Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Tanzania’s National Debt October 2025
October 10, 2025  
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 […]

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.


1. Overview of Tanzania’s National Debt (as of August 2025)

  • Total Public Debt (External + Domestic):
    TZS 124.8 trillion
    (equivalent to about USD 47.2 billion)
  • This represents an increase of 2.3% from TZS 122.0 trillion in July 2025.
  • The rise was mainly due to new disbursements from external creditors and continued issuance of government bonds in the domestic market.

2. Composition of Public Debt

CategoryAmount (TZS Trillion)Share of Total (%)Remarks
External Debt87.770.3Increased due to new loan disbursements and exchange rate revaluation
Domestic Debt37.129.7Growth mainly from issuance of Treasury bonds
Total Public Debt124.8100.0


External debt continues to dominate Tanzania’s debt structure, accounting for about 70% of the total debt portfolio.


3. Composition of External Debt by Borrower

Borrower CategoryAmount (TZS Trillion)Share of External Debt (%)
Central Government70.980.8
Private Sector16.819.2
Public Corporations0.010.0
Total External Debt87.7100.0


The central government is the main external borrower, holding about four-fifths (81%) of all external debt.


4. Composition of Domestic Debt by Creditor Category

Creditor CategoryAmount (TZS Trillion)Share of Domestic Debt (%)
Pension Funds10.127.2
Commercial Banks10.628.4
Bank of Tanzania7.119.0
Insurance Companies1.84.9
BoT Special Funds0.82.2
Others (Individuals, NBFIs, Public Entities)6.818.3
Total Domestic Debt37.1100.0


The domestic debt market remains dominated by institutional investors, mainly pension funds and commercial banks, holding over 55% combined.


5. Key Ratios and Indicators

IndicatorValueInterpretation
Total Public DebtTZS 124.8 trillionEquivalent to about USD 47.2 billion
Government Share of Total Debt80.8%Indicates fiscal borrowing dominance
Private Sector Share19.2%Mainly external commercial loans
Domestic Debt as % of Total Debt29.7%One-third of the debt is domestic
External Debt as % of Total Debt70.3%Majority in foreign currency

Implications for Tanzania's Economic Development

1. Overview and Composition of Public Debt: Balanced Growth for Productive Financing

  • Key Observations Recap: Total TZS 124.8 trillion (+2.3% m-o-m), external TZS 87.7 trillion (70.3%), domestic TZS 37.1 trillion (29.7%); rise from external disbursements and bonds.
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Infrastructure and Recovery Catalyst: The modest uptick funds high-return projects (e.g., transport/energy, 33.2% of external uses), aligning with July's TZS 1,634.4 billion development spending and boosting 14.8% credit to construction. This supports 6.0% growth projections, with debt-financed capex adding 1-2% to GDP via multipliers in mining (3.2% credit growth) and agriculture (30.1%).
    • Sustainability Amid Resilience: At 46.3% of GDP, the portfolio's concessional tilt (e.g., from IDA/IMF) keeps distress risk moderate, providing buffers against global uncertainties (Chart 1.1a). Domestic growth (5% m-o-m) deepens markets, reducing rollover risks and crowding-out.
    • Risks: 2.3% monthly pace could push debt-to-GDP above 50% if exports soften; President Samia's September defense highlights productive use but calls for efficiency.
CategoryAmount (TZS Tn)Share (%)Implication for Development
External Debt87.770.3Funds imports/tech transfers, aiding 6% growth but FX-vulnerable.
Domestic Debt37.129.7Builds local markets, supporting 21% M3 expansion.
Total Public Debt124.8100.0Sustainable at ~46% GDP, enabling 4.5% deficit for social spending.

2. Composition of External Debt by Borrower: Public-Led External Leverage

  • Key Observations Recap: Central government TZS 70.9 trillion (80.8%), private TZS 16.8 trillion (19.2%).
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Public Investment Multipliers: Government dominance channels funds to social/education (21.5% use) and BoP support (22.5%), enhancing human capital and stability for 5.5% unemployment reduction. This ties to 6.5% Zanzibar growth spillover, per October updates.
    • Private Sector Catalyst: 19.2% private share (up historically) reflects FDI in energy/mining (12.9% use), fostering diversification beyond gold (35.5% export rise).
    • Risks: 80.8% concentration amplifies fiscal pressures if global rates rise; IMF notes need for private borrowing caps.
Borrower CategoryAmount (TZS Tn)Share of External (%)Implication for Development
Central Government70.980.8Drives public goods, targeting 7% medium-term growth.
Private Sector16.819.2Boosts FDI, narrowing current account to 2.5% GDP.

3. Composition of Domestic Debt by Creditor: Institutional Deepening for Stability

  • Key Observations Recap: Banks TZS 10.6 trillion (28.4%), pensions TZS 10.1 trillion (27.2%), BoT TZS 7.1 trillion (19.0%), others TZS 6.8 trillion (18.3%).
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Market Maturation: >55% institutional hold (banks/pensions) mobilizes savings (deposits +20.2% y-o-y), funding bonds at lower yields (13.91-14.42%), which eases private credit costs (15.07% lending rate).
    • Inclusive Financing: 18.3% "others" (individuals/NBFIs) broadens participation, supporting MSME loans (36% of credit) and financial inclusion in rural areas.
    • Risks: BoT's 19% share risks quasi-fiscal expansion; Q3 report shows domestic at TZS 34.3 trillion, signaling steady but monitored growth.
Creditor CategoryAmount (TZS Tn)Share of Domestic (%)Implication for Development
Commercial Banks10.628.4Channels liquidity to trade (29.2% credit growth).
Pension Funds10.127.2Secures long-term funds for infra, per WB.
Others6.818.3Enhances retail access, aiding poverty targets.

4. Key Ratios and Indicators: Moderate Risk with Growth Upside

  • Key Observations Recap: Government 80.8%, private 19.2%; external 70.3%, domestic 29.7%.
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Fiscal Space Optimization: 80.8% government share ensures targeted spending (e.g., TZS 41.8 billion Zanzibar development), while 29.7% domestic reduces FX exposure, aligning with SECO's 2025 report on USD 47.66 billion stock.
    • Resilience Metrics: Moderate risk supports 3.8% SSA growth context, with debt service sustainable at 20% revenues, freeing resources for ag/tourism.
    • Risks: USD-heavy external (66.1%) vulnerable to appreciation reversals; Allianz projects 46.3% GDP stability but urges reforms.
IndicatorValueInterpretation
Government Share80.8%Enables public-led growth but risks crowding-out.
Private Sector Share19.2%Signals FDI potential in exports.
Domestic as % Total29.7%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).

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