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Sub-Saharan Africa
After 30 years of one-party rule, Tanzania held its first free elections in 1995. The country has since been making the transition from a centralist, state-run economy to a liberal, free-market economy and pluralistic multi-party democracy.
Today, Tanzania is one of the most politically stable countries in sub-Saharan Africa. In a highly conflict-prone region (Congo, Burundi, Rwanda), Tanzania is an anchor for stability. The government has launched a comprehensive reform agenda, which has enabled it to achieve steady economic growth over recent years. The global economic and financial crisis has slowed Tanzania's development, however. Furthermore, the pace of reform in Tanzania has not been sufficient to combat poverty effectively across the board. On the 2009 Human Development Index (HDI), Tanzania is ranked 151st out of 182 states. The vast majority of the population depends on subsistence agriculture for their living.
Relations between Tanzania and Germany
Tanzania and Germany are bound by a brief and, in some ways, painful colonial history. From 1891 to 1918, large sections of the country belonged to German East Africa, a crown colony of the German Empire. The two countries now enjoy positive and friendly relations. For example, numerous partnerships exist between schools and churches in the two countries.
Development cooperation
In 2005, Tanzania drafted a five-year poverty reduction strategy (PRSP), which is due to be updated in 2010. The strategy concentrates on economic growth and overcoming income poverty, raising quality of life and improving governance and accountability. In response to the PRSP, the Tanzanian government and the donor community adopted the Joint Assistance Strategy in 2006 to better align donor inputs with national reform needs and improve the division of labour within the donor community.
Tanzanian-German development cooperation is aligned with this national strategy. It concentrates particularly on the areas of water supply and sanitation, health care – including HIV/AIDS prevention – and support for decentralisation and local government.
To add value to the priorities, Germany provides budget support for Tanzania's poverty reduction strategy. Using the instrument of budget support, the donor community's intention is to promote Tanzanian ownership of poverty reduction efforts. The clear progress made on democracy and transparency justifies this form of assistance. One good example of this is the Tanzanian government's exposing of several major corruption incidents since autumn 2007, which has been exemplary within the African context, and the self-critical and systematic approach it has adopted to date in following these cases through.
German Embassy

German Embassy in Tanzania
Umoja House
Garden Avenue / Mirambo Street
Dar es Salaam
Tanzania
Phone: +255 / 22 / 211 74 09
Fax: +255 / 22 / 211 29 44






