DAR ES SALAAM. Tanzania is positioning itself at the centre of a new regional digital investment drive following the East African Community’s decision to establish a multi‑country Artificial Intelligence (AI) fund. The initiative aims to accelerate innovation across fintech, agriculture, and healthcare, sectors already central to Tanzania’s economy.
From Vision to Investment
Momentum for the fund grew at the 4th EAC Regional Science, Technology and Innovation Conference in Kigali (March 4-6, 2026), where member states agreed to move beyond policy coordination toward investment mobilisation.
This builds on the Global AI Summit on Africa held in Kigali in April 2025, which framed AI as a strategic pillar for long‑term growth. Together, these milestones mark a clear progression:
- April 2025: Continental vision‑setting (Global AI Summit)
- March 2026: Regional policy alignment (EAC STI Conference)
- 2026 onward: Transition to deployable investment vehicles (AI Fund)
For investors, the timeline signals a shift from concept‑stage dialogue to structured capital deployment.
Tanzania’s Role in the Digital Economy
Tanzania has emerged as a strong advocate, framing AI as a lever for productivity, service delivery, and competitiveness. At the Kigali forum, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and East African Cooperation Hon. Mahmoud Thabit Kombo, stressed that AI can “improve efficiency, enhance public service delivery, and strengthen economic competitiveness.”
The initiative aligns with Vision 2050, where digital transformation is seen as a cross‑sector enabler rather than a standalone industry.
Regional Scale and AI Sovereignty
A defining feature of the fund is its emphasis on regional coordination and AI sovereignty; systems trained on African data, operating in local languages such as Kiswahili, and supported by domestic infrastructure.
Regional policymakers, including Sylvance Okoth, highlighted that pooled investments will “reduce duplication and enable the region to compete more effectively,” underscoring the economic logic of shared resources.
Targeted High‑Growth Sectors
The AI fund will prioritise sectors with immediate scalability:
- Fintech: AI‑driven credit scoring and financial inclusion platforms
- Agriculture: Precision farming, climate analytics, yield optimisation
- Healthcare: Diagnostics, telemedicine, and digital health systems
At a continental level, AI is projected to contribute up to $1 trillion to Africa’s GDP by 2035, highlighting the scale of opportunity.
Investor Lens: Frontier Opportunity
For investors, the fund represents an early‑stage but high‑upside frontier:
- Opportunities: Entry into a fast‑scaling digital economy, access to cross‑border ecosystems, exposure to sectors with structural demand.
- Structural Advantages: Large youthful population, rising mobile penetration, regional policy alignment.
- Risks: Execution complexity across jurisdictions, infrastructure gaps, and skills shortages in advanced technologies.
Growth Prospects
The creation of a regional AI fund signals East Africa’s move from experimentation to institutionalised digital investment frameworks.
For Tanzania, participation offers a pathway to leapfrog traditional development constraints provided infrastructure, skills, and regulation evolve alongside innovation.
For investors, the message is clear: East Africa’s AI economy is entering an investable phase, with Tanzania positioned as a key node in that transition.

































