TICGL

| Data Driven Centre

Doing Business in Tanzania 2025-2030
June 19, 2025  
Tanzania stands at a crossroads, poised to become East Africa’s trade powerhouse but held back by systemic barriers that stifle small and medium enterprises (SMEs), which drive 35% of GDP and employ 60% of the workforce (ILO, 2020). High taxes, fragile startup ecosystems, and outdated infrastructure limit Tanzania’s competitiveness within the East African Community (EAC) […]

Tanzania stands at a crossroads, poised to become East Africa’s trade powerhouse but held back by systemic barriers that stifle small and medium enterprises (SMEs), which drive 35% of GDP and employ 60% of the workforce (ILO, 2020). High taxes, fragile startup ecosystems, and outdated infrastructure limit Tanzania’s competitiveness within the East African Community (EAC) and African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). A new study by the Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd. (TICGL) offers a bold vision to transform this landscape through targeted reforms, drawing on regional models like Rwanda and Nigeria.

The Challenges: Taxation, Startups, and Infrastructure

SMEs, comprising over 90% of Tanzania’s businesses, face a 30% corporate tax and 25% import duties, far above Rwanda’s 15% SME tax rate, draining profits and curbing growth (World Bank, 2020). Registering a business takes 26 days—six times longer than Rwanda’s 4 days—while tax compliance consumes 195 hours annually. These burdens contribute to Tanzania’s 141st global Ease of Doing Business ranking, lagging behind Kenya (56th) and Rwanda (38th).

Startups fare worse, with 60-70% failing within three years due to limited credit access (only 15% of SMEs secure formal loans) and weak support systems (Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics, 2020). Historical policies like Ujamaa (1967-1980s) stifled private enterprise, leaving a legacy of unclear partnership roles and low entrepreneurial skills.

Infrastructure gaps further erode competitiveness. Dar es Salaam port, handling 95% of Tanzania’s trade, suffers 10–14-day dwell times, compared to Mombasa’s 7-10 days, inflating logistics costs to 16-20% of export value. The Tazara Railway operates at 20% capacity (0.5 million tons annually vs. 2 million tons potential), hampering trade with landlocked EAC countries (EAC, 2023).

A Blueprint for Transformation

TICGL proposes three actionable strategies to unlock Tanzania’s potential:

  1. Tax and Regulatory Reforms: Reducing corporate tax to 20% and import duties to 15% could boost SME profits by 5-7%, saving $2,000-5,000 annually per business and creating 20,000-30,000 jobs across 10,000 SMEs. Streamlining registration to 7 days, inspired by Rwanda’s one-stop shops, could improve Tanzania’s Ease of Doing Business rank by 10-20 positions.
  2. Entrepreneurship Hubs: Investing $8 million to establish incubators in Dar es Salaam ($5M) and Arusha ($3M), plus $20 million in seed funding, would support 400 startups annually with $20,000-$50,000 grants. Modeled on Nigeria’s $2 billion Lagos tech hub, these hubs could cut failure rates to 40-50%, create 14,000 jobs, and add $2 billion to GDP by 2030.
  3. Infrastructure Upgrades: A $1.05 billion investment—$500M for Dar es Salaam port, $300M for Tazara Railway, $200M for roads, and $50M for digital logistics—would reduce port dwell times to 5-7 days and logistics costs to 10-12%. This could boost EAC trade by $1-1.5 billion, create 35,000 jobs, and add $0.5-1 billion to GDP annually, mirroring Kenya’s Standard Gauge Railway success.

The Path Forward

TICGL’s roadmap, informed by Rwanda’s tax reforms, Nigeria’s tech ecosystem, and Kenya’s infrastructure gains, calls for partnerships with the Tanzania Revenue Authority, private banks like CRDB, and EAC bodies. By 2026, tax reforms and hub pilots should launch, with infrastructure upgrades phased through 2030. These efforts could add $2.5-4 billion to GDP annually, cementing Tanzania’s role as an EAC trade leader.

Tanzania’s strategic location, with Dar es Salaam as a gateway for landlocked neighbors, offers immense potential. By addressing these challenges, Tanzania can transform its business landscape, empower SMEs, and build a resilient economy for the future.

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