Tanzania Export Increase by 8.7% in Year Ending March 2016

tanzania export march 2016

The Bank of Tanzania (BOT) Monthly Economic Review–April 2016 recently published shows that the value of export of goods and services in the year ending March 2016 increased by +8.7%.

Overall exports reached USD9,879.1m, compared with USD9090.3m in the year ending March 2015.

The improvement was mainly driven by an increase in travel (tourism) receipts, gold and manufactured goods.

TANZANIA BUSINESS & INVESTMENT GUIDE 2026

Travel maintained the leading position among foreign currency earners, before manufactured goods, gold and traditional exports, with USD2,289.6m worth of exports in the year ending March 2016, showing a year-on-year increase of +8.1%.

Gold exports increased by +4.3% to USD1,320.2m as a result of increase in export volume.

Foreign exchange earnings from manufactured goods increased by 3% to USD1,408.2m in the year ending March 2016, with a notable improvement recorded in sisal products, textile apparels, and plastic goods.

Among Tanzania’s traditional exports, increases were seen in coffee (USD150.6m, +4.9%), tea (USD47.2m, +11.6%), cloves (USD44.4m,  +39.6%) and sisal (USD29.3m, +65.5%).

There was also a notable rise in export value of oil seeds, raw hides and skins, cocoa, cereals, and re-exports of machinery, vehicles, wheat and tyres.

Commodities Prices

In March 2016, prices of coffee, gold and crude oil went up, thanks to higher global demand, reaching USD1.67 per kg of Robusta coffee and USD3.47 of Arabica, USD37.34 per barrel of crude oil, and USD1,245.14 per troy ounce of gold.

The price of crude oil rose mainly due to expected decrease in oil supply following the agreement by Saudi Arabia and Russia to freeze production.

The price of gold rose together with the investors’ increasing demand for this metal seen as safe haven under volatile global equity markets.

Related Posts
Tanzania Quarterly GDP Growth 2021-2025
Read More

Tanzania Economic Performance in 2025 Records 6.4% GDP Growth in Q3, 3.6% Inflation, 23.5% Credit Growth, 37.4% Gold Export Rise, and 2.29 Million Tourists

Tanzania’s economic performance in 2025 recorded real GDP growth of 6.4% in Q3, stable inflation at 3.6%, and strong private sector credit expansion of 23.5%, while lending rates moderated to 15.24%. Exports of goods and services rose by 10.2%, led by gold exports increasing 37.4% to about USD 4.7 billion, while international tourist arrivals reached 2.29 million.
AFRICA EAST TANZANIA REAL GDP GROWTH RATE 2025-2026-2027 UNCTAD
Read More

UNCTAD Forecasts 5.8% GDP Growth for Tanzania in 2026 as Inflation Declines to 2.8% Despite Global Slowdown

UNCTAD’s World Economic Situation and Prospects 2026 projects GDP growth at 5.8% in 2026 and 5.3% in 2027, supported by robust domestic demand, improved macroeconomic stability, IMF-backed reforms, strong agricultural output, and favourable gold prices, while inflation is projected to decline to 2.8%. This contrasts with a global growth outlook of 2.7% in 2026 amid trade tensions, fiscal pressures, and subdued investment.