Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Tanzania Tackles 5.3% Food Inflation (2025) with 557K Tonnes in Food Stocks for Inclusive Growth
June 12, 2025  
In April 2025, Tanzania faced a surge in food inflation to 5.3%, up from 1.4% in April 2024, driven by weather-induced supply volatility and logistics challenges, as reported in the "Monthly Economic Review”. To ensure affordability and foster inclusive economic development, Tanzania can leverage policies like expanding the National Food Reserve Agency’s (NFRA) 557,228-tonne food […]

In April 2025, Tanzania faced a surge in food inflation to 5.3%, up from 1.4% in April 2024, driven by weather-induced supply volatility and logistics challenges, as reported in the "Monthly Economic Review”. To ensure affordability and foster inclusive economic development, Tanzania can leverage policies like expanding the National Food Reserve Agency’s (NFRA) 557,228-tonne food stocks (up from 340,102 tonnes in 2024) and releasing 29,834 tonnes of maize to stabilize prices. With headline inflation at 3.2% and a steady 6% Central Bank Rate, the Bank of Tanzania’s 5% medium-term target supports economic stability amidst global uncertainties, including a 2.8% growth forecast. This introduction explores strategies to manage food prices for equitable growth.

Policies to Manage Food Price Increases and Ensure Affordability

  1. Strengthen Food Reserve and Distribution Systems:
    • Policy: Expand the National Food Reserve Agency’s (NFRA) capacity to stockpile and distribute staple foods, particularly maize, to stabilize supply and mitigate price spikes. The document notes that NFRA increased food stocks to 557,228 tonnes by April 2025, up from 340,102 tonnes in April 2024, and released 29,834 tonnes of maize to local traders. Further increasing stock levels and strategic releases during price surges can dampen food inflation.
    • Impact on Affordability: By ensuring a steady supply of staples like maize, which saw a significant price increase contributing to the 5.3% food inflation, the NFRA can prevent sharp price hikes, making food more affordable for low-income households. This supports inclusive development by reducing the cost-of-living burden, as food is a major component of household expenditure.
    • Implementation: Invest in storage infrastructure and improve distribution networks to reduce logistics costs, which the document identifies as a factor in price volatility. For example, expanding NFRA’s capacity to release more than 29,834 tonnes during peak demand periods could further stabilize prices.
  2. Invest in Agricultural Productivity and Resilience:
    • Policy: Enhance agricultural productivity through investments in irrigation, climate-resilient seeds, and modern farming techniques to address weather-induced supply volatility, a key driver of the 5.3% food inflation. Subsidizing inputs like fertilizers and providing extension services can boost yields of staple crops.
    • Impact on Affordability: Increased production of staple food crops, as noted in improved forecasts for coffee and wheat, can reduce supply shortages, lowering prices. For instance, if maize production increases, it could counteract the price pressures that drove food inflation above the 5% medium-term target. Affordable food prices ensure broader access, promoting inclusive growth by supporting rural and low-income populations.
    • Implementation: Allocate public funds to irrigation projects and partner with agricultural research institutions to develop drought-resistant crops. The document’s mention of global agricultural commodity price declines (e.g., coffee, wheat) suggests potential for replicating such improvements domestically.
  3. Improve Logistics and Supply Chain Infrastructure:
    • Policy: Upgrade transportation and logistics infrastructure to reduce costs associated with food distribution, as logistics challenges contributed to high staple food prices. Investments in rural road networks and market access can streamline supply chains.
    • Impact on Affordability: Efficient logistics can lower the cost of transporting food from rural to urban areas, reducing retail prices. For example, the 5.3% food inflation rate could be mitigated by cutting transportation costs, making staples more affordable and supporting urban poor households, thus fostering inclusive development.
    • Implementation: Prioritize infrastructure projects in the national budget, potentially funded through public debt, as defined in the glossary, which includes domestic and external borrowing for development projects. Public-private partnerships could also accelerate logistics improvements.
  4. Implement Targeted Subsidies and Social Safety Nets:
    • Policy: Introduce or expand targeted subsidies for staple foods and social safety nets, such as food vouchers or cash transfers, to shield low-income households from the 5.3% food inflation impact. These measures can complement NFRA’s efforts to stabilize supply.
    • Impact on Affordability: Subsidies reduce the effective cost of food for vulnerable populations, ensuring access despite price increases. For instance, core inflation’s decline to 2.2% in April 2025 indicates easing non-food price pressures, allowing fiscal space to redirect resources to food subsidies. This promotes inclusive development by protecting purchasing power for the poor, who spend a higher share of income on food.
    • Implementation: Use data from the National Bureau of Statistics to identify high-risk groups and design means-tested programs. The government’s budgetary operations could allocate funds for such initiatives, ensuring fiscal sustainability.
  5. Strengthen Regional Trade and Market Integration:
    • Policy: Leverage Tanzania’s alignment with EAC and SADC benchmarks to enhance regional trade in food commodities, importing staples from surplus areas to offset domestic shortages. This can stabilize prices affected by local supply volatility.
    • Impact on Affordability: Importing affordable food from regional partners can counteract the 5.3% food inflation, ensuring stable prices for consumers. For example, the global decline in wheat prices suggests potential for importing cheaper grains, enhancing affordability and supporting inclusive growth by reducing food costs across income levels.
    • Implementation: Negotiate trade agreements within EAC/SADC to reduce tariffs on food imports. The document’s note on easing global trade tensions suggests a favorable environment for such negotiations, supported by stable exchange rates managed by the Bank of Tanzania.

Challenges and Considerations

  • Fiscal Constraints: Funding subsidies or infrastructure investments may strain government budgetary operations. The glossary defines public debt as including domestic and external borrowing for development projects, but rising debt levels could limit fiscal space.
  • Global Volatility: The document’s mention of a 2.8% global growth forecast and U.S. tariffs could disrupt import costs, complicating regional trade strategies. For example, tea and sugar price increases (8.2% and 3.9%) highlight global price risks.
  • Supply-Side Limitations: Weather-induced volatility requires long-term investments in agriculture, which may take years to yield results. The NFRA’s 557,228-tonne stock is a short-term fix but may not suffice during prolonged disruptions.
  • Coordination: Effective policies require coordination between monetary policy (e.g., maintaining the 6% CBR) and fiscal measures, which can be complex given structural constraints noted in the document.

Conclusion

To manage the 5.3% food inflation in April 2025 and ensure affordability, Tanzania can strengthen NFRA’s food reserves (557,228 tonnes, 29,834 tonnes maize released), invest in agricultural resilience, improve logistics, provide targeted subsidies, and enhance regional trade within EAC/SADC. These policies support inclusive economic development by stabilizing food prices, protecting low-income households, and fostering rural and urban economic growth. Figures like the 3.2% headline inflation and 2.2% core inflation suggest room for complementary fiscal measures, but challenges like global uncertainties (2.8% growth forecast) and fiscal constraints require careful policy calibration.

Table: Key Economic Figures for Managing Food Inflation in Tanzania (May 2025)

CategoryIndicatorValue
InflationFood Inflation (April 2025)5.3%
Food Inflation (April 2024)1.4%
Headline Inflation (April 2025)3.2%
Headline Inflation (March 2025)3.3%
Core Inflation (April 2025)2.2%
Core Inflation (April 2024)3.9%
Non-Core Inflation (April 2025)5.7%
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities Inflation (April 2025)7.3%
Energy, Fuel, and Utilities Inflation (April 2024)9.3%
Food SecurityNFRA Food Stocks (April 2025)557,228 tonnes
NFRA Food Stocks (April 2024)340,102 tonnes
Maize Released by NFRA (April 2025)29,834 tonnes
Monetary PolicyCentral Bank Rate (CBR, April 2025)6.0%
Medium-Term Inflation Target5.0%
Global Economic ContextGlobal Growth Forecast (2025)2.8%
Crude Oil Price Change (April 2025)-6.7%
Tea Price Increase (April 2025)8.2%
Sugar Price Increase (April 2025)3.9%
Wheat Price Change (April 2025)Decline (specific % not provided)

Notes on the Table

  • Inflation Figures: The 5.3% food inflatio exceeds the 5% medium-term target, highlighting the urgency of policies to stabilize food prices. The 3.2% headline inflation and 2.2% core inflation indicate overall price stability, providing fiscal space for subsidies or investments. Non-core inflation at 5.7% underscores the role of volatile food prices in driving inflation.
  • Food Security: The NFRA’s food stocks increased significantly to 557,228 tonnes from 340,102 tonnes and the release of 29,834 tonnes of maize demonstrates proactive supply-side intervention to curb price spikes, supporting affordability.
  • Monetary Policy: The 6% CBR supports economic stability, complementing efforts to manage food inflation through supply-side measures, aligning with the 5% inflation target for inclusive growth.
  • Global Context: The 2.8% global growth forecast and commodity price changes (e.g., -6.7% for crude oil, 8.2% for tea) affect Tanzania’s import costs and export revenues, influencing food affordability and trade strategies.

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