Tanzania Exports Improve in June 2020, Tourism Suffering

Tanzania exports june 2020

The Bank of Tanzania (BOT) Monthly Economic Review of July 2020 shows that in the year ending June 2020 exports continued to improve as many economies were re-opened from the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown.

Exports of goods and services amounted to USD 9,773.6 million in the year ending June 2020 compared with USD 8,716.1 million in the year ending June 2019.

Exports of goods rose to USD 6,160.4 million from USD 4,598.8 million and accounted for 63.0% of total exports from 52.7%.

In June 2020, the value of exports of goods and services amounted to USD 548.2 million, lower compared with USD 757.6 million in June 2019.

The decline occurred in service receipts, which mainly comprises receipts from tourism. Foreign exchange earnings from tourism decreased due to travel restrictions and lockdown in source countries.

Traditional Exports

Traditional exports nearly doubled to USD 1,020.9 million in the year ending June 2020 from USD 518.0 million in the corresponding period in 2019, and accounted for 16.6% of exports of goods and 10.4% of exports of goods and services.

The increase was manifested in exports of cashew nuts, cotton, cloves and sisal exports. Cashew nuts and sisal exports rose on account ofnincrease in both volume and prices.

Exports of cotton and cloves rose due to the increase in volume as a result of high production. On month to month, the value of traditional good exports declined to USD 15.6 million in June 2020 from USD 18.3 million in the corresponding month in 2019.

Non-Traditional Exports

Non-traditional exports improved to USD 4,579.4 million in the year ending June 2020 compared with USD 3,662.7 million in the corresponding period in 2019.

The export value was 46.8% of export of goods and services and 74.3% of exports of goods. Much of the increase was driven by the export of gold and horticultural products.

Gold Exports

Export of gold increased by 48.5% to USD 2,591.3 million in the year ending June 2020, and accounted for 56.6% of value of nontraditional exports and 42.1% of total exports of goods.

The increase was largely on account of price effect. The price of gold in the world market rose from USD 1,263.8 per troy ounce in June 2019 to USD 1,562.5 per troy ounce in June 2020, driven by rising preference of investors over gold as alternative financial assets in the wake of COVID-19.

On month-to-month, the export of gold amounted to USD 247.8 million in June 2020 compared with USD 178.5 million in the corresponding month in 2019. The increase was mostly due to price effects.

Service Receipts

Service receipts amounted to USD 3,613.2 million in the year ending June 2020, lower than USD 4,117.3 million in June 2019.

Travel Receipts

Travel receipts, which mainly comprise receipts from tourism, declined by 15.2% to USD 2,126.1 million following a decrease in number of tourist arrivals due to COVID-19 pandemic.

In June 2020, travel receipts dropped to USD 16.4 million compared with USD 209.0 million in June 2019. This was due to measures adopted by many countries to limit the spread of COVID-19, which included suspension of international flights and lockdowns.

Despite the low performance, the share of travel receipts in earnings from services remain dominant, accounting for 58.9%.

Related Posts
East Africa Nordic Investment Summit Tanzania
Read More

Dar Es Salaam Hosted East Africa Nordic Investment Summit To Advance Digital Transformation And SEZ Investments

Dar es Salaam hosted the East Africa Nordic Investment Summit on 25–26 February 2026, bringing together government leaders, Nordic partners, investors and entrepreneurs to align digital systems, capital structuring and policy frameworks. The summit focused on digital transformation, Special Economic Zones incentives and the launch of the Tanzania Youth Agri-Export Hub targeting exports to the UK market.
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.