
The national debt profile from the Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review (September 2025) for August 2025 reveals a manageable 2.3% monthly increase to TZS 124.8 trillion (USD 47.2 billion), with external debt comprising 70.3% (TZS 87.7 trillion) and domestic at 29.7% (TZS 37.1 trillion). This structure—government-dominated (80.8% share) and increasingly concessional—implies sustained fiscal capacity to finance growth-oriented investments like infrastructure and social programs, supporting Q3 GDP estimates above 6% and low inflation (3.4%). As of early October 2025, debt remains at moderate risk of distress, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of ~46.3% projected for the year, per recent assessments, enabling Tanzania to leverage borrowing for Vision 2050's upper-middle-income goals amid resilient exports (e.g., gold and tourism). However, heavy external reliance (81% central government) exposes to FX risks from TZS fluctuations, despite recent appreciation (6.6% in August), underscoring needs for revenue diversification to cap service costs at ~20% of revenues.
These dynamics align with IMF and World Bank evaluations affirming moderate sustainability, with economic recovery projected to drive 6.0% GDP growth in 2025. Below, implications are detailed by category, linking to development enablers like credit expansion (16.2% y-o-y) and sectoral investments.
| Category | Amount (TZS Trillion) | Share of Total (%) | Remarks |
| External Debt | 87.7 | 70.3 | Increased due to new loan disbursements and exchange rate revaluation |
| Domestic Debt | 37.1 | 29.7 | Growth mainly from issuance of Treasury bonds |
| Total Public Debt | 124.8 | 100.0 | — |
External debt continues to dominate Tanzania’s debt structure, accounting for about 70% of the total debt portfolio.
| Borrower Category | Amount (TZS Trillion) | Share of External Debt (%) |
| Central Government | 70.9 | 80.8 |
| Private Sector | 16.8 | 19.2 |
| Public Corporations | 0.01 | 0.0 |
| Total External Debt | 87.7 | 100.0 |
The central government is the main external borrower, holding about four-fifths (81%) of all external debt.
| Creditor Category | Amount (TZS Trillion) | Share of Domestic Debt (%) |
| Pension Funds | 10.1 | 27.2 |
| Commercial Banks | 10.6 | 28.4 |
| Bank of Tanzania | 7.1 | 19.0 |
| Insurance Companies | 1.8 | 4.9 |
| BoT Special Funds | 0.8 | 2.2 |
| Others (Individuals, NBFIs, Public Entities) | 6.8 | 18.3 |
| Total Domestic Debt | 37.1 | 100.0 |
The domestic debt market remains dominated by institutional investors, mainly pension funds and commercial banks, holding over 55% combined.
| Indicator | Value | Interpretation |
| Total Public Debt | TZS 124.8 trillion | Equivalent to about USD 47.2 billion |
| Government Share of Total Debt | 80.8% | Indicates fiscal borrowing dominance |
| Private Sector Share | 19.2% | Mainly external commercial loans |
| Domestic Debt as % of Total Debt | 29.7% | One-third of the debt is domestic |
| External Debt as % of Total Debt | 70.3% | Majority in foreign currency |
1. Overview and Composition of Public Debt: Balanced Growth for Productive Financing
| Category | Amount (TZS Tn) | Share (%) | Implication for Development |
| External Debt | 87.7 | 70.3 | Funds imports/tech transfers, aiding 6% growth but FX-vulnerable. |
| Domestic Debt | 37.1 | 29.7 | Builds local markets, supporting 21% M3 expansion. |
| Total Public Debt | 124.8 | 100.0 | Sustainable at ~46% GDP, enabling 4.5% deficit for social spending. |
2. Composition of External Debt by Borrower: Public-Led External Leverage
| Borrower Category | Amount (TZS Tn) | Share of External (%) | Implication for Development |
| Central Government | 70.9 | 80.8 | Drives public goods, targeting 7% medium-term growth. |
| Private Sector | 16.8 | 19.2 | Boosts FDI, narrowing current account to 2.5% GDP. |
3. Composition of Domestic Debt by Creditor: Institutional Deepening for Stability
| Creditor Category | Amount (TZS Tn) | Share of Domestic (%) | Implication for Development |
| Commercial Banks | 10.6 | 28.4 | Channels liquidity to trade (29.2% credit growth). |
| Pension Funds | 10.1 | 27.2 | Secures long-term funds for infra, per WB. |
| Others | 6.8 | 18.3 | Enhances retail access, aiding poverty targets. |
4. Key Ratios and Indicators: Moderate Risk with Growth Upside
| Indicator | Value | Interpretation |
| Government Share | 80.8% | Enables public-led growth but risks crowding-out. |
| Private Sector Share | 19.2% | Signals FDI potential in exports. |
| Domestic as % Total | 29.7% | Builds buffers against external shocks. |
Overall Summary and Forward Outlook
August's debt rise implies a strategic tool for Tanzania's development: sustainable levels finance 6%+ growth and inclusion, with diversification mitigating risks in a resilient SSA economy (3.8% regional projection). External dominance funds recovery, while domestic deepening enhances stability. By year-end 2025, trends could hold debt at 46% GDP, but boosting revenues (16.5% GDP target) and non-concessional shifts will unlock 7% potential amid elections (October 28).