Democracy Vista
Official national flag of Tanzania. Democracy Vista assessment territory.
Official Territory

Tanzania

United Republic of Tanzania

Pop: 68,153,004
Zone: Africa
DEMOVISTA PROPRIETARY // 2026

Liberty
Analysis

A weighted composite metric synthesizing global data on democracy, human rights, economic freedom, and societal development.

5.7INDEX / 10.0
Hybrid Regime

Supporting
Indices

6.6
SCORE / 10

Democracy Quality

Comprehensive analysis of democratic institutional quality

Emerging Democracy
6.1
SCORE / 10

Economic Freedom

Degree to which policies and institutions support economic liberty

Emerging Democracy
6.6
SCORE / 10

Human Freedom

A comprehensive measure of personal, civil, and economic freedom

Emerging Democracy
6.3
SCORE / 10

Economic Policy

Analysis of rule of law, government size, and regulatory efficiency

Emerging Democracy
5.7
SCORE / 10

Liberal Democracy

Accountability to citizens through elections and individual rights protection

Hybrid Regime

Structural
Categories

#94
🗣️

Freedom of Speech

5.5

Moderate constraints; expression permitted but with some friction.

Status
#94/ 184
#88
📜

Rule of Law

5.8

Functional legal systems with occasional inconsistency.

Status
#88/ 184
#96
👩

Women's Freedom

5.8

Moderate protections with recognized gaps in enforcement.

Status
#96/ 184
#88
👥

Minorities Freedom

6.1

Moderate minority protections with localized discrimination risks.

Status
#88/ 184
#77
🛡️

Crime & Safety

7.3

Low violent crime rates and robust personal security infrastructure.

Status
#77/ 184
#95
🗽

Individual Liberties

5.4

Generally respected personal freedoms with minor restrictions.

Status
#95/ 184
#96
🗳️

Democratic Health

4.0

Severe democratic deficits or authoritarian structures.

Status
#96/ 184
#53
🏛️

Institutional Integrity

6.5

Moderate systemic corruption or institutional friction.

Status
#53/ 184
#79
⚖️

Civil Justice

7.0

Functioning courts with vulnerability to external influence.

Status
#79/ 184
#93
📈

Economic Vigor

6.5

Developing market with average structural freedom.

Status
#93/ 184
#79
🏦

Macroeconomic Stability

7.4

Reliable local currency strongly protected from inflation.

Status
#79/ 184
#135
🌐

Market Openness

4.9

Moderate hurdles in international trade and finance.

Status
#135/ 184
#110
📋

Regulatory Environment

5.2

Bureaucratic friction impedes rapid business operations.

Status
#110/ 184
#115
🌟

Quality of Life

5.8

Moderate welfare capacity; localized safety risks exist.

Status
#115/ 184
#86
🌈

Social Tolerance

5.1

Inconsistent execution of equal rights distributions.

Status
#86/ 184
#91
📰

Expression and Information

4.9

Partial constraints on expression or media environments.

Status
#91/ 184
#95
🤝

Civil Society

5.4

Regulated but functional civil assembly permissions.

Status
#95/ 184

Metadata &
Technical Details

Basic Information

Capital

Dodoma

Region

Africa

Subregion

Eastern Africa

Landlocked

No

Culture & Language

Languages

English, Swahili

Currencies

Tanzanian shilling (Sh)

Technical Details

Country Codes

TZTZA

Neighboring Countries

BDI, COD, KEN, MWI, MOZ, RWA...

Geographic
Hub

Initializing Projections...
Geospatial Context
Coordinates-6.00°N, 35.00°E
ProjectionEquirectangular

National
Insights

Background

Tanzania contains some of Africa’s most iconic national parks and famous paleoanthropological sites, and its diverse cultural heritage reflects the multiple ethnolinguistic groups that live in the country. Its long history of integration into trade networks spanning the Indian Ocean and the African interior led to the development of Swahili as a common language in much of east Africa and the introduction of Islam into the region. A number of independent coastal and island trading posts in what is now Tanzania came under Portuguese control after 1498 when they began to take control of much of the coast and Indian Ocean trade. By 1700, the Sultanate of Oman had become the dominant power in the region after ousting the Portuguese, who were also facing a series of local uprisings. During the next hundred years, Zanzibar -- an archipelago off the coast that is now part of Tanzania -- became a hub of Indian Ocean trade, with Arab and Indian traders establishing and consolidating trade routes with communities in mainland Tanzania that contributed to the expansion of the slave trade. Zanzibar briefly became the capital of the Sultanate of Oman before it split into separate Omani and Zanzibar Sultanates in 1856. Beginning in the mid-1800s, European explorers, traders, and Christian missionaries became more active in the region. The Germans eventually established control over mainland Tanzania -- which they called Tanganyika -- and the British established control over Zanzibar. Tanganyika came under British administration after the German defeat in World War I.

Tanganyika gained independence from Great Britain in 1961, and Zanzibar followed in 1963 as a constitutional monarchy. In Tanganyika, Julius NYERERE, a charismatic and idealistic socialist, established a one-party political system that centralized power and encouraged national self-reliance and rural development. In 1964, a popular uprising overthrew the Sultan in Zanzibar and either killed or expelled many of the Arabs and Indians who had dominated the isles for more than 200 years. Later that year, Tanganyika and Zanzibar combined to form the United Republic of Tanzania, but Zanzibar retained considerable autonomy. Their two ruling parties combined to form the Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party in 1977, which has since won every presidential election. Tanzania held its first multi-party elections in 1995, but CCM candidates have continued to dominate politics. The ruling party has claimed victory in four contentious elections since 1995, despite international observers' claims of voting irregularities. In 2001, 35 people died in Zanzibar when soldiers fired on protestors. John MAGUFULI won the 2015 and 2020 presidential elections, and the CCM won over two-thirds of the seats in Parliament in both elections. MAGUFULI died in 2021 while in office and was succeeded by his vice president, Samia Suluhu HASSAN.