Tanzania Exports Up by 14.7% in The Year Ending February 2024, Tourism Receipts Up by 28.5%

TANZANIA ECONOMIC UPDATE FEBRUARY 2024

The Bank of Tanzania (BOT) released its Monthly Economic Review-March 2024 which covers key macroeconomic indicators for the year ending February 2024.

External Sector Performance

The external sector has shown signs of improvement, with imports declining, exports increasing, and global commodity prices moderating, albeit remaining above the levels before the breakout of the Russia-Ukraine war.

As a result, the current account deficit narrowed to USD 2,701.4 million in the year ending February 2024, compared with a deficit of USD 5,133.6 million in the corresponding period in 2023.

Foreign Exchange Reserves

On foreign exchange reserves, the stock increased to USD 4,971.5 million at the end of February 2024 from USD 4,577.1 million that was recorded at the end of February 2023.

Foreign reserves were sufficient to cover 4.1 months of projected import of goods and services.

Exports

In the year ending February 2024, exports of goods and services rose by 14.7%, reaching USD 14,274 million compared with the level recorded in the corresponding period in 2023.

The main drivers included tourism receipts, traditional goods and minerals, specifically gold.

Non-traditional Goods and Mineral Exports

Exports of non-traditional goods rose by 2.4% to USD 6,343.1 million, with the increase noticeable in gold, horticultural products, and oil seeds.

The export of gold amounted to USD 3,108.8 million, compared with USD 2,872.6 million in the previous period, and accounted for 49% of non-traditional exports.

Exports of horticultural products edged up by 46.5% to USD 425.4 million, driven by an increase in exports of edible vegetables.

Traditional Exports

Traditional goods exports amounted to USD 1,022.7 million, from USD 748.7 million in the previous year, with much of the increase observed in exports of tobacco and coffee on account of volume and price effects.

Service and Tourism Receipts

Service receipts surged to USD 6,482.5 million in the year to February 2024 from USD 5,094 million in the previous year, largely driven by travel (tourism) and transportation receipts.

On a monthly basis, service receipts amounted to USD 598.2 million in February 2024, compared with USD 493.3 million in February 2023.

The surge in travel receipts reflects the rebound of the tourism sector, as tourist arrivals rose by 21.4% to 1,881,823 from 1,550,333.

Tourism receipts reached USD 3,510.1 million in the year ending February 2024, compared with USD 2,730.9 million in the year ending February 2023.

Want to know more about Trade in Tanzania? Our free Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers Trade, plus regulations, key sectors, and investment opportunities — all in one place.

Download Free Guide
Related Posts
TANZANIA ECONOMIC UPDATE YE FEBRUARY 2026
Read More

Tanzania Monthly Economic Review February 2026: Exports Up 12.4% Driven by Gold and Manufactured Goods

Tanzania’s economy remained broadly stable in the year ending February 2026, with headline inflation steady at 3.2%, private sector credit expanding by 24.4%, and gold exports surging 35.8% to USD 4,968.4 million. Total exports of goods and services increased by 12.4% to USD 18,393.2 million, underpinned by strong performances in mining, tourism, with 2,255,006 arrivals, and manufactured goods, signalling a shift toward value-added production.
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.