VICTOR KGOMOESWANA, AUTHOR & DIRECTOR OF AFRICA IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS

Loading player...
Tanzania’s economic growth slowed to 6.6% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2019 from 7.5% in the same period a year earlier, official data showed on Sunday, weighed down by softer construction, agriculture and manufacturing activity.
A leaked report from the International Monetary Fund said earlier this year that Tanzania’s economy has not been expanding as fast as official figures suggest. It said lower growth was partly due to President John Magufuli’s “unpredictable and interventionist” policies.
In the first quarter, construction, the biggest driver of GDP, grew 13.2%, compared with 15.6% a year ago, the state-run National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
However, growth in the mining sector, which has been the target of repeated government interventions, rebounded to 10.0% from a 5.7% decline during the same period in 2018. Tanzania is Africa’s fourth-largest gold producer.
29 Jul 2019 12PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

FDI at a Turning Point: What Global Investors Expect in 2026

Kearney’s Global Business Policy Council unveils the 2026 FDI Confidence Index®, revealing the top global and emerging markets expected to attract investment over the next three years. Africa Managing Partner Theo Sibiya breaks down the trends shaping investor sentiment
9 Apr 4PM 13 min

Inside Your Pocket: Why SA’s Cost of Living Keeps Climbing

Electricity inflation has surged 85% since 2020, water is up 68%, and low‑income households now spend nearly 67% of their income on food and utilities. Senior economist Raksha Darji unpacks the Competition Commission’s March 2026 Cost of Living Report — revealing structural failures, pricing behaviour, and what must change to…
9 Apr 4PM 13 min