Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

What is the Current Trend in Tanzania’s Inflation, and What Drives It?
May 18, 2025  
Tanzania’s inflation in March 2025, as detailed in the April 2025 Monthly Economic Review, shows an upward trend in headline inflation, driven primarily by rising food and energy prices, while core inflation has declined. Below, we outline the current inflation trends and their drivers, using specific figures from the document to provide clarity. Headline Inflation […]

Tanzania’s inflation in March 2025, as detailed in the April 2025 Monthly Economic Review, shows an upward trend in headline inflation, driven primarily by rising food and energy prices, while core inflation has declined. Below, we outline the current inflation trends and their drivers, using specific figures from the document to provide clarity.

Headline Inflation Trend

Figure: Headline inflation rose to 3.3% in March 2025, up from 3.0% in March 2024.

Explanation:

  • Trend: The 0.3 percentage point increase indicates a moderate upward trend in overall price levels, but inflation remains within national targets and regional benchmarks of the East African Community (EAC) and Southern African Development Community (SADC).
  • Drivers: The document attributes this rise primarily to increases in food and energy prices (Page 3). These components have exerted significant upward pressure on the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which is based on a 2020=100 index.
  • Context: Despite the increase, headline inflation is relatively stable, supported by the Bank of Tanzania’s monetary policy, which maintains the Central Bank Rate at 6% to keep inflation expectations below the 5% medium-term target.

Food Inflation Trend

Figure: Food inflation surged to 5.4% in March 2025, up from 1.4% in March 2024.

Explanation:

  • Trend: The sharp 4.0 percentage point increase reflects significant price pressures in the food sector, which has a CPI weight of 26.1%.
  • Drivers: Higher prices for staple crops—maize, rice, and beans—are the primary drivers, amplified by logistical challenges in transportation due to seasonal heavy rains. These rains disrupted supply chains, increasing costs for producers and traders.
  • Mitigation: The National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) held 587,062 tonnes of food stocks (mainly maize and paddy) and released 32,598 tonnes to local traders by March 2025, which helped mitigate further price spikes. The overall food supply remained adequate, preventing even higher inflation.
  • Impact: The document notes that unprocessed food inflation’s contribution to overall inflation has increased, making it a key driver of the 3.3% headline rate.

Core Inflation Trend

Figure: Core inflation decreased to 2.2% in March 2025 from 3.9% in March 2024.

Explanation:

  • Trend: The 1.7 percentage point decline indicates easing price pressures from non-food items, which constitute 73.9% of the CPI basket.
  • Drivers: Core inflation excludes volatile items like food, energy, and utilities. The reduction suggests stable or declining prices for services and non-food goods, reflecting lower underlying inflationary pressures.
  • Impact: The document highlights that core inflation’s contribution to overall inflation has gradually diminished, with unprocessed food inflation taking a larger role. This decline helps moderate the headline inflation rate despite food and energy spikes.

Energy, Fuel, and Utilities Inflation Trend

Figure: Energy, fuel, and utilities inflation increased to 7.9% in March 2025 from 6.6% in March 2024.

Explanation:

  • Trend: The 1.3 percentage point rise makes this the highest inflation component, with a CPI weight of 5.7%.
  • Drivers: The increase is primarily due to rising prices of petroleum products and wood charcoal, the latter linked to scarcity following seasonal rains (Page 5). The document notes the weight of wood charcoal in the energy component but does not quantify it.
  • Impact: High energy inflation significantly contributes to the 3.3% headline rate, as energy costs affect transportation, production, and household expenses, amplifying overall price pressures.

Additional Context and Drivers

  • Global Commodity Prices: Rising global fertilizer prices (up 2% to USD 615.13 per tonne) increase agricultural input costs, indirectly contributing to food inflation by raising production expenses. Conversely, a 4% drop in crude oil prices to USD 70.70 per barrel may have tempered energy inflation slightly, though domestic petroleum price hikes dominated.
  • Monetary Policy: The Bank of Tanzania’s stable Central Bank Rate (6%) and adequate liquidity management (no reverse repo auctions) help anchor inflation expectations, preventing runaway price increases despite food and energy pressures.
  • CPI Dynamics: The CPI weights show food (26.1%) and energy (5.7%) as smaller shares compared to core items (73.9%), but their volatility gives them outsized impacts on headline inflation. Month-on-month data shows food inflation at 2.5% and energy at 2.9% for March 2025, reinforcing their role as key drivers.

Conclusion

In March 2025, Tanzania’s headline inflation rose to 3.3% (from 3.0% in 2024), driven by surging food inflation (5.4%, up from 1.4%) and energy, fuel, and utilities inflation (7.9%, up from 6.6%). Food price increases, fueled by maize, rice, and bean costs and rain-related logistical challenges, and energy price hikes, driven by petroleum and wood charcoal, are the primary drivers. Core inflation’s decline to 2.2% (from 3.9%) moderate’s overall pressures, but unprocessed food’s growing contribution underscores its significance. The NFRA’s 587,062-tonne food stock and 32,598-tonne release helped contain food inflation, keeping headline inflation within EAC and SADC benchmarks.

Key Figures: Tanzania’s Inflation Trends and Drivers (March 2025)

IndicatorKey Figure
Headline Inflation3.3% (Mar 2025, up from 3.0% in Mar 2024)
Food Inflation5.4% (Mar 2025, up from 1.4% in Mar 2024)
Core Inflation2.2% (Mar 2025, down from 3.9% in Mar 2024)
Energy, Fuel, Utilities Inflation7.9% (Mar 2025, up from 6.6% in Mar 2024)
Food Reserves587,062 tonnes (Mar 2025, 32,598 tonnes released)
Fertilizer Price (Global)USD 615.13/tonne (+2%, Mar 2025)
Crude Oil Price (Global)USD 70.70/barrel (-4%, Mar 2025)
CPI Weight (Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages)26.1%
CPI Weight (Energy, Fuel, Utilities)5.7%
CPI Weight (Core)73.9%
Month-on-Month Food Inflation2.5% (Mar 2025)
Month-on-Month Energy Inflation2.9% (Mar 2025)
Central Bank Rate6% (unchanged, Mar 2025)

Notes:

  • All inflation figures reflect March 2025 unless stated otherwise.
  • Food inflation driven by maize, rice, bean prices, and logistical issues from rains.
  • Energy inflation driven by petroleum and wood charcoal price hikes.
  • Source refer to the April 2025 Monthly Economic Review.

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