Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Tanzania’s Government Domestic Debt October 2025
October 10, 2025  
The Government Domestic Debt composition as of August 2025 from the Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review (September 2025) highlights a diversified creditor base, with total stock at TZS 37,129.8 billion (up 5% m-o-m, driven by bond issuance). This structure—dominated by institutional investors like pension funds (27.2%) and commercial banks (28.4%)—signals deepening domestic financial markets, […]

The Government Domestic Debt composition as of August 2025 from the Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review (September 2025) highlights a diversified creditor base, with total stock at TZS 37,129.8 billion (up 5% m-o-m, driven by bond issuance). This structure—dominated by institutional investors like pension funds (27.2%) and commercial banks (28.4%)—signals deepening domestic financial markets, enabling cost-effective funding for growth initiatives amid 6%+ Q3 GDP estimates and 3.4% inflation. In the broader context of the document, this supports fiscal operations (e.g., July revenues 103% of target) and monetary easing (CBR at 5.75%), while aligning with IMF and World Bank assessments of moderate debt distress risk and medium carrying capacity. As of September 2025, total public debt stands at ~50% of GDP (sustainable under 55% threshold), with IDA commitments reaching USD 9 billion to finance 35 operations. These trends imply enhanced fiscal flexibility for infrastructure and social spending, fostering inclusive growth toward Vision 2050, though rising stock (national debt up 13.5% y-o-y to TZS 116.6 trillion by June) underscores needs for revenue mobilization to mitigate crowding-out risks.

Recent analyses, including SECO's 2025 Economic Report, emphasize this diversification as key to sustaining 6% growth through improved fiscal health and market depth.


1. Overview

  • Total Domestic Debt Stock: TZS 37,129.8 billion (a 5% increase from July 2025).
  • The increase was mainly attributed to the issuance of government bonds, which continue to dominate the domestic debt portfolio.

2. Composition by Creditor Category

Creditor CategoryAmount (TZS Billion)Share (%)
Commercial Banks10,558.328.4
Bank of Tanzania (BoT)7,052.219.0
Pension Funds10,116.527.2
Insurance Companies1,821.84.9
BoT Special Funds799.32.2
Others (non-bank financial institutions, public institutions, private firms & individuals)6,781.719.2
Total37,129.8100.0

3. Analysis

  • Pension funds and commercial banks are the largest domestic creditors, collectively holding over 55% of total government domestic debt.
  • BoT’s share (19%) represents central bank holdings from monetary policy operations and special facilities.
  • Non-traditional holders (other financial institutions and individuals) represent about one-fifth (19%) of the total, reflecting increased market participation.

Implications for Tanzania's Economic Development

1. Total Domestic Debt Stock: Steady Growth Reflects Proactive Fiscal Management

  • Key Observations Recap: TZS 37,129.8 billion (+5% from July), primarily from bond issuance (TZS 1,480.7 billion in August auctions).
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Funding for Capital Projects: The bond-driven rise provides long-term, low-cost resources (yields down to 13.91-14.42%), aligning with July's TZS 1,634.4 billion development spending (77% domestic). This bolsters sectors like transport (20.3% of external debt use) and agriculture (30.1% credit growth), targeting 6.2% FY 2025/26 growth per IMF projections.
    • Debt Sustainability Buffer: At ~35% of GDP, the increase maintains moderate risk, per July 2025 IMF/WB assessments, freeing space for private investment amid TZS appreciation (6.6% in August).
    • Risks: Accelerated issuance could elevate service costs (9.4% of July expenditures), potentially crowding out private credit if global rates rise.
MetricAugust 2025 ValueImplication for Development
Total StockTZS 37,129.8 bn (+5% m-o-m)Enables 4.5% deficit financing for infrastructure, supporting 6% GDP.
Bond Contribution~TZS 1,481 bn (Aug issuance)Reduces refinancing risks, aiding long-term projects like hydropower.

2. Composition by Creditor Category: Diversification Enhances Market Resilience

  • Key Observations Recap: Pension funds (TZS 10,116.5 billion, 27.2%) and banks (TZS 10,558.3 billion, 28.4%) hold >55%; BoT 19%; others 19.2%.
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Institutional Investor Dominance: High pension/bank shares reflect strong domestic savings mobilization (deposits up 20.2% y-o-y), channeling funds to pro-growth bonds and reducing external vulnerability (external debt USD 35.4 billion). This deepens markets, as noted in SECO's report, supporting FDI in mining/tourism (exports up 14.8%).
    • Broadened Participation: 19.2% "others" (non-banks, individuals) indicates retail inclusion, fostering financial literacy and stability amid 21% M3 growth.
    • BoT Role: 19% holdings from policy ops ensure liquidity (IBCM rates at 6.48%), but cap monetization risks to preserve inflation anchors (3-5% target).
Creditor CategoryAmount (TZS Bn)Share (%)Implication for Development
Commercial Banks10,558.328.4Funds private credit (16.2% growth), boosting trade/agriculture.
Pension Funds10,116.527.2Locks in long-term capital for social/infra projects, per WB.
BoT7,052.219.0Supports monetary transmission, aligning with CBR easing.
Others6,781.719.2Widens investor base, enhancing inclusion (5.5% unemployment).

Overall Summary and Forward Outlook

August's domestic debt profile implies a resilient financing ecosystem for Tanzania's development: diversified creditors and bond focus sustain fiscal buffers, enabling 6% growth while managing risks. This complements external stability (reserves USD 6.2 billion) and positions Tanzania as an EAC outperformer. By Q4 2025, continued trends could trim debt-to-GDP to 48%, per IMF, but prioritizing tax reforms (revenues at 16.5% GDP target) will counter y-o-y rises and unlock 7% potential.

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