TICGL

| Economic Consulting Group

TICGL | Economic Consulting Group
Tanzania ShillingΒ Stability vs.Β Inflation Rate β€”Β 2026 Analysis
May 10, 2026  
Tanzania Shilling Stability vs Inflation Rate 2026 – TZS Exchange Rate & Price Dynamics | TICGL πŸ‡ΉπŸ‡Ώ TICGL – Tanzania Investment & Consultant Group Ltd  Β·  ticgl.com Data: Bank of Tanzania MER, April 2026 Overview CPI Breakdown Food Inflation Energy Prices Core Inflation TZS vs CPI Monetary Policy Zanzibar Outlook Related Links πŸ“Š BOT Monthly […]
Tanzania Shilling Stability vs Inflation Rate 2026 – TZS Exchange Rate & Price Dynamics | TICGL
πŸ‡ΉπŸ‡Ώ TICGL – Tanzania Investment & Consultant Group Ltd  Β·  ticgl.com
Data: Bank of Tanzania MER, April 2026
πŸ“Š BOT Monthly Economic Review Β· April 2026

Tanzania Shilling Stability
vs. Inflation Rate β€” 2026 Analysis

Headline inflation held steady at 3.2% in March 2026 β€” within Tanzania's 3–5% target β€” while the TZS appreciated 2.52% year-on-year. TICGL analyses the intricate relationship between exchange rate movements, domestic price levels, food security, energy costs, and the monetary policy framework keeping both in balance.

πŸ“… Reference: March 2026 🏦 Source: Bank of Tanzania πŸ’± Base Year: 2020 = 100 🎯 National Target: 3–5%
Headline Inflation
3.2%
Mar-26 Β· Same as Feb-26
Core Inflation
2.2%
+0.1pp vs Feb-26
Food Inflation
5.5%
β–Ό from 5.7% (Feb-26)
Energy/Fuel/Utilities
2.1%
β–Ό from 7.9% (Mar-25)
TZS/USD (Mar-26)
TZS 2,583
β–² 2.52% YoY appreciation
Transport Inflation
4.2%
β–² up from 4.0% (Feb-26)
Context & Strategic Overview

A Stable Currency, Low Inflation β€” Tanzania's 2026 Macro Sweet Spot

Tanzania enters 2026 with a rare dual achievement: a currency that is appreciating and an inflation rate comfortably within target. Understanding the mechanisms that hold this balance β€” and the risks that could break it β€” is essential for businesses, investors, and policymakers operating in the Tanzanian economy.

Headline Finding: In March 2026, Tanzania's headline annual inflation stood at 3.2% β€” unchanged from February 2026 and firmly within both the national (3–5%) and regional EAC/SADC targets. Simultaneously, the Tanzania shilling appreciated 2.52% against the US dollar year-on-year, reaching TZS 2,583 per USD. These twin achievements reflect prudent monetary policy, adequate food supply, and a structurally strong gold export buffer that insulates the currency from external shocks.

🌑️
Core Inflation
2.2%
Underlying price pressure very well contained
Weight: 73.9% of CPI basket
πŸ“Š
Headline Inflation
3.2%
Within national 3–5% target band
Weight: 100% Β· Base 2020=100
πŸ₯©
Food Inflation
5.5%
Easing from 7.7% peak (Aug-25); harvest improvement
Weight: 28.2% of CPI basket
πŸš—
Transport Inflation
4.2%
Rising on global oil price pass-through
Weight: 14.1% of CPI basket
⚑
Energy/Fuel/Utilities
2.1%
Sharply down from 7.9% in March 2025
Weight: 5.7% of CPI basket
πŸ—οΈ
Housing/Water/Utilities
1.6%
Falling steadily from 3.8% a year ago
Weight: 15.1% of CPI basket
Inflation vs. Target
On Target
3.2% within 3–5% national band
TZS YoY Change
+2.52%
β–² Appreciation β€” TZS 2,650 β†’ TZS 2,583
Food Stock (NFRA)
533,634 T
Tonnes held at end-March 2026
Petrol Pump Price
TZS 3,312
Per litre Β· approx. Mar-26 retail
CBR (Policy Rate)
5.75%
Held for Q2 2026 Β· corridor Β±150 bps
BOT Inflation Forecast
3–5%
Projected throughout 2026
Consumer Price Index

Full CPI Breakdown β€” All Components, March 2026

Tanzania's Consumer Price Index basket (base 2020=100) covers 14 main expenditure groups. The March 2026 data shows a broadly contained price environment, with food and transport as the main pressure points, while housing, energy, and core goods remain subdued.

Annual Inflation by CPI Component β€” March 2026

% change year-on-year, all main groups

Mar-26
Source: BOT Table 2.2.1 Β· National Bureau of Statistics Β· Base 2020=100

Monthly CPI Change by Component β€” March 2026

Month-on-month % change

MoM
Source: BOT Table 2.2.1 Β· NBS

Complete CPI Data Table β€” All Main Groups, March 2025–March 2026

This table presents both the month-on-month and annual inflation rates for all 14 CPI components in Tanzania, alongside each group's weight in the national basket. Transport (4.2%) and food (5.5%) remain the primary upward contributors in March 2026.

Main CPI GroupWeight (%)MoM Mar-25MoM Feb-26MoM Mar-26Annual Mar-25Annual Feb-26Annual Mar-26Trend
Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages28.21.91.21.85.4%5.7%5.5%β–Ό
Alcoholic Beverages & Tobacco1.90.10.00.13.5%2.1%2.1%β†’
Clothing & Footwear10.80.20.00.52.0%1.1%1.3%β–²
Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas15.10.90.40.73.8%1.7%1.6%β–Ό
Furnishings & Household Equipment7.90.30.00.12.2%2.5%2.3%β–Ό
Health2.50.20.00.41.4%0.9%1.1%β–²
Transport14.10.40.10.52.1%4.0%4.2%β–²
Information & Communication5.40.10.20.00.1%1.1%1.0%β–Ό
Recreation, Sports & Culture1.60.00.10.11.6%0.6%0.6%β†’
Education Services2.00.00.10.64.1%0.3%0.9%β–²
Restaurants & Accommodation6.60.10.60.41.7%1.7%2.1%β–²
Insurance & Financial Services2.10.20.10.10.7%0.3%0.3%β†’
Personal Care & Miscellaneous2.10.20.00.33.3%3.2%3.3%β†’
All Items β€” Headline Inflation100.00.80.50.83.3%3.2%3.2%β†’
Source: BOT Table 2.2.1. Base year 2020=100. Annual inflation = 12-month % change. MoM = month-on-month % change. Weight = % share in national CPI basket.

Selected CPI Groups β€” Core, Non-Core, Services, Goods

Selected GroupWeight (%)Annual Mar-25Annual Feb-26Annual Mar-26YoY ChangePolicy Significance
Core Inflation73.92.2%2.1%2.2%+0.0ppBOT's primary inflation gauge; very stable
Non-Core Inflation26.16.0%5.9%5.6%βˆ’0.4ppVolatile foods + energy; easing on harvest
Energy, Fuel & Utilities5.77.9%2.8%2.1%βˆ’5.8pp YoYDramatic easing β€” charcoal, firewood price fall
Services Inflation37.21.0%2.2%2.4%+1.4pp YoYRising β€” transport, restaurant, accommodation
Goods Inflation62.84.5%3.7%3.6%βˆ’0.9pp YoYEasing β€” imported goods benefiting from TZS appreciation
All Items Less Food71.82.3%2.1%2.1%βˆ’0.2pp YoYNon-food CPI very stable; TZS helps hold this down
Source: BOT Table 2.2.1. pp = percentage points.
Food Price Dynamics

Food Inflation & the TZS β€” Staples, Stocks & Supply Chains

Food inflation at 5.5% in March 2026 is the single largest upward driver of headline CPI, contributing approximately 1.55 percentage points. However, the trend is improving: food inflation has eased from a 12-month peak of 7.7% in August 2025, supported by improving harvests, NFRA strategic stock releases, and a stronger shilling reducing import food costs.

Annual Food Inflation Trend β€” Mar 2025 to Mar 2026

% change year-on-year Β· Food & Non-Food comparison

Easing
Source: BOT Tables 2.2.1 & A9(i) Β· NBS data

National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) Stocks

Tonnes held monthly Β· 2022–2026

Food Security
Source: BOT Table 2.2.2 Β· National Food Reserve Agency

Monthly Food Inflation Rate β€” 12-Month Annual % Change

The table below tracks food and non-food inflation side by side with headline inflation, alongside the TZS/USD rate, to illustrate the relationship between currency movements and domestic food price trends.

PeriodHeadline (%)Food & Non-Alc. (%)Non-Food (%)Food MoM (%)TZS/USD (End)TZS-Food Price Note
Mar-253.35.42.31.92,650Food main driver; TZS weak
Apr-253.25.32.30.72,679Continued weakness
May-253.25.62.10.02,686Food edging up; TZS still weak
Jun-253.37.31.70.72,605Food spikes; TZS begins recovery
Jul-253.37.61.5βˆ’0.82,546Food peaks; TZS appreciating
Aug-253.47.71.60.02,463Food peak; TZS strong β€” imported costs lower
Sep-253.47.01.90.62,443Food easing; TZS near peak strength
Oct-253.57.41.90.02,452Slight rebound
Nov-253.46.62.10.42,437Continued easing
Dec-253.66.72.12.02,448Year-end seasonal uptick
Jan-263.35.72.20.32,518Harvest improving; food easing
Feb-263.25.72.11.22,543Stable
Mar-263.25.52.11.82,577Food continuing to ease
YoY Changeβˆ’0.1ppβˆ’0.1ppβˆ’0.2ppβ€”βˆ’2.74% (TZS stronger)TZS appreciation = lower imported food costs
Source: BOT Tables A9(i), 2.2.1, A10. Annual inflation = 12-month % change. pp = percentage points.

National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) β€” Stocks in Tonnes

NFRA released 26,374 tonnes of maize and paddy to traders in March 2026, reducing stocks from 560,008 to 533,634 tonnes β€” a deliberate supply-side intervention that helped stabilise retail food prices and contributed to the easing of food inflation from 5.7% to 5.5%.

Month2022 (Tonnes)2023 (Tonnes)2024 (Tonnes)2025 (Tonnes)2026 (Tonnes)YoY Change (%)
January207,899124,736270,984646,480567,469βˆ’12.2%
February203,297106,881326,172619,659560,008βˆ’9.6%
March200,62680,123336,099587,062533,634βˆ’9.1%
April190,36663,808340,102557,228β€”β€”
August144,410210,020489,187537,571β€”β€”
September149,044244,169651,403570,519β€”β€”
December137,655248,282677,115577,376β€”β€”
Source: BOT Table 2.2.2 Β· National Food Reserve Agency. 2026 data covers Jan–Mar only (provisional).

TZS–Food Price Linkage: A stronger Tanzania shilling reduces the cost of imported food commodities (wheat, edible oil, sugar). The TZS's appreciation from TZS 2,686 (May-25 peak weakness) to TZS 2,443 (Sep-25) coincided with food inflation falling from 7.7% to 7.0%. This pass-through mechanism, combined with NFRA interventions and improved domestic harvests, has brought food inflation down to 5.5% by March 2026 β€” a 2.2 percentage point improvement from the August peak.

Energy & Fuel Prices

Energy Inflation β€” Charcoal Eases, Petrol Rises

Energy, fuel and utilities inflation slowed to 2.1% in March 2026 from 2.8% in February and a striking 7.9% in March 2025 β€” a year-on-year improvement of 5.8 percentage points. The decline was mainly driven by falling charcoal and firewood prices. However, retail petroleum pump prices edged up following the sharp surge in global crude oil prices linked to the Strait of Hormuz crisis.

Energy, Fuel & Utilities Inflation β€” Monthly Trend

Annual % change Β· Mar 2025 – Mar 2026

Declining
Source: BOT Table A9(ii) Β· Energy/Fuel/Utilities weight = 5.7% of CPI

Retail Petroleum Pump Prices (TZS per litre)

Petrol, Diesel, Kerosene Β· Mar 2023 – Mar 2026

TZS/Litre
Source: BOT Chart 2.2.5 Β· NBS retail price data

Petroleum Price Pass-Through: Global Oil β†’ TZS Pump Price

The Strait of Hormuz conflict caused global crude oil prices to surge from USD 68/barrel in February 2026 to USD 95.58/barrel in March 2026 β€” a 40.5% monthly jump. EWURA's cost-plus pricing model means this feeds directly into domestic pump prices. The TZS appreciation partially offsets this: at TZS 2,583/USD versus TZS 2,650/USD a year ago, each barrel costs approximately TZS 6,313 less in local currency terms (about 2.5% cheaper in TZS).

PeriodCrude Oil (USD/bbl)TZS/USDCrude in TZS (per bbl)Energy CPI YoY (%)Headline CPI (%)Oil-TZS-CPI Note
Mar-2570.702,650TZS 187,3557.9%3.3%High energy CPI from prior oil spike
Apr-2565.912,679TZS 176,5337.3%3.2%Oil falling β€” energy CPI easing lag
Jun-2569.152,605TZS 180,1362.1%3.3%TZS stronger β€” cost offset
Aug-2566.722,463TZS 164,2712.6%3.4%TZS peak strength cuts oil import cost
Oct-2563.042,452TZS 154,5744.0%3.5%Charcoal/firewood costs seasonal
Dec-2560.882,448TZS 149,0343.8%3.6%Oil cheapest in period; TZS holds
Jan-2663.652,518TZS 160,2705.2%3.3%Oil ticking up β€” early Hormuz risk
Feb-2668.012,543TZS 172,9332.8%3.2%Charcoal prices falling offset oil rise
Mar-2695.582,577TZS 246,3292.1%3.2%Oil surges +40.5% β€” lagged CPI impact ahead
YoY Change (Mar-25β†’26)+35.2% oilβˆ’2.6% TZS+31.5% TZS costβˆ’5.8 ppβˆ’0.1 ppOil cost rose in TZS but CPI benefitted from charcoal
Source: BOT Tables A8 (world commodity prices), A10 (exchange rates), A9(ii) (energy CPI). TZS cost per barrel = crude price Γ— TZS/USD rate. pp = percentage points.

Forward Risk β€” Hormuz Shock: The March 2026 crude oil surge to USD 95.58/barrel had not yet fully passed through to the March CPI, as the energy CPI still showed 2.1%. The lagged pass-through effect will likely push energy and transport inflation higher in April–June 2026. The critical buffer remains the TZS: every 100 TZS of appreciation per dollar reduces the local-currency cost of imported petroleum by approximately TZS 0.5 billion per month in import cost savings β€” providing partial but meaningful protection.

Core Inflation Analysis

Core Inflation β€” The Underlying Monetary Pressure

Core inflation β€” which excludes volatile unprocessed food and energy β€” edged up to 2.2% in March 2026 from 2.1% in February. At 73.9% of the CPI basket weight, core inflation is the most policy-relevant measure and the primary gauge used by the Bank of Tanzania's Monetary Policy Committee. Its sustained stability well below the 3% lower bound of the national target underscores the effectiveness of Tanzania's monetary framework.

Core vs. Headline vs. Non-Core Inflation

Annual % change Β· Mar 2025 – Mar 2026

Key Comparison
Source: BOT Table A9(ii) Β· NBS

Contribution to Headline Inflation by Component

Percentage points contribution Β· Mar 2025 – Mar 2026

Contribution
Source: BOT Chart 2.2.6 Β· NBS

Core Inflation Breakdown β€” Annual % Change Trend

PeriodCore (%)Non-Core (%)Energy (%)Services (%)Goods (%)Ex-Food (%)Headline (%)
Mar-252.26.07.91.04.52.33.3
Apr-252.25.77.31.14.32.33.2
May-252.15.66.11.04.22.13.2
Jun-251.97.12.10.94.71.73.3
Jul-251.97.11.00.84.71.53.3
Aug-252.07.32.60.84.91.63.4
Sep-252.26.73.71.34.71.93.4
Oct-252.17.34.01.05.01.93.5
Nov-252.36.23.81.64.42.13.4
Dec-252.36.23.81.64.42.13.6
Jan-262.26.05.24.62.12.23.3
Feb-262.15.92.82.23.72.13.2
Mar-262.25.62.12.43.62.13.2
YoY Change0.0 ppβˆ’0.4 ppβˆ’5.8 pp+1.4 ppβˆ’0.9 ppβˆ’0.2 ppβˆ’0.1 pp
Source: BOT Table A9(ii) Β· NBS. pp = percentage points.
Currency–Inflation Nexus

TZS Exchange Rate vs. Inflation β€” The Relationship Decoded

Economic theory predicts that a depreciating currency drives up domestic inflation through higher import costs β€” and a stronger currency suppresses it. Tanzania's 2025–2026 data confirms this transmission, but with an important nuance: the pass-through is faster for tradeable goods than for services, and domestic supply-side factors (harvests, fuel subsidies) moderate the effect.

TZS/USD Rate vs. Headline Inflation β€” Mar 2025 to Mar 2026

Dual axis: exchange rate (TZS/USD, inverted) vs. headline CPI (%)

Dual-Axis
Source: BOT Tables A10 (exchange rates) & A9(i) (CPI). Note: TZS axis inverted β€” higher line = weaker shilling.

How the TZS Affects Each Inflation Component

A stronger TZS (lower TZS/USD) reduces the cost of all imports priced in foreign currency. The table below quantifies estimated TZS impact on key inflation drivers using March 2026 data.

Inflation ComponentAnnual Rate Mar-26Import DependencyTZS Appreciation EffectAssessment
Petroleum & Fuel ProductsWithin transport 4.2%~100% importedDirect: USD 95.58/bbl Γ— TZS 2,583 = TZS 246,834/bbl. At TZS 2,650 = TZS 253,287/bbl β€” TZS 6,453 savings per barrelPartially offsetting
Wheat & Wheat ProductsWithin food 5.5%~80% importedGlobal wheat at USD 275.91/tonne Γ— TZS 2,583 vs TZS 2,650 = savings of TZS 18,461/tonne (6.7% cost reduction)Meaningful reduction
Edible Oil (Palm/Sunflower)Within food 5.5%~70% importedPalm oil at USD 1,102.98/tonne β€” TZS appreciation saves ~TZS 73,900/tonne vs Mar-25 rateSignificant relief
Manufactured Goods (Domestic)Goods 3.6%~40% imported inputsInput cost reduction partially passed to consumers; moderate effect on finished goods CPIModerate positive
Fertilisers (Agricultural)Indirect on food~100% importedUrea at USD 725.63/tonne Mar-26 (up 84% YoY). TZS strength saves ~TZS 48,528/tonne vs year-ago rateOffset by global price surge
Housing & Rent Services1.6%~5% importedMinimal direct TZS effect β€” primarily determined by domestic demand and supplyNot a TZS channel
Education & Health Services0.9% / 1.1%~10% importedSmall import component (textbooks, medical equipment). TZS effect modest.Marginal
Source: BOT Table A8 (commodity prices), Table 2.2.1 (CPI), Table A10 (exchange rates). Savings estimates are illustrative, based on price/quantity data from BOT MER April 2026.

TICGL Quantification: Tanzania's import bill for goods was approximately USD 15,968.2 million in the year to March 2026. With the TZS 2.52% stronger year-on-year, this represents a TZS-equivalent saving of roughly TZS 1.04 trillion on the import bill in local currency terms β€” equivalent to approximately 0.3% of GDP. This import cost saving is one of the key mechanisms by which TZS appreciation directly suppresses domestic inflation.

Monetary Policy Framework

How Monetary Policy Links the TZS & Inflation

The Bank of Tanzania's monetary policy decisions β€” through the Central Bank Rate, liquidity management, and the CBR corridor β€” simultaneously influence both the exchange rate and domestic inflation. The April 2026 MPC decision reflects this dual mandate.

CBR (Policy Rate) vs. Headline & Core Inflation

Mar 2025 – Mar 2026 Β· % per annum

Policy Rates
Source: BOT Tables A4, A9(i) Β· CBR = Central Bank Rate

M3 Money Supply Growth vs. Headline Inflation

Annual % change Β· Jan 2025 – Mar 2026

Money Supply
Source: BOT Tables A3 (M3), A9(i) (CPI)

The Monetary Transmission Mechanism in Tanzania

  • CBR Channel: The CBR at 5.75% anchors the 7-day IBCM rate at ~6.32%, influencing the cost of credit and thus demand-driven inflation. A stable CBR signals to markets that the BOT is neither tightening nor loosening, reducing inflation uncertainty.
  • Exchange Rate Channel: BOT's management of the IFEM β€” reducing its net USD sales from USD 128.8M (Feb) to USD 65M (Mar) β€” directly supports the TZS, which in turn lowers import prices. This is probably the most powerful near-term inflation channel in Tanzania's open economy.
  • Money Supply Channel: M3 growth of 23.2% in March 2026 appears high relative to headline inflation of 3.2%. However, private sector credit growth of 24.1% reflects real economic expansion rather than pure monetary excess, supported by growth in mining, trade, and transport lending. If M3 growth meaningfully exceeds nominal GDP growth over time, inflationary pressure would build.
  • Expectations Channel: By maintaining a transparent, rules-based CBR corridor (now Β±150 bps) and communicating clearly through the MER, BOT anchors inflation expectations. Low and stable expectations are self-fulfilling β€” businesses and consumers plan as though inflation will remain around 3%, making it so.
Monetary IndicatorMar-25Sep-25Dec-25Feb-26Mar-26YoY Change
CBR (Policy Rate)6.00%5.75%5.75%5.75%5.75%βˆ’0.25 pp
Overall IBCM Rate8.12%6.45%6.29%6.34%6.32%βˆ’1.80 pp
M3 Growth (YoY %)17.1%β€”β€”24.5%23.2%+6.1 pp
Private Sector Credit Growth14.0%β€”β€”24.4%24.1%+10.1 pp
Overall Lending Rate15.50%15.18%15.24%15.11%15.11%βˆ’0.39 pp
Headline CPI (%)3.3%3.4%3.6%3.2%3.2%βˆ’0.1 pp
Core CPI (%)2.2%2.2%2.3%2.1%2.2%0.0 pp
TZS/USD (Weighted Avg)2,6502,4432,4482,5432,583βˆ’2.52%
Source: BOT Tables A3, A4, A9, A10. pp = percentage points. YoY = year-on-year.

Real Interest Rate Check: With the CBR at 5.75% and headline inflation at 3.2%, Tanzania's real policy rate is approximately +2.55% β€” a moderately positive real rate that supports the TZS by making TZS-denominated assets attractive to investors, while also restraining demand-driven inflation. This is a healthier monetary configuration than the negative real rates seen in many peer economies.

Zanzibar Inflation

Zanzibar β€” Food-Led Inflation Diverges from Mainland

Zanzibar's inflation dynamics differ meaningfully from Tanzania Mainland's. Headline inflation eased to 4.9% in March 2026 from 5.1% in March 2025, driven by declining non-food inflation (from 4.1% to just 0.9%). However, food inflation surged to 10.1% β€” nearly double the mainland's 5.5% β€” reflecting Zanzibar's higher dependence on imported food and the archipelago's structural supply constraints.

Zanzibar vs. Mainland Headline Inflation

Annual % change Β· Mar 2025 – Mar 2026

Comparative
Source: BOT Table 3.1.1 (Zanzibar) & Table 2.2.1 (Mainland) Β· Base: July 2022=100 (Zanzibar)

Zanzibar β€” Food vs. Non-Food Inflation Trend

Annual % change Β· Mar 2025 – Mar 2026

Food Surge
Source: BOT Table 3.1.1 Β· Office of the Chief Government Statistician, Zanzibar
IndicatorMar-25Jun-25Sep-25Dec-25Feb-26Mar-26YoY Change
Zanzibar Headline Inflation5.1%β€”β€”β€”4.8%4.9%βˆ’0.2 pp
Zanzibar Food Inflation6.4%β€”β€”β€”9.3%10.1%+3.7 pp
Zanzibar Non-Food Inflation4.1%β€”β€”β€”1.4%0.9%βˆ’3.2 pp
Mainland Headline Inflation3.3%3.3%3.4%3.6%3.2%3.2%βˆ’0.1 pp
Mainland Food Inflation5.4%7.3%7.0%6.7%5.7%5.5%+0.1 pp
Gap: Zanzibar βˆ’ Mainland+1.8 ppβ€”β€”β€”+1.6 pp+1.7 ppWidened
Source: BOT Tables 2.2.1 and 3.1.1. pp = percentage points. Zanzibar base year: July 2022=100. Mainland base year: 2020=100.

Zanzibar TZS Exposure: Zanzibar's inflation divergence highlights a structural vulnerability: as an island economy with limited domestic agricultural production, it sources roughly 40–50% of food from imports, making it more sensitive to both the TZS/USD rate and global food commodity prices. The TZS appreciation provides direct relief on import costs β€” but the 10.1% food inflation suggests local distribution bottlenecks, logistics costs, and supply constraints are overwhelming the currency benefit in the short term.

TICGL Forward View

Inflation & TZS Outlook β€” What to Expect Through 2026

The Bank of Tanzania projects headline inflation to remain within the 3–5% target throughout 2026. TICGL's analysis broadly concurs, but identifies three key scenarios and five critical watchpoints that could shift this outcome.

Base Case (Most Likely)
3.2–4.0%
Inflation stays in target; TZS holds TZS 2,500–2,650/USD
Adverse Case (Oil Shock)
4.5–5.5%
Hormuz disruption persists; oil/fertiliser pass-through
Upside Case (Gold Surge)
2.8–3.2%
Gold >USD 5,500/oz; TZS appreciates to TZS 2,400/USD

Tanzania Headline CPI β€” Long-Run Trend (2018–2026)

Annual average inflation rate with target band

Long Term
Source: BOT Table A1 Β· Selected Economic Indicators

Key Global Commodity Prices β€” Inflation Risk Monitor

Indexed: Jan-24 = 100 Β· Crude Oil, Gold, Urea, Wheat

Risk Watch
Source: BOT Table A8 Β· World Bank Commodity Markets data

Five Critical Watchpoints for TZS-Inflation Dynamics in 2026

  • Crude Oil Price Trajectory: Oil at USD 95.58/barrel (March 2026) is a significant upside risk. EWURA's cost-plus pricing means any sustained elevation above USD 80/barrel will push transport CPI above 5% and fuel food logistics costs, potentially lifting headline inflation toward the 4.5% upper end of BOT's comfort zone.
  • Fertiliser Prices & Agricultural Input Costs: Urea prices surged 84% year-on-year to USD 725.63/tonne in March 2026 β€” the Strait of Hormuz disruption cut off Gulf state supply. If this persists through the main planting season, food production costs rise, tightening the agricultural supply pipeline and pushing food inflation back up in Q3–Q4 2026.
  • Gold Price Stability: Gold at USD 4,855/troy oz remains high but fell from USD 5,020 in February. Any sustained retreat below USD 4,000 would reduce Tanzania's primary forex buffer, potentially weakening the TZS and triggering the inflationary pass-through that a strong shilling currently suppresses.
  • Domestic Harvest Outcomes: Improved harvests in 2025/26 have been the single biggest factor bringing food inflation down from 7.7% to 5.5%. A drought or locust event could reverse this progress rapidly. The NFRA buffer stock at 533,634 tonnes provides approximately 6–8 weeks of stabilisation capacity.
  • M3 Growth and Credit Expansion: M3 growth at 23.2% and private sector credit at 24.1% are running well above nominal GDP growth of ~10%. If this credit surge flows primarily into consumption rather than productive investment, demand-pull inflation could emerge β€” particularly in the services sector, where inflation is already rising (2.4% in March 2026).

TICGL Conclusion: Tanzania's simultaneous achievement of TZS appreciation and low inflation in 2026 is not accidental β€” it reflects the institutional quality of the Bank of Tanzania's monetary framework, the structural windfall of the gold export boom, and prudent fiscal management that keeps domestic borrowing within bounds. The primary threat to this equilibrium is an external commodity shock β€” specifically the combination of persistently high oil prices and a gold price correction. Businesses should plan for inflation remaining in the 3.2%–4.5% range through end-2026, with the TZS trading in a TZS 2,500–2,700/USD band depending on how the global commodity shock evolves.

βœ… On Target: 3.2% πŸ’± TZS: Appreciating ⚠️ Oil Risk: High 🌾 Food: Improving πŸ“ˆ M3: Watch

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