Economy of Tanzania

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Economy of Tanzania
CurrencyTanzanian shilling (TZS)
1 July – 30 June
Trade organisations
EAC, SADC, AU, WTO
Statistics
GDP$46.87 billion (nominal, 2016 est.)[1]
GDP rank91st (nominal, 2013)
GDP growth
Increase +7.4% Q1 2014 (22nd)[2]
GDP per capita
$768[1]
GDP by sector
Agriculture: 24.5%[3]
Industry and construction: 22.2%
Services: 44.3
Decrease 4% (January 2015)[4]
12%[5]
Population below poverty line
28.2% (2012)[6]
37.83 (2012)[7]
Labour force
25.59 million (2013 est.)
Labour force by occupation
Agriculture: 50%[3]: page 56 
Unemployment11.7% (2011)[8]
Main industries
Agricultural processing
Mining
External
ExportsIncrease $5.6685 billion (105th; October 2015)[9]
Export goods
List
Main export partners
 India 21.4%
 China 8.1%
 Japan 5.1%
 Kenya 4.6%
 Belgium 4.3% (2015)[10]
ImportsDecrease $10.441 billion (FOB; October 2015)[9]
Import goods
List
Main import partners
 China 15.5%
 India 12.7%
 United States 9.6%
 Germany 6.8%
 United Kingdom 4.3% (2015)[11]
FDI stock
$12.715 billion (2013)[12]
–4.002 billion (October 2015)[9]
$15.4 billion (October 2015)[9]
Public finances
42.7% of GDP (2013 est.)
Revenues$7.117 billion (2013 est.)
Expenses$8.917 billion (2013 est.)
Economic aid$490 million (recipient; 2014)[13]
n/a (TBD)
$4,383.6 billion (4.5 months of imports; 2013)[9]
Main data source: CIA World Fact Book
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

The United Republic of Tanzania is the second largest economy in the East African Community and the twelfth largest in Africa. The country is largely dependent on agriculture for employment, accounting for about half of the employed workforce.[3]: page 56  An estimated 34 percent of Tanzanians currently live in poverty.[14] The economy has been transitioning from a command economy to a market economy since 1985. Although total GDP has increased since these reforms began, GDP per capita dropped sharply at first, and only exceeded the pre-transition figure in around 2007.[15]

Following the rebasing of the economy in 2014, the GDP increased by a third to $41.33 billion.[16]

History

Significant measures have been taken to liberalize the Tanzanian economy along market lines and encourage both foreign and domestic private investment. Beginning in 1986, the Government of Tanzania embarked on an adjustment program to dismantle the socialist (Ujamaa) economic controls and encourage more active participation of the private sector in the economy. The program included a comprehensive package of policies which reduced the budget deficit and improved monetary control, substantially depreciated the overvalued exchange rate, liberalized the trade regime, removed most price controls, eased restrictions on the marketing of food crops, freed interest rates, and initiated a restructuring of the financial sector.

Current GDP per capita of Tanzania grew more than 40 percent between 1998 and 2007. In May 2009, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved an Exogenous Shock Facility for Tanzania to help the country cope with the global economic crisis[17] Tanzania is also engaged in a Policy Support Instrument (PSI) with the IMF, which commenced in February 2007 after Tanzania completed its second three-year Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF), the first having been completed in August 2003. The PRGF was the successor program to the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility, which Tanzania also participated in from 1996-1999. The IMF's PSI program provides policy support and signaling to participating low-income countries and is intended for countries that have usually achieved a reasonable growth performance, low underlying inflation, an adequate level of official international reserves, and have begun to establish external and net domestic debt sustainability.

Tanzania also embarked on a major restructuring of state-owned enterprises. The program has so far divested 335 out of some 425 parastatal entities. Overall, real economic growth has averaged about 4 percent a year, much better than the previous 20 years, but not enough to improve the lives of average Tanzanians. Also, the economy remains overwhelmingly donor-dependent. Moreover, Tanzania has an external debt of $7.9 billion. The servicing of this debt absorbs about 40 percent of total government expenditures. Tanzania has qualified for debt relief under the enhanced Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative. Debts worth over $6 billion were canceled following implementation of the Paris Club 7 Agreement. Height measure studies for Tanzania show that welfare increased through the years of colonization, with an decline during the 1930's. This is due to epidemics in that period of time. [18]

Macro-economic trend

This is a chart of trend of gross domestic product of Tanzania at market prices estimated by the International Monetary Fund with figures in millions of Tanzanian Shillings. See [1]

Year Gross Domestic Product US Dollar Exchange
1980 45,749 8.21 Shillings
1985 115,006 17.87 Shillings
1990 830,693 195.04 Shillings
1995 3,020,501 536.40 Shillings
2000 7,267,133 800.43 Shillings
2005 13,713,477 1,127.10 Shillings
2010 - 1,515.10 Shillings

Mean wages were $0.52 per man-hour in 2009.[citation needed]

Agriculture

The Tanzanian economy is heavily based on agriculture, which accounts for 24.5 percent of gross domestic product,[3]: page 37  provides 85 percent of exports,[19] and accounts for half of the employed workforce;[3]: page 56  The agricultural sector grew 4.3 percent in 2012, less than half of the Millennium Development Goal target of 10.8 percent.[20] 16.4 percent of the land is arable,[21] with 2.4 percent of the land planted with permanent crops.[22]

This strong dependence on agriculture, makes Tanzania's economy highly vulnerable to weather shocks and fluctuating commodity prices. 76% of Tanzania's population subsist thanks to agriculture and, due to the lack of knowledge and infrastructure to develop and implement some kind of agricultural technology, any droughts, floods, or temperature shocks can severely damage the living standards of those people and create huge increases in unemployment, hunger, and malnutrition rates, as well as, in really severe case, mortality rates due to starvation.[23]

Industry and construction

Industry and construction is a major and growing component of the Tanzanian economy, contributing 22.2 percent of GDP in 2013.[3]: page 37  This component includes mining and quarrying, manufacturing, electricity and natural gas, water supply, and construction.[3]: page 37 

Mining

Mining contributed 3.3 percent of GDP in 2013.[3]: page 33  The vast majority of the country's mineral export revenue comes from gold, accounting for 89 percent of the value of those exports in 2013.[3]: page 71  It also exports sizable quantities of gemstones, including diamonds and tanzanite.[24]: page 1250  All of Tanzania's coal production, which totalled 106,000 short tons in 2012, is used domestically.[25] Other minerals exploited in Tanzania include pozzolana, salt, gypsum, kaolinite, silver ore, copper, phosphate, tin, graphite, and bauxite.[3]: pages 70–71 

Modern gold mining in Tanzania started in the German colonial period, beginning with gold discoveries near Lake Victoria in 1894. The first gold mine in what was then Tanganyika, the Sekenke Gold Mine, began operation in 1909, and gold mining in Tanzania experienced a boom between 1930 and World War II. By 1967, gold production in the country had dropped to insignificance but was revived in the mid-1970s, when the gold price rose once more. In the late 1990s, foreign mining companies started investing in the exploration and development of gold deposits in Tanzania, leading to the opening of a number of new mines, like the Golden Pride mine, which opened in 1999 as the first modern gold mine in the country, or the Buzwagi mine, which opened in 2009.[26][27]

Buzwagi Gold Mine.

Nickel reserves amounting to 290,000 tonnes were discovered in October 2012 by Ngwena Company Limited, a subsidiary of the Australian mining company IMX Resources. An initial investment of around USD38 millions has been made since exploration began in 2006, and nickel should start being mined at the end of 2015.[28]

Chinese firms have been showing major interest in Tanzania’s mineral deposits; an announcement was made in late 2011 of a plan by the Sichuan Hongda Group, to invest about USD3 billion to develop the Mchuchuma coal and Liganga iron ore projects in the south of the country.[29] It was also announced in August 2012 that China National Gold Corp are in talks to purchase mining assets in Tanzania from African Barrick Gold, in a deal that could be worth more than £2 billion.[29]

In November 2012, the Tanzanian government announced investigations into allegations that mining investors in the country were harassing and on some occasions, killing residents around mining sites.[30]

Electricity

The government-owned Tanzania Electric Supply Company Limited (TANESCO) dominates the electric supply industry in Tanzania.[31] The country generated 6.013 billion kilowatt hours (kWh) of electricity in 2013, a 4.2 percent increase over the 5.771 billion kWh generated in 2012.[32]: page 4  Generation increased by 63 percent between 2005 and 2012;[33][34] however, only 15 percent of Tanzanians had access to electric power in 2011.[35] Almost 18 percent of the electricity generated in 2012 was lost because of theft and transmission and distribution problems.[33] The electrical supply varies, particularly when droughts disrupt hydropower electric generation; rolling blackouts are implemented as necessary.[24]: page 1251 [31] The unreliability of the electrical supply has hindered the development of Tanzanian industry.[24]: page 1251  In 2013, 49.7 percent of Tanzania's electricity generation came from natural gas, 28.9 percent from hydroelectric sources, 20.4 percent from thermal sources, and 1.0 percent from outside the country.[32]: page 5  The government is building a 532 kilometres (331 mi) gas pipeline from Mnazi Bay to Dar es Salaam, with a scheduled completion in 2015.[36] This pipeline is expected to allow the country to double its electricity generation capacity to 3,000 megawatts by 2016.[37] The government's goal is to increase capacity to at least 10,000 megawatts by 2025.[38]

Natural gas

Songo Songo Gas Plant

According to PFC Energy, 25 to 30 trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas resources have been discovered in Tanzania since 2010.[25] The value of natural gas actually produced in 2013 was US $52.2 million, a 42.7 percent increase over 2012.[3]: page 73 

Commercial production of gas from the Songo Songo Island field in the Indian Ocean commenced in 2004, thirty years after it was discovered there.[39][40] Over 35 billion cubic feet of gas was produced from this field in 2013,[3]: page 72  with proven, probable, and possible reserves totalling 1.1 trillion cubic feet.[40] The gas is transported by pipeline to Dar es Salaam.[39] As of 27 August 2014, TANESCO owed the operator of this field, Orca Exploration Group Inc., US $50.4 million, down from US $63.8 million two months earlier.[41]

A newer natural gas field in Mnazi Bay in 2013 produced about one-seventh of the amount produced near Songo Songo Island[3]: page 73  but has proven, probable, and possible reserves of 2.2 trillion cubic feet.[40] Virtually all of that gas is being used for electricity generation in Mtwara.[39]

The Indian Ocean, off the coast of Mozambique and Tanzania, is proving to be a rich hunting ground for natural gas exploration. According to US Geological Survey estimates, the combined gas reserves of Mozambique and Tanzania could be as high as 250 trillion cubic feet. In Mozambique alone, proven gas reserves have increased dramatically from a mere 4.6 trillion cubic feet in 2013 to 98.8 trillion cubic feet as of mid-2015. Given continued offshore discoveries and the size of discoveries to date, continued growth in proven gas reserves is likely to continue into the foreseeable future.[42][43]

New exploration on more frontier blocks, however, will likely be slowed as oil and gas prices fall[44] and companies apply increasing caution to investing in frontier markets with nascent industries, poor infrastructure and long lead times.[45]

External trade and investment

Tanzanian exports in 2006

Tanzania's history of political stability has encouraged foreign direct investment. The government has committed itself to improve the investment climate including redrawing tax codes, floating the exchange rate, licensing foreign banks, and creating an investment promotion center to cut red tape. Tanzania has mineral resources and a largely untapped tourism sector, which might make it a viable market for foreign investment.

The stock market capitalisation of listed companies in Tanzania was valued at $588 million in 2005 by the World Bank.[46]

Zanzibar

Zanzibar's economy is based primarily on the production of cloves (90% grown on the island of Pemba), the principal foreign exchange earner. Exports have suffered from the downturn in the clove market. Tourism is an increasingly promising sector, and a number of new hotels and resorts have been built in recent years.

The Government of Zanzibar has been more aggressive than its mainland counterpart in instituting economic reforms and has legalized foreign exchange bureaus on the islands. This has loosened up the economy and dramatically increased the availability of consumer commodities. Furthermore, with external funding, the government plans to make the port of Zanzibar a free port. Rehabilitation of current port facilities and plans to extend these facilities will be the precursor to the free port. The island's manufacturing sector is limited mainly to import substitution industries, such as cigarettes, shoes, and process agricultural products. In 1992, the government designated two export-producing zones and encouraged the development of offshore financial services. Zanzibar still imports much of its staple requirements, petroleum products, and manufactured articles.

Literature

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Tanzania". International Monetary Fund. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  2. ^ "Q1 GDP Jan - March 2014" (PDF) (Press release). NBS. September 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Statistical Abstract 2013, National Bureau of Statistics, Tanzania Ministry of Finance, July 2014, accessed 22 October 2014
  4. ^ "NCPI for Jan 2014" (PDF) (Press release). Dar es Salaam. National Bureau of Statistics (Tanzania). February 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  5. ^ "BoT: Weighted Average Interest Rate Structure" (PDF). Bank of Tanzania. 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  6. ^ "Data: Tanzania". World Bank. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  7. ^ "GINI index". World Bank. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  8. ^ "Unemployment estimates for the Year 2011". National Bureau of Statistics (Tanzania). Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  9. ^ a b c d e "BoT: Monthly Economic Review" (PDF). Bank of Tanzania. November 2015. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  10. ^ "Export Partners of Tanzania". CIA World Factbook. 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  11. ^ "Import Partners of Tanzania". CIA World Factbook. 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  12. ^ "World Investment Report 2014: Investing in the SDGs: An Action Plan" (PDF). UNCTAD. 2014. p. 210. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
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  14. ^ "Economic Growth and Trade". USAID. 11 February 2014.
  15. ^ "Tanzania: The Story of an African Transition" (PDF). International Monetary Fund. 2009.
  16. ^ "UPDATE 2-Tanzania's GDP expands by 32 pct after rebasing - officials". Reuters. 19 December 2014. Retrieved 19 December 2014.
  17. ^ "Press Release: IMF Executive Board Completes Sixth Review Under the Policy Support Instrument, First Review Under the Exogenous Shock Facility for Tanzania".
  18. ^ Baten, Jörg (2016). A History of the Global Economy. From 1500 to the Present. Cambridge University Press. p. 337. ISBN 9781107507180.
  19. ^ Central Intelligence Agency (2013). "Tanzania". The World Factbook. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  20. ^ "MKUKUTA Annual Implementation Report 2012/13", Tanzania Ministry of Finance, November 2013, page 11, accessed 1 November 2014
  21. ^ "Arable land (% of land area) - Data".
  22. ^ "Permanent cropland (% of land area) - Data".
  23. ^ "Tanzania. Poverty Report" (PDF).
  24. ^ a b c "Annex on the Free Movement of Persons". East African Community. Retrieved 21 October 2014.
  25. ^ a b "International - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)".
  26. ^ Tanzania Mining History tanzaniagold.com, accessed: 24 July 2010
  27. ^ •Mineral Sector Overview Ministry of Energy and Minerals website, accessed: 27 July 2010
  28. ^ Tanzania: Nickel Exploration Bears Fruit, Africa: AllAfrica.com, 2012, retrieved 18 October 2012
  29. ^ a b Business Week Reporter, "China seeks to venture into gold mining in Tanzania", The Citizen (23 August 2012)
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  33. ^ a b "IEA - Report".
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  35. ^ "Access to electricity (% of population) - Data".
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  37. ^ "Tanzania: Govt Signs Gas Supply Deal to Double Power Generation", Daily News, 17 September 2014, reprinted at allAfrica.com, accessed 23 October 2014
  38. ^ Electricity Supply Industry Reform Strategy and Roadmap 2014-2025, Tanzania Ministry of Energy and Minerals, 30 June 2014, page i, accessed 26 October 2014
  39. ^ a b c "International - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)".
  40. ^ a b c Natural Gas - Introduction, Tanzania Energy and Water Utilities Regulatory Authority, accessed 25 November 2014
  41. ^ "2014 Q2 Report for the Quarter Ended June 30 2014 and 2013", Orca Exploration Group Inc., page 3, accessed 24 October 2014
  42. ^ "Is East Africa's gas asset boom about to go bust?". Mineweb. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  43. ^ "Bright Africa | The drivers, enablers and managers of investment on the continent". www.riscura.com. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  44. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/business/energy-environment/oil-prices.html?_r0
  45. ^ "Frontier Markets in Focus | Mark Mobius". Investment Adventures in Emerging Markets. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  46. ^ "Data - Finance".

External links

External links

Government ministries, agencies and sites