THE government has presented its 32.5trn/- National Development Plan and Budget ceiling for the 2018/19 fiscal year, earnestly setting in motion, the drive towards transforming Tanzania into an industrial economic powerhouse.
The new budget outlook tabled in the
National Assembly yesterday by the Finance and Planning Minister, Dr
Phillip Mpango, indicates a slight increment of about 0.9trn/- over the
current 31.6trn/- financial plan.
Members of Parliament are expected to
deliberate on the new National Development Plan and the fiscal budget
for five days, according to a schedule released by the National
Assembly. Dr Mpango forecasts that 68 per cent of revenue collection
(about 22.1trn/-), will be generated from local (domestic) sources with
tax paying the lion’s share of 18.8trn/-.
“Non tax revenue is projected to be
2.4trn/-. Revenues from Local Government Authorities’ own sources is
estimated at 847.7bn/-,” Dr Mpango said in the august House.
The minister also said that the
government was expected to borrow 1.4trn/- from international commercial
loan sources,and borrow 4.0trn/- from domestic sources that would
finance treasury bills and bonds.
“The government will borrow 1.3trn/-,
equivalent to 1 per cent of GDP, as a new loan to finance development
projects,” he said. The government pointed out that the new plan and
fiscal budget were in line with the five-year development plan ending
2020/21.
It said under the fiscal year 2018/19,
the plan would be to propel economic growth at an annual average of 7.1
per cent up from the initial projections of 7.0 per cent in 2017. In a
bid to maintain an inclusive growth, the government will strive to
regulate the inflation rate from 5.3 per cent recorded in June 2017 to
5.0 per cent in June next year.
The minister further explained that tax
revenue would remain the same at 14.2 per cent of the Gross Domestic
Product (GDP). But, he said government spending would be halved by
nearly 2 per cent to 24.5 per cent of the GDP in the next FY from 26.2
per cent of the current fiscal plan.
At least four key priorities were
outlined in the new plan, including industrial development, human skills
development, improving the business environment and strengthening
execution of the plan.
Implementation of the Liquefied Natural
Gas (LNG) plant, Mchuchuma and Liganga projects, as well as Mkulazi
sugar plantation and factory topped the list of highly-prioritised
projects.
Under its plan, the government
emphasised plans to construct the Stiegler’s Gorge dam project, the
standard gauge railway and enhance the national air Carrier -- Air
Tanzania Company Limited -- to accommodate business developments.
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