For years, one of the biggest challenges facing African economies has not been a lack of investment opportunities, but a lack of mechanisms to channel capital into them at scale. While development finance institutions, impact investors, and international lenders have committed billions of dollars to the continent, many businesses continue to struggle to access affordable financing.
A growing consensus among financial leaders suggests that local banks may hold the key to solving this problem.
Speaking during discussions at the Tanzania Investment Summit 2026 in Arusha, policymakers, financiers, and development partners highlighted the increasingly important role domestic financial institutions are playing in blended finance structures. The message was clear: local banks are no longer just intermediaries—they are becoming central players in mobilizing investment capital across Africa.
Blended finance combines concessional funding, guarantees, grants, and commercial capital to reduce investment risks and attract private-sector participation. Historically, many of these structures were driven primarily by international institutions. Today, however, domestic banks are emerging as critical partners capable of identifying opportunities, assessing local risks, and deploying capital where it can generate the greatest economic impact.
According to representatives from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), blended finance should not be viewed merely as a financing tool but as a mechanism for building sustainable markets. By absorbing part of the investment risk through guarantees and concessional capital, development institutions can encourage commercial lenders to finance sectors that traditionally struggle to attract funding, including agriculture, renewable energy, infrastructure, manufacturing, and small and medium-sized enterprises.
For Tanzania, this shift presents a significant opportunity.
The country’s banking sector has undergone considerable transformation over the past decade, with stronger capitalization, improved regulation, and expanding financial inclusion. As Tanzania pursues ambitious economic growth targets and seeks to accelerate industrialization, local financial institutions are increasingly positioned to support investments that align with national development priorities.
One example frequently cited is the use of guarantee schemes to unlock financing for businesses lacking conventional collateral. Through partnerships involving institutions such as PASS Trust, commercial banks have been able to extend credit to smallholder farmers, agribusinesses, and entrepreneurs who might otherwise remain excluded from formal financing channels.
The implications extend beyond agriculture.
Tanzania’s expanding infrastructure pipeline, growing energy sector, and emerging manufacturing industries require substantial long-term investment. While international investors remain important sources of capital, local banks possess an advantage that external financiers often lack: deep knowledge of domestic markets, regulatory environments, and borrower behavior.
This local expertise can significantly improve capital allocation decisions and reduce information gaps that often discourage investment.
Recent discussions across Africa have also highlighted the growing popularity of fund-of-funds structures and on-lending platforms that channel development finance through domestic institutions. Such arrangements enable international capital providers to leverage local banking networks while improving access to financing for businesses operating far from major financial centres.
The evolution of these financing models comes at a critical time. Africa faces an estimated multi-billion-dollar annual financing gap across infrastructure, climate adaptation, food systems, and industrial development. Bridging this gap will require more than public funding alone. It will require stronger partnerships between development institutions, private investors, and domestic financial systems.
For Tanzania, the opportunity is particularly compelling. The country combines political stability, sustained economic growth, abundant natural resources, and a strategic geographic position within East Africa. As blended finance mechanisms continue to mature, Tanzanian banks could become increasingly influential in directing capital toward sectors capable of generating employment, exports, and long-term economic value.
The success of this approach will depend on continued innovation, stronger risk-sharing mechanisms, and policies that encourage collaboration between public and private actors. If these elements come together, local banks could become one of the most important catalysts for investment-led growth not only in Tanzania but across the African continent.
Message for Investors
Investors seeking exposure to Tanzania’s growth story should pay close attention to the country’s financial institutions. As blended finance gains momentum, banks are becoming more than lenders—they are evolving into strategic gateways for investment opportunities. Those institutions that successfully combine local market expertise with international capital partnerships are likely to play a defining role in financing Tanzania’s next phase of economic development.


































