Latest Thinking on Tanzania’s Trade Landscape (2025)


1. Shift Toward Trade Resilience and Food Sovereignty

What’s new:

  • The government is increasingly prioritizing food system resilience amid global supply chain shocks, climate events, and geopolitical tensions.
  • There is a push to reduce reliance on imports of staples like wheat, rice, and edible oils through:
    • Expansion of irrigation schemes (e.g., Lower Ruvu, Mbarali)
    • Promotion of local oilseed production (sunflower, sesame, soybean)
    • Investment in agro-processing zones

Implication:

  • Potential decline in some food imports over time
  • Opportunity for agribusiness and input suppliers to invest in domestic production ecosystems

2. Acceleration of Agro-Industrialization

Driven by:

  • Tanzania’s FYDP III and ASDP-II emphasize agro-processing, export diversification, and value addition
  • New investment in Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zones (SAPZs) in regions like Dodoma, Morogoro, and Mbeya
  • Strategic partnerships (e.g., South-South cooperation with countries like India, Brazil, China)

Notable trends:

  • Rise in exports of semi-processed cashews, coffee, and spices (especially to China, UAE, and EU)
  • Investment in packaging, branding, and certification for international markets

Implication:

  • Investors in food processing, logistics, and packaging stand to benefit
  • Greater participation of smallholder cooperatives in value chains

3. Regional Trade Taking Center Stage (EAC, AfCFTA)

Key developments:

  • EAC: Greater harmonization of customs and quality standards; Tanzania is benefiting from higher regional demand for maize, rice, cement, and processed foods
  • AfCFTA: Tanzania has begun pilot shipments to West African countries (e.g., Ghana, Nigeria), especially in coffee, spices, and light manufacturing

What’s working:

  • Improved port efficiency (e.g., Dar es Salaam and Tanga)
  • New cross-border infrastructure (e.g., road & rail to DRC, Burundi)

Challenges:

  • Non-tariff barriers (NTBs) persist in the region (e.g., border delays, standards enforcement)
  • Tanzania still lags in leveraging AfCFTA fully due to policy alignment and logistics constraints

4. Export Markets Are Shifting – Greater Focus on Asia and Middle East

China, UAE, India, and Indonesia are overtaking some Western markets in:

  • Importing Tanzanian cashews, pulses, sesame, and horticulture
  • Investing in agribusiness, ports, and logistics
  • Demand is growing for Halal-certified and organic products, especially in the Gulf

Opportunities:

  • Targeting Halal and health-conscious segments
  • Leveraging Dubai and Abu Dhabi as re-export hubs to Asia and Europe

5. Digital Trade and E-Commerce Are Emerging Frontiers

New initiatives:

  • Government and private sector support for digital agriculture platforms (e.g., farm-to-market traceability)
  • Exporters using e-commerce to reach diaspora markets, especially in Europe, UAE, and the U.S.

Potential:

  • Tech-enabled traceability and compliance can unlock higher-value exports (e.g., organic spices, specialty coffee)

6. Climate and Sustainability are Key Export Requirements

Global buyers, particularly in the EU and UK, are demanding:

  • Sustainably sourced products
  • Climate-smart certifications
  • Supply chain transparency

Tanzania’s response:

  • Efforts to improve Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) infrastructure
  • Training smallholders on climate-smart farming and export compliance

7. AGOA Uncertainty and Diversification Beyond the U.S.

AGOA’s potential expiry in 2025 is creating:

  • Uncertainty for apparel and textiles exporters
  • A pivot toward UK, EU, and Asian buyers by Tanzanian producers

Outlook:

  • Even if AGOA is renewed, Tanzania is expected to reduce dependence on U.S. trade preference programs and diversify partners

Strategic Takeaways (2025)

AreaTrendOpportunity
ImportsShifting from dependency to substitutionLocal investment in edible oils, grain milling, cold chains
ExportsMoving up the value chainAgro-processing, branding, certifications
Regional TradeStrengthening EAC, unlocking AfCFTALogistics, compliance support, NTB reforms
Market FocusIncreasing Asia & Middle East tradeHalal, organic, health-conscious products
SustainabilityKey to global market accessClimate-smart farming, traceability tech
DigitalRising e-commerce, agri-techExport platforms, mobile traceability apps

Model Structure

We’ll forecast two main aggregates:

  1. Agricultural & Food Imports (value, USD)
  2. Agro‑Processed & Agricultural Exports (value, USD)

We project forward from a base year (say 2025) to 2035.

We’ll use scenarios: Baseline, Optimistic, Pessimistic.

Key drivers / variables:

  • GDP growth
  • Income per capita growth / urbanization
  • Domestic production growth (especially agriculture, agro‑processing)
  • Investment in infrastructure, logistics, SPS compliance
  • Trade policy effectiveness (tariffs, non‑tariff barriers, AfCFTA, EPAs)
  • External demand (global commodity prices, demand from Asia/Middle East/EU)
  • Inflation and exchange rates

Data Inputs / Assumptions (2025 base + forecast drivers)

From recent sources:

  • Tanzania GDP growth ~ 5.4‑6.0 % in 2024/2025. TanzaniaInvest+2TanzaniaInvest+2
  • Horticultural exports in 2024 ~ USD 418 million, with a target of USD 2 billion by 2030 for horticulture sector under Agenda 10/30. FreshPlaza
  • Grain & feed: wheat imports projected to rise ~15.4 % in 2025/26 due to low corn supply and rising incomes. FAS

We will assume the base (2025) values:

  • Agricultural & food imports = USD X_imp_2025 (let’s assume USD 2 billion for baseline for those goods),
  • Agro‑processed & agricultural exports = USD X_exp_2025 (assume USD 2.5 billion in 2025),

These are placeholders; we’ll scale relative growth, not absolute.

Other assumptions:

  • Inflation averaged ~3‑5 % per year; we’ll operate in real USD terms (i.e. remove inflation effect).
  • Population growth & urbanization continuous; real income per capita growth ~3‑4 % per year.
  • Domestic agricultural productivity growth ~2‑4 % per year, depending on investment.
  • Trade policy & infrastructure improvements (cold chain, SPS etc) will reduce non‑tariff barriers, improving export growth.

Scenarios & Growth Rates

ScenarioImport Growth Rate (Annual CAGR)Export Growth Rate (Annual CAGR)
Pessimistic3 %5 %
Baseline5 %8 %
Optimistic7 %12 %
  • Import growth depends largely on income, consumption changes, and filling gaps not met by local production.
  • Export growth higher in optimistic scenario if agro‑processing, market access, certifications, and external demand improve strongly.

Projection Tables: 2025 → 2035

Assuming:

  • Import base (2025): USD 2.0 billion
  • Export base (2025): USD 2.5 billion

Then project forward.

YearImports (Pessimistic)Exports (Pessimistic)Imports (Baseline)Exports (Baseline)Imports (Optimistic)Exports (Optimistic)
20252.00 B2.50 B2.00 B2.50 B2.00 B2.50 B
20262.062.632.102.702.142.80
20272.122.762.212.922.293.13
20282.182.902.323.152.453.51
20292.253.042.443.402.633.94
20302.323.192.563.672.814.41
20312.393.342.693.953.014.95
20322.473.512.834.263.225.56
20332.553.682.974.593.456.25
20342.633.863.124.953.707.03
20352.714.053.275.353.967.89

(All in USD billions, real terms; numbers rounded.)


Interpretation

  • Under the Baseline scenario, by 2035 imports of agricultural & food goods grow from USD 2.0B → ~USD 3.27B; exports from USD 2.5B → ~USD 5.35B. Export growth outpaces import growth, narrowing the import/export gap.
  • Under the Optimistic scenario, big gains: exports ~USD 7.9B by 2035; imports ~USD 3.96B. Exports are more than double imports in value.
  • Under Pessimistic, slow progress: exports (~USD 4.05B) only modestly above imports (~USD 2.71B).

Sensitivity & Key Variables

A few “what ifs”:

  • If global commodity prices rise sharply, exports could overshoot forecasts.
  • If climate shocks (droughts, pests) reduce agricultural output, both domestic supply and export growth suffer.
  • If non‑tariff barriers (NTBs), SPS compliance, logistics costs remain poor, export growth slows.
  • If infrastructure investments (cold chain, storage, ports, rail) accelerate, export growth shifts toward optimistic.

Example: Horticulture Sub‑sector

Given the horticulture export target: USD 2 billion by 2030 from ~USD 418 million in 2024. That is a CAGR of: CAGR=(2.00.418)1/6−1≈(4.7856)0.1667−1≈28.8%/year\text{CAGR} = \left(\frac{2.0}{0.418}\right)^{1/6} – 1 ≈ (4.7856)^{0.1667} -1 ≈ 28.8\%/yearCAGR=(0.4182.0​)1/6−1≈(4.7856)0.1667−1≈28.8%/year

So horticulture is expected to grow ~25‑30 % per annum under Government target up to 2030.

If that kind of growth rate is partly replicable in other high‑potential sub‑sectors (nuts, spices, value‑added products), then the “baseline” 8‑12 % export aggregate CAGR might actually be conservative for certain categories.


Suggested Forecast Graph / Visualization

  • Line graphs showing imports vs exports under different scenarios
  • Export:Import ratio over time
  • Sub‑sector breakout (horticulture, value‑added, raw)

Final Thoughts

Tanzania stands at a strategic inflection point in its trade journey. The shift from being primarily an exporter of raw commodities to a hub for value-added, sustainable agri-food exports is underway—but it requires sustained investment in infrastructure, standards, and market intelligence.

If you’re exploring business, investment, or development opportunities, focus areas include:

  • Agro-processing (especially edible oils, cashews, fruits)
  • Cold chain logistics and food storage
  • Export compliance and certification services
  • Digital traceability and e-commerce platforms
  • Green and climate-smart farming value chains