A new Afrobarometer Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Scorecard shows Tanzania is making progress on reducing poverty and hunger and ensuring access to medical care, clean water, and electricity.
The Afrobarometer SDG Scorecard, which provides citizens’ assessments of Tanzania’s progress over a recent five-year period on important aspects of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, reveals that the country is also doing better on several other indicators, including reducing economic and ethnic inequalities. Trust in the police, judiciary, and Parliament has increased, while perceived corruption among these institutions has declined.
But the country is slipping on climate action, unemployment has worsened, and the gender gap in unemployment has remained unchanged. Tanzania has also made no progress on increasing access to education, ensuring gender equality, and reducing payment of bribes for public services.
The newly developed Afrobarometer SDG Scorecards highlight citizens’ experiences and evaluations of their country’s performance on democracy and governance, poverty, health, education, energy supply, water and sanitation, inequality, gender equity, and other priorities reflected in 12 of the 17 SDGs. These citizen assessments can be compared to official UN tracking indicators. They present both summary assessments for each SDG – via blue, green, yellow, and red “stoplights” – as well as the data behind these assessments.
Afrobarometer, an independent pan-African survey research network, released scorecards for Tanzania and five other countries as part of a series of regional webinars focusing on progress toward the SDGs in Africa.
Speaking at the webinar, Abel Oyuke, Afrobarometer project manager for East Africa, said the Afrobarometer SDG Scorecards provide an additional perspective – one that is usually missing from other sources – that can be compared and contrasted with other indicators and thus enrich the discussion, help identify gaps, and support action to move forward in each country.
“Afrobarometer data relevant to the SDGs are especially valuable because of the frequency of collection (in survey rounds every two to three years) and the independence, quality, and reliability of the data. They can offer an independent check, from a grassroots perspective, on the data points reported by government statistics offices and other sources,” he said.
Afrobarometer SDG Scorecards for 31 countries are being released in May-August 2021. All scorecards can be accessed on the Afrobarometer website’s SDG Scorecards page.