interventions: Objective 2 — MSME Manufacturing Integration Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 | 7 Interventions
  • I2.1Review and establish conducive regulatory framework for MSME formalisation, finance access, capacity building, and regional/international market access by June 2031
  • I2.2Establish dedicated manufacturing MSMEs facility providing grants and concessional loans for technology upgrading and business expansion by 2028
  • I2.3Create specialised MSMEs Credit Guarantee Scheme within the financing facility to unlock commercial bank lending by June 2031
  • I2.4Establish at least one MSME-friendly industrial park per city with shared utilities, logistics and storage infrastructure by June 2031 — supportive governance framework by 2029; pilot construction by 2031; integrate business support services within all parks
  • I2.5Establish national MSME quality and certification support programme to certify MSMEs to international manufacturing standards by June 2031
  • I2.6Launch national supply chain linkage programme facilitating matchmaking and contract agreements between certified MSMEs and large manufacturers by June 2031
  • I2.7Develop and deliver supply-chain-ready training curriculum to MSMEs covering procurement processes, logistics, and production scaling by June 2031
MSME Manufacturing Value Added — Baseline to Target Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 | MIT / SIDO Monitoring

Raising MSME MVA from 12% to 22% — a 10 percentage point leap — requires simultaneous advances in financing, parks, certification, and supply chain access.

MSME Integration Pathway — Intervention Pillars Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 | TICGL Analysis

FYDP IV's three-pronged MSME approach — parks + finance + supply chain linkage — is structurally coherent. Quality certification is the critical missing link.

Table 5.3a — Quantified Targets: Objective 3 — Construction Sector Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.3 | Local Contractor Empowerment & PPP Finance
RefTarget StatementDeadline
T3.1Local contractors' share of large-scale construction projects increased to 50%June 2031
T3.2At least 50% of all large construction projects implemented through alternative financing (PPP and bonds)June 2031
T3.3At least 50% of local construction companies adopting advanced technologies and sustainable practicesJune 2031
T3.480% of technical and skilled jobs in the construction industry undertaken by local contractorsJune 2031
T3.530% of construction projects incorporating green building practices and resilient constructionJune 2031
Table 5.3b — Key Interventions: Objective 3 — Construction Sector Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.3 | 14 Interventions
  • I3.1Institutionalise a contractor financing framework enhancing local firms' access to affordable financing by 2027
  • I3.2Implement local contractor empowerment framework by June 2027 — mandate 30-day prompt payments, local content preferences, and joint ventures with technology-transfer KPIs for all public projects
  • I3.3Improve framework for planning, managing, monitoring, and evaluating local participation in public procurement by June 2028
  • I3.4Implement incentives for access to modern construction equipment and technologies annually
  • I3.5Launch international readiness programme by June 2031 to certify local firms to international standards for regional project competition
  • I3.6Strengthen and translate PPP frameworks into implementable, bankable projects by 2027; provide fiscal and non-fiscal incentives annually; enhance public officials' PPP contract management capacity
  • I3.7Promote use of capital market instruments to finance large-scale construction projects; operationalise PPP functions within MDAs and LGAs by 2027
  • I3.8Promote partnerships between local firms and multinationals in large construction projects annually; fund innovation hubs for R&D in local materials annually
  • I3.9Establish modern construction skills academy by 2028 — digital tools (BIM), green building, and international project management training
  • I3.10Implement National Construction Apprenticeship Scheme — mandate participation in major projects; partner with vocational institutes for technician certification annually
  • I3.11Establish and enforce mandatory Green Building Code and Green Public Procurement (GPP) policy for all new government projects by June 2029
  • I3.12Develop resilient infrastructure technical regulations, standards, and guidelines by June 2027
  • I3.13Introduce green tech incentive package by June 2028 — tax breaks and grants for renewable energy, prefabrication, and local material innovations in construction
  • I3.14Establish and certify construction professionals in green building design, management, and verification through national skills acceleration programme by June 2031
Construction Sector — Baseline vs. 2031 Targets Across All KPIs Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.3 | Economic Survey, MACMOD, BOT, ILO

Domestic contractor market share (+10 pp), alternative finance adoption (+50% of projects), and green construction (near-zero to 30%) represent the sector's most ambitious structural shifts.

6

Flagship Programmes — Industrial Sector Anchors

FYDP IV Section 4.2 & 4.3 — Transformational Anchor Projects & Value Chain Platforms

FYDP IV designates four Flagship Programmes as the primary investment platforms for industrial transformation. These are transformational anchor projects expected to catalyse downstream value chains, SME participation, and regional manufacturing leadership. The Liganga–Mchuchuma Iron and Steel Complex, at TZS 16 trillion, is the single most consequential industrial investment in Tanzania's post-independence history.

Flagship Programme Investment Scale vs. Regional Impact Potential Source: FYDP IV Section 4.2 & 4.3 | TICGL Assessment

Liganga–Mchuchuma dominates at TZS 16T — the single largest industrial investment in Tanzania's post-independence history. Other flagships are in feasibility/development stages.

Flagship Programmes — Value Chain Breadth by Sector Source: FYDP IV Section 4.2 & 4.3 | Table 6.1 Deliverables

Liganga–Mchuchuma generates the broadest downstream value chain (7 product clusters). Dodoma Hub anchors the green economy / critical minerals export pipeline.

Estimated Investment
Liganga–Mchuchuma Iron & Steel Complex (LAMI-STEEL)
📍 Ludewa District, Njombe/Ruvuma — Southern Highlands

Fully integrated iron ore mining, coal extraction, and industrial processing to produce steel, alloys, and related products — anchoring mineral beneficiation, industrial diversification, and import substitution. Tanzania currently imports virtually all steel; successful commissioning transforms the country's import bill and creates a domestic supply chain for construction, automotive, agricultural equipment, and capital goods.

Investment TZS 16 Trillion
Lead Institution MIT; NDC; PPPC; TANESCO; TRC
Status Pre-operational; under development
Enabling Infrastructure SGR spur + 590km roads + energy
Steel Fabrication Construction Materials Machinery Components Automotive Parts Metal Engineering SMEs Cement & Industrial Gases Fertilisers
Estimated Investment
Dodoma Critical Minerals & Technology Innovation Hub
📍 Dodoma Region — Central Tanzania

Technology plant for processing critical minerals (graphite, lithium, cobalt, rare earths) into battery precursors and solar PV modules — positioning Tanzania in global clean energy value chains. Tanzania possesses one of the world's most significant critical minerals endowments, strategically valuable in the global EV, battery, and renewable energy transition.

Investment TBD — under feasibility
Lead Institution NPC; MIT; MoEST; PPPC
Status Development stage
Global Drivers EU CRMA; US IRA; EV battery demand
Battery Value Chain Solar PV Modules Electronics Assembly Mineral Beneficiation Clean Energy Manufacturing
Estimated Investment
Great Lakes Smart Industrial & Blue Economy Hub
📍 Lake Zone — Mwanza, Kigoma, Kagera

Regional hub for mineral processing, agro-pharmaceuticals, blue economy industries, cross-border digital trade, and fisheries-linked manufacturing. Targets East Africa's Great Lakes regional market with tourism-linked processing and digital trade corridor development.

Investment TBD — multi-sector programme
Lead Institution NPC; MIT; Ministry Blue Economy
Status Conceptual — programme design
Market EAC regional integration
Agro-Pharma Products Fish Processing Regional Mineral Logistics Tourism-Linked Processing Digital Trade Corridor
Estimated Investment
Bagamoyo Eco-Maritime City & Intermodal Transport Hub
📍 Bagamoyo, Coast Region

Deep sea port, SEZ activation, Blue Economy centre, and port-logistics corridor — enabling maritime logistics, aquaculture, seafood processing, horticulture exports, and ship repair. Positions Tanzania as East Africa's primary maritime logistics gateway.

Investment TBD — infrastructure-led
Lead Institution Ministry of Transport; TPA; PPPC
Status Pre-feasibility
Strategic Role Maritime gateway — EAC/SADC
Maritime Logistics Aquaculture Seafood Processing Horticulture Exports Ship Repair Services
Table 6.1 — Industrial Sector Flagship Programmes Summary (FYDP IV Section 4.2 & 4.3) Source: FYDP IV Chapter 4 — Flagship Programmes | MIT, NPC, PPPC Lead Institutions
Flagship ProgrammeCost EstimateLocationLead InstitutionsStage
Liganga–Mchuchuma Iron & Steel Complex (LAMI-STEEL)TZS 16 TrillionNjombe / RuvumaMIT; NDC; PPPC; TANESCO; TRC; TPA; TANROADS; TIRDOAdvanced
Dodoma Critical Minerals & Technology Innovation HubTBD (feasibility)Dodoma RegionNPC; MIT; MoEST; PPPC; International Tech PartnersDevelopment
Great Lakes Smart Industrial & Blue Economy HubTBD (multi-sector)Mwanza; Kigoma; KageraNPC; MIT; Ministry of Blue Economy; Regional PartnersDesign Stage
Bagamoyo Eco-Maritime City & Intermodal Transport HubTBD (infrastructure-led)Bagamoyo, Coast RegionMinistry of Transport; PPPC; TPA; Private InvestorsPre-Feasibility
Table 6.2 — Priority Manufacturing Value Chains (FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 & Chapter 4) Source: FYDP IV — TICGL Synthesis | 8 Priority Value Chains
Value ChainAnchor Programme / ZoneDescription & LinkageDevelopment Stage
Iron & SteelLiganga–MchuchumaConstruction materials, machinery, automotive parts, metal fabrication — import substitution anchorAdvanced
Critical Minerals ProcessingDodoma HubBattery precursors (graphite, lithium, cobalt), solar PV modules, rare earth electronics — green economy exportDevelopment
Pharmaceuticals & Medical ProductsSEZs / Great Lakes HubDomestic API manufacturing, generic medicines, medical equipment — reducing import dependenceNascent; Fast-Track
Agro-Processing & Food ManufacturingAll Regions (NAGITA-linked)Rice milling, edible oils, sugar, food packaging, starch, bioenergy — linkage with 420,000 ha irrigation expansionActive; Scaling
Textiles & GarmentsExisting SEZs / EPZsExport-oriented light manufacturing; East African market integration; cotton-to-cloth value chainActive; Constrained
Electronics & Digital HardwareTechnology Parks / SEZsSatellite assembly, component manufacturing, IoT hardware — nascent but strategically prioritisedNascent
Automotive ComponentsIndustrial ClustersParts fabrication linked to steel; regional value chains; co-location with skills training centresEarly-Stage
Cement, Glass & CeramicsDomestic Industrial ZonesConstruction-linked; import substitution; carbon-intensive — green building transition requiredActive
Tanzania Manufacturing Value Chains — Maturity vs. Strategic Priority Matrix Source: FYDP IV Annex I Section 3.3.2 & Chapter 4 | TICGL Assessment

Agro-processing is the most mature active value chain. Iron & Steel and Critical Minerals occupy the high-priority, high-investment quadrant — the transformation engines of FYDP IV.


FYDP IV Industrial Sector Analysis — Final Batch

SEZ/EPZ Framework, Investment Financing, Master Scorecard
& TICGL Analytical Assessment

Sections 7, 8, 9 & 10 — Source: FYDP IV Sections 3.3.2, 4.2, Annex I & II | NBS, MACMOD, ILO, World Bank | TICGL Independent Analysis

7

SEZ & EPZ Modernisation Framework

FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 — Smart Manufacturing, Digital Infrastructure & Advanced Manufacturing Zones

Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and Export Processing Zones (EPZs) are central to FYDP IV's industrial transformation strategy. The Plan calls for comprehensive modernisation — upgrading to smart manufacturing facilities, digital infrastructure, SGR corridor alignment, and a new Advanced Manufacturing Zone (AMZ) designation for 50% of EPZs. TISEZA (Tanzania Investment and Special Economic Zones Authority) is the lead implementing institution.

SEZ/EPZ — Current Baseline vs. FYDP IV Modernisation Targets Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 | TISEZA / MIT

50% of EPZs will be re-designated as Advanced Manufacturing Zones — from zero today. SEZ export share rises from a low baseline to 22% of sectoral exports by 2031.

SEZ/EPZ Modernisation — Priority Pillars & FYDP IV Readiness Score Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 | TICGL Assessment

Digital infrastructure and pharmaceutical zone readiness require the most investment. SGR alignment and incentive regime reform are the most actionable near-term pillars.

🏭
Smart Manufacturing Infrastructure
All SEZs and EPZs
High-speed internet, IoT platforms, and Industry 4.0 digital tools deployed across all zones.
By June 2031
🚄
SGR Corridor Alignment
Priority SEZs
Upgrade and expand SEZs/EPZs along the Standard Gauge Railway corridor for logistics efficiency.
By June 2031
Advanced Manufacturing Zone Designation
50% of All EPZs
50% of EPZs re-designated as AMZs with specialised high-tech and mineral value-add incentive regimes.
By June 2031
💊
Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Zones
Specific EPZs / SEZs
Conducive environment for accredited pharmaceutical and medical product industry establishment.
By June 2031
🔬
Innovation & Technology Parks
New — SEZ-adjacent
Purpose-built parks for R&D and high-tech manufacturing investment across priority sectors.
By June 2030
🎓
Skills Training Centres Within SEZs
All SEZs
On-zone skills training to accelerate private sector investment in automation and digital manufacturing.
By June 2031
🌿
Green Manufacturing Incentive Package
All SEZs / EPZs
ISO 14001 tax credits, mandatory environmental auditing, and targeted Green FDI attraction.
Annual — ongoing
🪪
One-Stop Investment Facilitation Centre
National (SEZ-linked)
Streamlined regulatory framework reducing time and cost of setting up and operating industrial businesses.
By June 2031
Accredited Testing & Certification Network
National + SEZ-based
Internationally accredited testing centres enabling domestic product certification to global standards.
By 2028
Table 7.1 — SEZ & EPZ Modernisation Targets & Interventions (FYDP IV) Source: FYDP IV Section 3.3.2 | Lead Institution: TISEZA / MIT
TargetScopeDescription & Timeline
Smart Manufacturing InfrastructureAll SEZs and EPZsEquip with foundational digital infrastructure: high-speed internet, IoT platforms, Industry 4.0 tools — by June 2031
SGR Corridor AlignmentPriority SEZsUpgrade and expand existing SEZs and EPZs with modern facilities, prioritising development along the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) corridor by June 2031
Advanced Manufacturing Zone Designation50% of all EPZsDesignate and upgrade 50% of EPZs as Advanced Manufacturing Zones with digital infrastructure and skilled labour pools for high-tech industries by June 2031
High-Tech & Mineral Value-Add Incentive RegimeAll EPZsEstablish specialised incentive regime targeting high-tech industrial production and mineral-based manufacturing by June 2031
Pharmaceutical Manufacturing ZonesSpecific EPZs / SEZsCreate conducive environment for establishment of accredited pharmaceutical industries by June 2031
Innovation & Technology ParksNew — SEZ-adjacent developmentSet up innovation and technology parks for R&D and manufacturing investments in high-tech industries by June 2030
Skills Training Centres Within SEZsAll SEZsEstablish skills training centres within SEZs to accelerate private sector investment in automation by June 2031
Green Manufacturing Incentive PackageAll SEZs/EPZsTax credits for ISO 14001 certified firms; mandatory energy and environmental auditing; attract Green FDI annually
One-Stop Investment Facilitation CentreNational (SEZ-linked)Streamlined regulatory framework — reduce time and cost of setting up and operating industrial businesses by June 2031
Accredited Testing & Certification NetworkNational + SEZ-basedNational network of internationally accredited testing and certification centres by 2028 — enable domestic product certification
8

Investment & Financing Framework

FYDP IV — USD 22.0 Billion Sector Allocation | 70:30 Private-to-Public Architecture

FYDP IV allocates USD 22.0 billion (12% of total plan resources) to Industry and Trade — the 3rd largest sector allocation. The overall financing architecture is 70:30 private-to-public, with the private sector expected to dominate through FDI, PPPs, domestic private investment, and industrial financing windows. Total FYDP IV resource envelope is USD 183.0 billion.

FYDP IV Sector Resource Allocation — All 11 Sectors (USD Billion) Source: FYDP IV LTPP 2050 Framework | Total: USD 183.0 Billion

Transport & Logistics leads at USD 45.8B (25%). Industry & Trade (USD 22.0B, 12%) ranks 3rd — reflecting the Plan's emphasis on productive sector transformation.

Industry & Trade Financing Architecture — Source Mix Source: FYDP IV Investment Framework | TICGL Estimate

70% private financing — FDI, PPP, domestic private — is the backbone of the framework. DFIs (TADB, TIB) play a catalytic role in de-risking the private-sector-led model.

Table 8.1 — FYDP IV Sector Resource Allocation Context: Industry & Trade Rank Source: FYDP IV LTPP 2050 Framework | USD Billion | Industry ranked 3rd of 11 sectors
#SectorCost (USD bn)Share (%)Note
1Transport and Logistics Infrastructure45.825.0%Largest allocation; SGR, roads, ports
2Energy and Extractives27.515.0%Power infrastructure and minerals sector
3Industry and Trade22.012.0%Manufacturing, SEZs, industrial clusters
4Agriculture, Livestock, and Fisheries18.310.0%NAGITA, irrigation, food systems
5Education and Skills Development14.68.0%Human capital for industrialisation
6Health and Social Protection12.87.0%Includes pharmaceutical sector links
7Water, Sanitation, and Urban Development9.25.0%Industrial water supply included
8ICT and Digital Economy9.25.0%Digital infrastructure for SEZs
9Tourism and Services7.34.0%Blue economy / maritime linkages
10Environment and Climate Resilience5.53.0%Green manufacturing / CBAM readiness
11Governance, Public Administration, R&D & Others10.05.5%Institutional strengthening
TOTAL183.0100.0%5-year plan envelope 2026/27–2030/31

Key Industrial Financing Instruments & Mechanisms

Primary FDI Instrument
FDI — Technology Transfer Focus
Targeted incentives for FDI bringing technology transfer and local industry development; competitive fiscal regime designed against regional peers (Kenya, Rwanda, Ethiopia).
Key Parties: TIC; MIT; TISEZA; Private International Investors
New — Operational by 2028
Manufacturing MSME Financing Facility
Dedicated grants and concessional loans for MSME technology upgrading and business expansion. Operational by 2028 with Credit Guarantee Scheme to unlock commercial bank lending.
Key Parties: TADB; TIB; MIT; Ministry of Finance
New — Operational by 2031
MSMEs Credit Guarantee Scheme
Unlocks commercial bank lending for manufacturing MSMEs by reducing credit risk; established within the MSME financing facility as a specialised risk-sharing window.
Key Parties: BoT; Commercial Banks; MIT
Multiple Projects — Pipeline by 2027
Industrial PPP Frameworks
PPPs for SEZs, EPZs, industrial parks, infrastructure-linked manufacturing, and technology parks. Bankable project pipeline by 2027; at least 50% of large construction projects via PPP.
Key Parties: PPPC; MIT; TISEZA; Private Investors
TZS 16 Trillion Flagship
Liganga–Mchuchuma Steel Complex (PPP)
Primary flagship investment; PPP structure with NDC as government anchor; private sector co-investment for steel plant, rolling mills, and industrial cluster development.
Key Parties: MIT (Lead); NDC; PPPC; Private Sector
Existing DFIs — Scale-Up
Industrial Financing — TADB & TIB
TADB and TIB as primary industrial Development Finance Institutions; recapitalisation and portfolio growth planned under FYDP IV financial sector chapter reforms.
Key Parties: TADB; TIB; Ministry of Finance; AfDB; World Bank
For Large Projects
Capital Market Instruments
Bond financing for large-scale construction and industrial projects; DSE listing of industrial enterprises; institutional investor mobilisation for long-term project finance.
Key Parties: DSE; Capital Markets Authority; Ministry of Finance
Ongoing / Annual
Green FDI & Clean Manufacturing Incentives
Tax incentives for foreign companies transferring energy-efficient and clean manufacturing technologies; ISO 14001 tax credit programme aligned with EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism.
Key Parties: MIT; NEMC; TRA; Green Finance Institutions
New Facility — By 2029
R&D Financing — Grants & Concessions
Dedicated research facilitation facility providing grants for industrial R&D and concessions for commercialisation of industrial innovations linked to academic and private sector partners.
Key Parties: MoEST; COSTECH; MIT; Private Partners
Table 8.2 — Industrial Sector Financing Instruments & Mechanisms (FYDP IV) Source: FYDP IV Investment Framework | TICGL Synthesis
InstrumentStatusDescription & RoleKey Parties
FDI — Technology TransferPrimary FDICompetitive fiscal regime vs. regional peers; one-stop facilitation centreTIC; MIT; TISEZA
MSME Financing FacilityNew — 2028Grants and concessional loans for technology upgrading and MSME expansionTADB; TIB; MIT; MoF
MSME Credit Guarantee SchemeNew — 2031Reduces credit risk; unlocks commercial bank lending for MSMEsBoT; Commercial Banks; MIT
Industrial PPP FrameworksMultiple ProjectsPPPs for SEZs, EPZs, industrial parks; bankable pipeline by 2027PPPC; MIT; TISEZA
Liganga–Mchuchuma Steel ComplexTZS 16T FlagshipPPP structure — NDC anchor + private co-investment for steel plant and clusterMIT; NDC; PPPC
Industrial DFIs — TADB & TIBScale-UpPrimary DFIs; recapitalisation and portfolio growth under DFI reformTADB; TIB; MoF; AfDB; WB
Capital Market InstrumentsLarge ProjectsBond financing; DSE listing; institutional investor mobilisationDSE; CMA; MoF
Green FDI & Clean Mfg. IncentivesAnnualISO 14001 tax credit; energy-efficient tech transfer incentives; CBAM alignmentMIT; NEMC; TRA
Supplier Development ProgrammeGovt-LinkedCertify and scale local SMEs; activates 30% local procurement quotaMIT; TBS; SIDO; GPA
R&D Financing — Grants & ConcessionsNew — 2029Research grants and commercialisation concessions for industrial innovationMoEST; COSTECH; MIT
9

FYDP IV Industrial & Manufacturing Sector — Master Scorecard

Complete Consolidated Reference — All 21 Quantified Targets | Baseline vs. 2030/31

The following master scorecard consolidates all 21 quantified industrial and manufacturing sector targets from FYDP IV into a single reference framework — spanning GDP performance, employment, exports, construction, MSME integration, SEZ/EPZ, governance, financing, and sustainability.

Master Scorecard — Percentage-Point Change Required Across All KPIs Source: FYDP IV Annex II Section 3.3.2 & 3.3.3 | NBS, MACMOD, ILO, World Bank, TISEZA, MIT

Green construction (near-zero → 30%) and PPP/bond finance for construction (est. <10% → ≥50%) represent the largest absolute transformations. Manufacturing GDP growth (+5.1 pp) is the steepest growth-rate challenge.

Table 9.1 — FYDP IV Industrial & Manufacturing Sector: Complete Master Scorecard Source: FYDP IV Annex II 3.3.2 & 3.3.3 | NBS, MACMOD, ILO, World Bank, TISEZA, PPPC, MIT, SIDO
#Target AreaBaseline2030/31 TargetChange RequiredSource / Monitor
1Overall Industrial Sector Share of GDP30.4% (2024)36.5%+6.1 ppNBS / MACMOD
2Overall Industrial Sector GDP Real Growth5.5% (2024)8.0%+2.5 ppNBS / MACMOD
3Manufacturing GDP Share (%)7.3% (2024)8.0%+0.7 ppEconomic Survey
4Manufacturing GDP Real Growth (%)4.8% (2024)9.9%+5.1 ppEconomic Survey / MACMOD
5Manufacturing Share of Total Goods Export Earnings22%30%+8 ppGrowth Diagnostics Study
6Manufacturing Share of Total Export Earnings9%15%+6 ppNBS National Accounts
7Industrial Sector Share of Total Employment9% (2024)15%+6 ppILO / World Bank
8Manufacturing Sector Share of Total Employment6% (2024)10%+4 ppNBS Employment Survey
9Construction GDP Share12.8% (2024)15.5%+2.7 ppEconomic Survey
10Construction GDP Real Growth4.1% (2024)8.5%+4.4 ppEconomic Survey
11Domestic Contractors' Market Share (Construction)40% (2023)50%+10 ppBOT / NBS
12Construction Sector Employment Share4% (2023)6%+2 ppILO / NBS
13Manufacturing Value Added (MVA) — MSMEs12%22%+10 ppMIT / SIDO
14Export Product Diversification Index0.40.52+0.12MIT / UNCTAD
15SEZ/EPZ Manufacturing Export ShareBaseline TBD22% of sectoral exportsSubstantialTISEZA / MIT
16EPZs Designated as Advanced Manufacturing Zones0%50% of all EPZs+50 ppTISEZA
17Government Procurement Local Content QuotaNo formal quota≥30% for eligible goodsNew MandateGPE / MIT
18Ease of Doing Business / Business Readiness IndexNot in top 50Top 50 globallyMajor ReformWorld Bank
19Local Contractors on Large Construction Projects<50% (est.)50%+10+ ppPPPC / MLCD
20Alternative Finance for Construction (PPP/bonds)<50% of projects≥50% of all large projectsStructural ShiftPPPC / DSE
21Green Construction Projects ShareVery low (<5% est.)30%+25+ ppMLCD / NEMC

Analytical Commentary & TICGL Assessment

Independent TICGL Analysis — Execution Risks, Opportunities & Strategic Relevance

Manufacturing Growth Gap — Tanzania vs. East African Comparators Source: TICGL Assessment | World Bank, NBS, National Statistical Offices 2023/24

Kenya, Rwanda, and Ethiopia have sustained manufacturing growth above 8% — demonstrating that Tanzania's 9.9% target is ambitious but regionally precedented.

TICGL Feasibility Assessment — FYDP IV Industrial Targets Source: TICGL Independent Assessment | Based on FYDP IV + comparative benchmarks

SEZ/EPZ reform and MSME parks score highest on feasibility. Manufacturing GDP growth doubling and Ease of Business (Top 50) require the most ambitious structural reform.

10.1 — Manufacturing Growth Gap
Why 4.8% Must Become 9.9% — The Central Challenge

FYDP IV's most challenging numerical target is the near-doubling of manufacturing GDP real growth from 4.8% to 9.9% — a 5.1 percentage point increase. Tanzania's manufacturing sector has been structurally weak for decades, constrained by energy unreliability, imported inputs, shallow finance, and limited technology.

The growth acceleration required is substantial but not impossible: Kenya, Rwanda, and Ethiopia have all achieved sustained manufacturing growth above 8% over multi-year periods. Tanzania's additional advantage is natural resource depth — iron ore and coal at Liganga–Mchuchuma, natural gas for industrial energy, and the critical minerals base.

The question is execution speed: can TANESCO restructure and deliver reliable industrial-grade electricity, can the SGR reach Liganga, and can the one-stop investment facilitation centre genuinely reduce setup time and cost within the plan period?

10.2 — Liganga–Mchuchuma Flagship
The Industrial Transformation Flagship — Viability & Risks

The Liganga–Mchuchuma Iron and Steel Complex (LAMI-STEEL), at TZS 16 trillion, is the single most consequential industrial investment in Tanzania's post-independence history. Successful commissioning would fundamentally transform the country's import bill — Tanzania currently imports virtually all steel.

It would create a domestic supply chain for construction, automotive, agricultural equipment, and capital goods, and anchor the Southern Corridor as a mineral-industrial growth pole. The challenge is the complexity of enabling infrastructure: the SGR spur to Liganga and Mchuchuma, over 590 km of dedicated roads, energy supply from the Mchuchuma coal component, and water infrastructure must all be ready before the steel plant can operate commercially.

The PPPC's role in structuring the PPP between NDC and private investors will be critical to project viability.

10.3 — MSME Manufacturing Gap
12% to 22% MVA — Social Inclusion Imperative

FYDP IV's target of raising MSME Manufacturing Value Added from 12% to 22% is a social inclusion imperative as much as an economic one. Tanzania's manufacturing sector is dominated by a small number of large formal enterprises; the MSME tier — which represents the vast majority of registered businesses — is largely excluded from manufacturing value chains.

The Plan's three-pronged approach (MSME-friendly industrial parks in every city, a dedicated financing facility, and a supply chain linkage programme) is structurally coherent. The critical missing link is quality and standards: without a functional national accreditation and certification system, MSMEs will continue to be excluded from supply chains requiring ISO, KEBS, or international quality compliance.

The accredited testing and certification centre network (targeted by 2028) must be prioritised and adequately resourced as the enabling condition for all other MSME integration efforts.

10.4 — Critical Minerals Opportunity
Tanzania's Green Economy Industrial Window — 5 to 8 Years

Tanzania possesses one of the world's most significant critical minerals endowments — graphite, lithium, cobalt, nickel, rare earths, vanadium, and titanium — assets that are strategically valuable in the global transition to electric vehicles, batteries, and renewable energy.

The global timing is favourable: the EU Critical Raw Materials Act, the US Inflation Reduction Act, and major automotive manufacturers' battery sourcing strategies all create demand for reliable, responsible sources of processed critical minerals. Tanzania's competitive advantage over DRC, Zambia, and Zimbabwe lies in governance stability, existing mining infrastructure, and the SGR logistics corridor.

The window to establish first-mover advantage in battery-grade mineral processing is narrow — 5 to 8 years before Chinese-backed African competitors consolidate market position. The Dodoma Critical Minerals Hub must accelerate from feasibility to implementation without delay.

10.5 — Green Manufacturing & Trade Risk
EU CBAM, ISO 14001, and the Green Compliance Imperative

The Plan's green manufacturing ambition — mandatory environmental auditing, ISO 14001 incentives, and green construction standards — represents a forward-thinking alignment with international trade trends. The EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will increasingly penalise carbon-intensive manufactured exports from non-compliant countries.

Tanzania's manufactured exports to Europe (including textiles, processed foods, and eventually minerals) will face greater scrutiny. FYDP IV's approach of using positive incentives (tax credits for certified green firms) rather than pure regulation is appropriate given the sector's current development stage — punitive carbon regulation would deter investment at exactly the moment when manufacturing scale-up is most needed.

The 30% green construction target for projects is ambitious given the current near-zero baseline, but Green Public Procurement mandated for government projects provides a guaranteed demand anchor to drive the transition.

The industrial sector presents the richest PPP opportunity pipeline in FYDP IV for TICGL. Industrial park development (MSME parks in every city), SEZ and EPZ modernisation, advanced manufacturing zone designation, the Liganga–Mchuchuma complex, technology parks, construction project PPP structuring, and the MSME financing facility all require bankable project preparation, investment advisory, and PPP governance frameworks.

The Plan mandates that at least 50% of large construction projects be financed through PPP and bond instruments — creating direct advisory mandates. PPPC's operationalisation of PPP functions within MDAs and LGAs (by 2027) will generate institutional capacity-building demand.

TICGL is well-positioned to address these advisory, research, and facilitation needs across the manufacturing and construction sectors, leveraging its analytical depth, stakeholder networks, and economic intelligence platforms.

📋 TICGL Synthesis Verdict

FYDP IV Industrial Transformation: Ambitious, Feasible in Parts, Execution-Critical

Tanzania's FYDP IV industrial agenda represents the most ambitious manufacturing transformation programme in the country's post-independence history. The framework is coherent — combining policy reform, investment incentives, infrastructure anchors, and institutional capacity. The critical variables are execution speed on Liganga–Mchuchuma infrastructure, energy sector reform by TANESCO, the pace of SEZ/EPZ digital modernisation, and the quality of PPP project preparation. The critical minerals window is narrow. TICGL's assessment is that Tanzania has a genuine opportunity to close the manufacturing growth gap and establish EAC regional industrial leadership — but only if the enabling conditions are delivered on schedule.

21
Total KPI Targets
USD 22B
Sector Allocation
TZS 16T
Steel Flagship
4
Flagship Programmes
5–8 yrs
Critical Minerals Window
9.9%
Mfg. Growth Target
Source & Citation: Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd (TICGL) | www.ticgl.com | Dar es Salaam, Tanzania | Analysis based on FYDP IV (2026/27–2030/31), January 2026 — referencing NBS National Accounts, Economic Survey 2024/25, MACMOD Projections, ILO/World Bank Employment Data 2023/24, BOT Financial Stability Report 2023, Growth Diagnostics Manufacturing Study 2023, MIT/TISEZA/PPPC institutional data, and TICGL independent analytical assessment.

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