Capex Scale- Up | States Get 41% Tax Devolution | Customs Procidures To Get Simpler | FM A Mixed Bag Markets| Banking Sector Set For Sea Change | Tax Holiday Boosts Data Centres | Textiles, MSMEs Get New Schemes | 10,000- Crore Dosage For Biopharma| Budget 2026: Turning Point | Budget 2026 Bets On Industry | Credible, Creditable | Budget Guides India Growth Path | Finance Minister Bypasses Large Farm Sector| Budget Look Ahead, Ducks Reforms Reforms Skipped
CAPEX SCALE- UP
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context Of the News
- Union Budget 2026–27 presented by Nirmala Sitharaman amid global economic uncertainty.
- Focus on productivity-led growth, employment generation, and global integration.
- Ninth consecutive Budget by the same Finance Minister.
- No major changes in direct tax rates for individuals or corporates.
Key Points
- Capital Expenditure:
- ₹12.2 lakh crore for 2026–27 (RE 2025–26: ₹10.9 lakh crore).
- Reinforces capex-led growth strategy.
- Exports & Trade:
- Customs duty reductions for marine, leather, and textile sectors.
- Objective: enhance export competitiveness and GVC integration.
- Infrastructure & Logistics:
- Integrated East Coast Industrial Corridor.
- Dedicated Freight Corridor: Dankuni (WB)– Surat (GJ).
- First new National Waterway in Odisha connecting mineral and port regions.
- Strategic Minerals:
- Rare earth corridors in Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu.
- Three Kartavyas:
- Economic growth and competitiveness.
- Capacity building and skill development.
- Inclusive access to resources and opportunities.
- Sectoral Focus:
- Manufacturing (strategic/frontier sectors). MSMEs (champion MSMEs).
- Services skilling: healthcare, medical tourism, AVGC, design.
- Social Inclusion:
- Farmer income through productivity and entrepreneurship.
- Livelihood, assistive devices, mental health access for divyang and vulnerable groups.
Static Linkages
- Public capital expenditure multiplier (Economic Survey).
- National Industrial Corridor Development Programme.
- National Waterways Act, 2016.
- Critical Minerals strategy (energy transition, strategic autonomy).
- Inclusive growth and DPSPs (Articles 38, 39).
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Sustains growth amid weak global demand.
- Improves logistics efficiency and export competitiveness.
- Strategic focus on rare earths enhances supply security.
- Concerns
- Limited boost to consumption demand due to no tax relief.
- Execution and environmental challenges in mining and corridors.
- MSME credit and technology gaps remain.
Way Forward
- Strengthen Centre–State coordination in infrastructure projects.
- Complement capex with demand-support measures if required.
- Accelerate MSME finance and technology adoption.
- Ensure environmental safeguards in mineral- rich regions.
STATES GET 41%TAX DEVOLUTION
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context
- 16th Finance Commission report submitted to the President on 17 November 2025 and tabled in Parliament with Union Budget 2026–27.
- Centre accepted the recommendation to retain 41% vertical devolution of divisible pool taxes to States.
- ₹1.4 lakh crore provided as Finance Commission Grants for FY 2026–27 (Local Bodies + Disaster Management).
- Horizontal devolution formula revised, increasing shares of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka.
Key Points
- Vertical Devolution:
- States’ share in divisible pool: 41% (unchanged since 15th FC).
- Divisible Pool Concern:
- Share of divisible pool reduced from 89.1% (2014–15) to 74–80% (2020–24) due to cesses and surcharges.
- Horizontal Devolution Criteria (16th FC):
- Per capita GSDP distance: 42.5% (↓ from 45%)
- Population: 17.5% (↑ from 15%)
- Demographic performance: 10% (↓ from 12.5%)
- Area: 10% (↓ from 15%)
- Forest cover: 10% (unchanged)
- Revised State Shares (examples):
- Andhra Pradesh: 4.217%
- Karnataka: 4.131%
- Tamil Nadu: 4.097%
- Kerala: 2.382%
- Telangana: 2.174%
Static Linkages
- Finance Commission: Article 280, Constitution of India.
- Divisible pool of taxes: Article 270.
- Cesses and surcharges: Article 271 (not shareable with States).
- Fiscal federalism objectives: vertical and horizontal balance.
- Equalisation principle in public finance (Economic Survey, NCERT Macroeconomics).
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Maintains stability in Centre–State fiscal relations.
- Higher weight to income distance strengthens inter-State equity.
- Forest cover criterion supports environmental conservation.
- Addresses concerns of southern States regarding fiscal imbalance.
- Concerns
- Excessive use of cesses and surcharges weakens fiscal federalism.
- Reduced weight to demographic performance may dilute population control incentives.
- States’ fiscal dependence on Centre continues.
- Local bodies remain financially constrained.
Way Forward
- Rationalise cesses and surcharges to expand divisible pool.
- Strengthen States’ own tax capacity.
- Enhance transparency and predictability in transfers.
- Provide greater flexibility in utilisation of grants.
- Link future devolution to outcome-based performance indicators.
CUSTOMS PROCEDURES TO GET SIMPLER
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context
- Union Budget announces selective changes in Basic Customs Duty (BCD) along with systemic reforms in Customs administration.
- Focus on tariff rationalisation, export promotion, Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) and trust-based compliance systems.
- Measures proposed by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
Key Points
- Tariff Measures
- BCD on potassium hydroxide increased from nil to 7.5% → impacts chemical, detergent, soap, battery industries.
- Duty on umbrellas (non-garden) revised to 20% or ₹60 per piece (whichever higher) → curb undervalued imports.
- Duty on dutiable personal imports reduced from 20% to 10%.
- NCCD on chewing tobacco and Jarda increased from 25% to 60% (effective duty unchanged).
- Export Promotion
- Duty-free import limit for seafood processing inputs increased from 1% to 3% of previous year’s FOB exports.
- Advance Authorisation Scheme: Export obligation period extended from 6 months to 1 year for leather, textiles, footwear.
- SEZ Reforms
- One-time concessional duty for SEZ units to sell into DTA up to a prescribed export- linked limit.
- Safeguards to protect DTA manufacturers.
- Customs & Trade Facilitation
- Single digital window for multi-agency cargo clearance by end of FY.
- Food, drugs, plant, animal and wildlife clearances (≈70% interdicted cargo) operationalised by April.
- Duty deferral:
- Tier-2 & Tier-3 AEOs: extended to 30 days.
- Extended to eligible manufacturer-importers.
- Advance Ruling validity extended from 3 to 5 years.
- Trusted importers to face minimal cargo verification via risk-based systems.
- Customs Integrated System to be rolled out in two years.
- External Assessment
- Global Trade Research Initiative: Budget is country-neutral but improves U.S. exporters’ market access in high-value sectors.
Static Linkages
- Customs duties as tools of trade policy and revenue mobilisation.
- Foreign Trade Policy instruments: Advance Authorisation, SEZs.
- Risk Management System (RMS) in Customs.
- WTO principles: MFN, bound tariffs.
- NCCD as a non-tariff fiscal levy.
Critical Analysis
- Advantages
- Improves Ease of Doing Business through digitalisation and trust-based systems.
- Boosts export competitiveness in seafood, leather and textiles.
- Reduces logistics cost and clearance time.
- Supports SEZs affected by global trade disruptions.
- Concerns
- Higher input tariffs may raise manufacturing costs.
- Risk of cost-push inflation if domestic substitutes are inadequate.
- Greater foreign market access may pressure infant industries.
- Tobacco duty change weakens public health signalling.
Way Forward
- Align tariff hikes with domestic capacity creation.
- Integrate Customs reforms with PLI and logistics policy.
- Strengthen risk analytics to prevent misuse of trust- based systems.
- Periodic review of SEZ-DTA concessions.
- Ensure tariff policy consistency with WTO commitments.
FM A MIXED BAG MARKETS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Union Budget 2026–27 introduced selective capital market reforms with focus on long-term capital formation.
- Measures included higher taxation on derivatives, liberalisation of NRI portfolio investment, and steps to deepen bond markets.
- Objective aligns with improving financial stability, productive investment, and urban infrastructure financing.
Key Points
- Securities Transaction Tax (STT):
- Futures: increased from 0.02% to 0.05%.
- Options premium: increased from 0.10% to 0.15%.
- Options exercise: increased from 0.125% to 0.15%.
- Purpose of STT hike: Curb excessive speculative trading and enhance market discipline.
- NRI Portfolio Investment Reforms:
- Persons Resident Outside India (PROI) allowed to invest in listed equities through Portfolio Investment Scheme.
- Individual investment limit increased from 5% to 10%
- Aggregate limit for all PROIs raised from 10% to 24%.
- Municipal Bonds:
- ₹100 crore incentive for single municipal bond issuances exceeding ₹1,000 crore.
- Corporate Bond Market:
- Proposal for corporate bond indices.
- Introduction of Total Return Swaps (TRS) on corporate bonds.
Static Linkages
- Capital markets as a source of resource mobilisation (NCERT Macroeconomics).
- Role of bond markets in financial stability (RBI, Economic Survey).
- Municipal bonds linked to urban decentralisation and fiscal federalism (12th Schedule).
- Portfolio Investment governed under FEMA framework.
Critical Analysis
- Advantages
- Promotes long-term investment over speculative activity.
- Enhances foreign portfolio participation without ownership dilution.
- Supports development of municipal finance for urban infrastructure.
- Improves depth and risk management in bond markets.
- Challenges
- Short-term reduction in market liquidity.
- Higher cost burden on retail derivative participants.
- Weak financial capacity and governance of Urban Local Bodies.
- Need for strong regulatory oversight for bond derivatives.
Way Forward
- Strengthen municipal financial management and creditworthiness.
- Improve investor awareness and financial literacy.
- Gradual and predictable tax policy changes.
- Complement bond market reforms with market-making and credit enhancement.
BANKING SECTOR SET FOR SEA CHANGE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Union Budget announcement to constitute a High-Level Committee on Banking for Viksit Bharat.
- Objective: Review banking and financial sector architecture to meet India’s next phase of growth.
- Assurance of financial stability, inclusion, and consumer protection.
- Statement made by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
- Proposal to restructure Power Finance Corporation (PFC) and Rural Electrification Corporation (REC) to enhance efficiency of public sector NBFCs.
Key Points
- Indian banking sector status:
- Improved asset quality (GNPA at multi-year low – RBI/Economic Survey).
- Record profitability and strong capital adequacy.
- Banking coverage extended to 98%+ villages.
- Committee mandate:
- Review credit delivery mechanisms.
- Assess role of banks in long-term growth financing.
- Align banking with Viksit Bharat vision.
- Trade union concern:
- Committee seen as step towards privatisation of PSBs.
- Fear of dilution of priority sector lending and rural banking.
- NBFC restructuring:
- PFC and REC to support financing of renewables, nuclear, transmission, storage.
- Objective: scale, efficiency, and alignment with energy transition.
Static Linkages
- Bank Nationalisation (1969, 1980) → rural expansion & social banking.
- Priority Sector Lending (PSL) under RBI guidelines.
- Role of PSBs in counter-cyclical lending.
- NBFCs as long-term infrastructure financiers.
- Financial inclusion as pillar of inclusive growth.
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Prepares banking sector for large-scale infrastructure and industrial financing.
- Opportunity to rationalise regulation and improve efficiency.
- Strengthens NBFC role in energy transition financing.
- Reflects confidence in banking sector health.
- Concerns
- Risk of weakening social banking mandate of PSBs.
- Private banks less inclined towards rural/priority lending.
- Financial inclusion success largely PSB-driven.
- Need clarity on safeguards against excessive privatisation.
Way Forward
- Clearly retain priority sector and inclusion mandates.
- Reform PSBs for efficiency without abandoning public ownership.
- Strengthen regulatory oversight and consumer protection.
- Align NBFC reforms with climate and energy transition goals.
- Ensure balanced public–private banking ecosystem.
TAX HOLIDAY BOOSTS DATA CENTRES
- The Union Budget introduced targeted tax and regulatory reforms to promote India as a global hub for data, cloud computing, and digital services.
- Key measures include expansion of Safe Harbour Rules, long-term tax holidays for data centres, and automatic approval mechanisms for IT-related services.
- The reforms aim to attract foreign investment, strengthen Global Capability Centres (GCCs), and support AI-driven digital infrastructure.
Key Points
- Safe Harbour threshold increased from ₹300 crore to ₹2,000 crore under transfer pricing provisions.
- Uniform Safe Harbour margin (~15–15.5%) applied to all IT and IT-enabled services.
- Automatic, rule-based approval system introduced to reduce litigation and discretion.
- 20-year tax holiday (up to 2047) for foreign companies establishing data centres in India.
- 15% cost-based Safe Harbour for data services provided to related foreign entities.
- Policy recognises data as a strategic economic asset critical for AI, cloud, and digital trade.
- Expected to enhance tax certainty, improve ease of doing business, and attract long-term FDI.
Static Linkages
- Fiscal policy as a tool for investment-led growth (Economic Survey).
- Transfer Pricing & BEPS framework under the Income Tax Act, 1961.
- Services-led growth model (NCERT – Indian Economic Development).
- FDI policy liberalisation and non-debt capital inflows (DPIIT).
- Digital economy and infrastructure as growth multipliers (NITI Aayog).
- Energy–industry linkage in infrastructure development.
Critical Analysis
- Advantages
- Reduces transfer pricing disputes and improves tax certainty.
- Encourages high-value FDI in data, cloud, and AI sectors.
- Supports India’s transition from IT services provider to digital value-chain hub.
- Enhances predictability and scalability for multinational firms.
- Concerns
- High energy and water demand of data centres may strain infrastructure.
- Risk of revenue foregone due to long tax holidays.
- Potential regional imbalance in concentration of digital infrastructure.
- Need for robust data protection and cybersecurity capacity.
Way Forward
- Align data centre expansion with renewable energy and green infrastructure.
- Strengthen data protection, privacy, and cyber governance frameworks.
- Promote decentralised digital infrastructure across states.
- Invest in skilling and R&D for AI, cloud, and data technologies.
- Periodic review of incentives to ensure fiscal sustainability.
TEXTILES, MSMEs GET NEW SCHEMES
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Rationale: Labour-intensive textile and MSME sectors were adversely affected by geopolitical disruptions, supply chain realignments, and export uncertainties in the last two years.
- Objective: Employment generation, domestic manufacturing push, export competitiveness, and MSME credit flow.
Budgetary Allocation
- Textile Sector: ~25% increase in allocation over 2025–26.
- Significance: Signals priority to employment- intensive manufacturing and value addition.
- MSME Sector: Allocation doubled.
- Significance: Addresses credit constraints, scaling challenges, and competitiveness of small firms.
Manufacturing & Technology Support
- High-Technology Tool Rooms:
- To be set up by CPSEs in two locations.
- Digitally enabled, automated service bureaux.
- Functions: Local design, testing, and mass manufacturing of high-precision components at lower cost.
- Impact: Enhances MSME access to advanced manufacturing infrastructure.
- Scheme for Enhancement of Construction & Infrastructure Equipment:
- Promotes domestic manufacturing of high- value, technologically advanced equipment.
- Relevance: Import substitution and strengthening capital goods sector.
- Container Manufacturing Scheme:
- ₹10,000 crore over five years.
- Aims to reduce dependence on imported containers and support logistics resilience.
Textile Sector–Specific Measures
- Sports Goods Promotion Programme:
- Diversification into high-growth niche segments.
- National Fibre Scheme:
- Focus on manmade fibre, silk, wool, etc.
- Addresses fibre imbalance and global demand shift.
- Mega Textile Parks (Challenge Mode):
- Emphasis on technical textiles and value addition.
- Textile Expansion & Employment Scheme:
- Modernisation of traditional clusters.
- Capital support for machinery, technology upgradation, testing & certification centres.
- National Handloom & Handicraft Programme: Targeted support for weavers and artisans.
- Mahatma Gandhi Gram Swaraj Initiative:
- Boost to khadi, handloom, and handicrafts.
- Tex-Eco Initiative:
- Promotes sustainable and globally competitive textiles.
- Samarth 2.0:
- Upgradation of textile skilling ecosystem.
- Overall Impact: Employment generation, sustainability, and export readiness.
MSME & Industrial Cluster Reforms
- Rejuvenation of Legacy Industrial Clusters: Revival of 200 clusters nationwide.
- SME Growth Fund:
- ₹10,000 crore dedicated fund.
- Objective: Create future champions among MSMEs.
- Self-Reliant India Fund (SRIF):
- Additional ₹2,000 crore.
- Enables micro units to access risk capital, not just debt.
Credit, Payments & Market Reforms for MSMEs
- TReDS as Mandatory Platform:
- All MSME purchases by CPSEs to be settled via TReDS.
- Significance: Addresses delayed payments problem.
- CGTMSE Credit Guarantee for TReDS:
- Credit guarantee support for invoice discounting.
- GeM–TReDS Linkage:
- Integrates government procurement with MSME financing.
- Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) on TReDS Receivables:
- Enables a secondary market for MSME receivables.
- Impact: Improves liquidity, lowers financing cost, deepens financial markets.
10,000- CRORE DOSAGE FOR BIOPHARMA
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Background and Rationale
- Structural shift in disease burden: India is witnessing a transition from communicable diseases to non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as diabetes, cancer and autoimmune disorders.
- Policy response: Biopharmaceuticals (biologics and biosimilars) are critical for long-term management of NCDs, improving longevity and quality of life.
- Strategic importance: Biopharma identified as one of the seven strategic and frontier sectors for scaling up under India’s industrial and health strategy.
Biopharma SHAKTI Programme
- Outlay: ₹10,000 crore over five years.
- Objective: Develop India into a global biopharma manufacturing hub, moving from volume-based to value-based leadership.
- Focus areas:
- Domestic production of biologics and biosimilars
- Promotion of knowledge, technology and innovation
- Strengthening the entire biopharma ecosystem
Key Institutional and Infrastructure Measures
- Human capital and education
- Setting up three new National Institutes of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPERs)
- Upgradation of seven existing NIPER facilities
- Clinical research ecosystem
- Creation of a network of 1,000+ accredited clinical trial sites across India
- Enhances India’s capacity for advanced clinical research and faster drug development
- Regulatory strengthening
- Capacity building of the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO)
- Introduction of a dedicated scientific review cadre and specialist reviewers
- Aim: alignment with global regulatory standards and faster approval timelines
Significance of Biopharmaceuticals
- Nature of biologics:
- Large, complex molecules produced using living systems (microorganisms, plant or animal cells)
- More difficult to characterise and regulate than small-molecule chemical drugs
- Strategic advantage:
- High entry barriers → greater value addition Essential for advanced therapies in oncology, endocrinology and immunology
Industry and Economic Implications
- Sectoral diversification:
- Enables Indian pharma companies to move beyond low-cost generics to complex, high- value products
- Global competitiveness:
- Stronger clinical trials and science-based regulation improve India’s credibility in global markets
- Innovation ecosystem:
- Encourages R&D, public–private collaboration and technology transfer
BUDGET 2026:TURNING POINT
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Union Budget 2026–27 presented amid global trade fragmentation and geopolitical uncertainty.
- Protectionist trade policies by major economies affecting global value chains.
- Persistent weakness in India’s manufacturing sector despite multiple policy initiatives since 2014.
- Budget signals renewed emphasis on domestic manufacturing and import substitution.
Key Points
- Manufacturing share in GDP stagnated at ~15– 16% (Economic Survey).
- Manufacturing employment share declining → premature deindustrialisation.
- Gross Fixed Capital Formation growth modest * erosion of industrial capacity.
- Rising import dependence on capital and intermediate goods.
- Budget measures include:
- Rationalisation of customs duties to correct inverted duty structure.
- Simplification of import procedures.
- Focus on electronics components and sub- assemblies.
- Proposal for rare earths corridor in mineral-rich coastal States.
- Expansion and modernisation of MSME clusters.
- Net FDI inflows as % of GDP declined sharply in recent years (RBI).
Static Linkages
- Structural transformation and industrialisation.
- Inverted duty structure in indirect taxation.
- Capital formation and long-term growth.
- Import substitution vs export-led growth.
- Special Economic Zones as export- promotion instruments
- Fiscal federalism and Centre–State relations.
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Tariff correction may improve domestic value addition.
- Focus on electronics and critical minerals strengthens supply-chain resilience.
- MSME clustering can improve productivity and employment.
- Concerns
- Limited push for fixed investment revival. Weak focus on attracting high-technology FDI.
- Allowing SEZ units to sell domestically dilutes export orientation.
- Centre–State fiscal issues not addressed despite upcoming Finance Commission.
Way Forward
- Provide stable policy regime to revive FDI inflows.
- Shift from assembly-led to ecosystem- based manufacturing.
- Strengthen export competitiveness of SEZs.
- Enhance Centre–State coordination in industrial infrastructure.
- Integrate industrial policy with skilling, R&D and technology transfer.
- Set medium-term manufacturing targets.
BUDGET 2026 BETS ON INDUSTRY- Union Budget 2026–27 presented during a phase of high GDP growth with moderate inflation.
- India has become the 4th largest economy in nominal GDP terms.
- Budget framed amid global geopolitical tensions, tariff conflicts, and supply-chain disruptions.
- Focus on continuity of public investment, fiscal consolidation, and long-term growth.
Key Points
- Capital Expenditure (Capex): ₹12.2 lakh crore (FY27) vs ₹11.2 lakh crore (FY26).
- Fiscal Deficit Target: 4.3% of GDP (FY27).
- Debt-to-GDP Ratio: 55.6% (current); medium- term target of 50%.
- Gross Market Borrowing: ₹17.2 trillion. Net Market Borrowing: ₹11.7 trillion.
- Nominal GDP Growth Assumption: >10%. Inflation Outlook:
- GDP deflator: ~3%.
- CPI inflation: ~4%+.
- Limited space for further monetary easing due to higher borrowing.
- Sectoral Measures
- Manufacturing Focus:
- Support to 7 strategic/frontier sectors (electronics, semiconductors, biopharma, chemicals, capital goods, textiles).
- Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme: Outlay increased to ₹40,000 crore.
- India Semiconductor Mission 2.0 announced.
- Logistics & Infrastructure:
- ₹10,000 crore for container manufacturing.
- Investment in freight corridors and transport infrastructure.
- MSME Support:
- ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund for equity financing.
- Targeted support for export-oriented MSMEs affected by higher US tariffs.
- Digital Infrastructure:
- Proposal of zero tax till 2047 for global cloud services provided via Indian data centres.
Static Linkages
- Public capital expenditure and growth multiplier (Economic Survey).
- Fiscal consolidation under FRBM framework. Manufacturing-led structural transformation.
- MSMEs as drivers of employment and exports.
- Infrastructure-logistics-export competitiveness link.
Critical Analysis
- Strengths
- Maintains fiscal prudence while prioritising growth.
- Signals transition from PLI-centric approach to broader manufacturing support.
- Strengthens MSME financing architecture.
- Addresses supply-chain vulnerabilities in strategic sectors.
- Limitations
- Absence of a comprehensive industrial policy framework.
- Under-execution of capital expenditure may weaken demand.
- Overestimation of services-sector employment generation.
- Data centre expansion not matched with power sector planning.
- Revenue assumptions from disinvestment remain uncertain.
- No explicit policy response to exchange-rate volatility.
Way Forward
- Formulate an integrated industrial policy.
- Improve efficiency and timely execution of capital expenditure.
- Strengthen domestic demand through employment generation.
- Align digital infrastructure expansion with energy planning.
- Rationalise tax incentives with accountability mechanisms.
- Address macroeconomic risks from external sector volatility.
CREDIBLE, CREDITABLE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Union Budget 2026–27 presented amid global geoeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties.
- Shift from tax-centric reforms (Budget 2025) to a diffused, sector-based growth strategy.
- Emphasis on stability, implementation and medium-term competitiveness rather than disruptive reforms.
Key Points
- Manufacturing push across seven sectors:
- Biopharma, Semiconductors, Electronics, Rare Earths, Chemicals, Capital Goods, Textiles.
- Biopharma SHAKTI Scheme: ₹10,000 crore over five years to strengthen domestic biopharma manufacturing.
- India Semiconductor Mission 2.0 and higher allocation to Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme.
- Targeted support to labour-intensive sectors (textiles, leather, marine exports) through indirect tax rationalisation.
- Champion MSMEs programme: focus on equity, liquidity and managerial support.
- MSMEs contribute 48.6% of India’s exports. Services sector measures:
- High-level committee on education–employment– enterprise linkage.
- Focus on healthcare and medical tourism.
- Capital expenditure:
- ₹12.2 lakh crore in 2026–27 (4.4% of GDP) — highest in a decade.
- Dedicated freight corridors, rail skilling institutes.
- Coastal Cargo Promotion Scheme to enhance inland waterways and coastal shipping.
- Fiscal indicators:
- Fiscal deficit: 4.3% of GDP (2026–27). Corporate tax growth projected ~14%.
- Income tax growth muted due to previous slab rationalisation.
- GST revenue contraction due to rate rationalisation and end of Compensation Cess.
Static Linkages
- Public capital expenditure as a counter-cyclical fiscal tool.
- Manufacturing and MSMEs in structural transformation.
- Logistics efficiency and infrastructure multiplier effect.
- Fiscal consolidation under FRBM framework.
- Export competitiveness and global value chain integration.
Critical Analysis
- Strengths
- Reduces policy disruption during global uncertainty.
- Strengthens strategic manufacturing sectors.
- Infrastructure-led growth compensates for weak private investment.
- Maintains fiscal discipline while supporting growth.
- Region-specific projects support cooperative federalism.
- Concerns
- Risk of implementation delays.
- MSME support effectiveness depends on timely execution.
- Aggressive fiscal consolidation may limit policy flexibility.
- Export relief insufficient to offset short-term tariff shocks.
- GST revenue contraction may constrain future spending.
Way Forward
- Time-bound implementation and monitoring of sectoral schemes.
- Greater Centre–State coordination for industrial corridors.
- Allow calibrated fiscal flexibility during external shocks.
- Strengthen logistics and trade facilitation.
- Align industrial policy with skilling and labour reforms.
- Improve outcome-based evaluation of MSME support programmes.
BUDGET GUIDES INDIA GROWTH PATH- Union Budget FY26 assessed in the context of global economic fragmentation and geopolitical uncertainty.
- Budget reflects a shift towards trade-led growth, export competitiveness, and technology-driven capital formation.
- Aligned with macroeconomic assessment in the Economic Survey.
Key Points
- Growth strategy based on capital, technology, exports.
- Trade agreements with EU, UK, Australia, UAE, Oman to diversify export markets.
- Current Account Deficit at 1.3% of GDP (Q2 FY26); sustainable level ~2–2.5% of GDP.
- Fiscal deficit reduced from 9.2% (FY21) to 4.4% (FY26 BE).
- Public capital expenditure increased to ₹11.21 lakh crore.
- General government debt-GDP ratio declined by ~7 percentage points since FY21.
- State fiscal deficit around 3.2% of GDP (FY25); state debt ~28% of GDP.
- Investment rate stabilised near 30% of GDP.
- Industrial GVA growth 7% in H1 FY26; medium and high-technology manufacturing ~50%.
- Budget focus on:
- Rationalised customs duties
- Correction of inverted duty structures
- Faster MSME payments
- Private sector R&D
- Climate focus: carbon capture utilisation and storage (CCUS) for steel and cement.
- Workforce size >56 crore; unemployment 4.8%; female LFPR >41%.
- City Economic Regions (CERs): ₹5,000 crore per CER over five years.
- Municipal bonds raised ₹2,834 crore (2017–25).
- Property tax ~60% of ULB revenues.
Static Linkages
- Fiscal deficit and debt sustainability. Twin deficits hypothesis.
- Crowding-in vs crowding-out of private investment.
- Cooperative fiscal federalism
- Agglomeration economies in urbanisation.
- Climate change as non-tariff trade barrier.
- Schumpeterian creative destruction.
Critical Analysis
- Strengths
- Fiscal consolidation improves macro credibility.
- Public capex supports private investment.
- Trade diversification reduces single- market risk.
- Climate-aligned manufacturing enhances export resilience.
- Urban reforms support productivity and labour absorption.
- Challenges
- High government borrowing absorbs household financial savings.
- Elevated cost of capital for MSMEs.
- Rising state-level fiscal stress.
- Climate compliance costs for industry.
- Weak municipal governance capacity.
Way Forward
- Focus on quality of fiscal consolidation.
- Strengthen state-level fiscal discipline.
- Reduce economy-wide cost of capital.
- Integrate climate strategy with industrial policy.
- Deepen municipal finance and governance reforms.
- Build trusted trade and technology partnerships.
- Invest in human capital and productivity-enhancing technologies.
FINANCE MINISTER BYPASSES LARGE FARM SECTOR
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- First Advance Estimates project GDP growth
- ~7.4%, while agriculture growth slows to ~3.1% in FY26 (from ~4.6% in FY25).
- Union Budget continues subsidy- and welfare- dominated spending in agriculture, with limited increase in developmental expenditure.
- Policy concerns raised regarding low public investment in agricultural R&D and persistence of input-linked subsidies, as highlighted in the Economic Survey.
Key Points
- Agriculture employs ~45% of workforce and contributes ~17% to GDP.
- Allocation to farm and allied sectors: ~₹1.63 lakh crore.
- Allocation to Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers’ Welfare: ~₹1.4 lakh crore (≈5.4% increase over previous RE).
- Allocation to Department of Agricultural Research & Education: ~3% decline.
- Allocation to Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying: ~26.7% increase.
- Total rural-agrarian support (subsidies + welfare): ~₹6.7 lakh crore (~12.6% of total Budget).
- Food subsidy: ~₹2.27 lakh crore (largest component).
- Fertiliser subsidy: ~₹1.7 lakh crore; remains price-based and input-linked.
- India spends <0.5% of agricultural GDP on R&D, below the ~1% level associated with sustained productivity growth.
- Evidence shows higher poverty reduction and GDP returns from agri-R&D compared to fertiliser subsidies.
Static Linkages
- Role of public investment in agriculture for long-term productivity.
- Green Revolution model and fertiliser-use imbalance (N:P:K distortion).
- Capital formation in agriculture vs revenue expenditure.
- Sustainable agriculture: soil health, water use efficiency, biodiversity.
- Food security vs farm income enhancement debate.
Critical Analysis
- Strengths
- Increased allocation to allied sectors supports diversification.
- Food subsidy ensures short-term food security.
- Marginal reduction in fertiliser subsidy indicates fiscal caution.
- Limitations
- High share of subsidies crowds out productive investment.
- Input-linked fertiliser subsidy causes nutrient imbalance and soil degradation.
- Low R&D spending weakens climate resilience and productivity growth.
- Spending pattern not aligned with declining poverty levels.
Way Forward
- Gradual shift from price-based fertiliser subsidies to per-acre / agro-climatic income support.
- Increase public spending on agricultural R&D, extension and irrigation.
- Strengthen soil testing, precision farming and technology diffusion.
- Promote region-specific, climate-resilient agriculture.
- Use DBT mechanisms to protect farmers while reducing distortions.
BUDGET LOOKS AHEAD, DUCKS REFORMS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Why is the Budget considered fiscally prudent?
- Fiscal deficit shows how much the government borrows in a year.
- Despite a ₹1.63 lakh crore tax shortfall, the government met its 4.4% of GDP target (2025– 26).
- For 2026–27, the deficit is reduced further to 4.3%, showing commitment to FRBM targets.
- Debt-to-GDP ratio is projected to fall from 56.1% to 55.6%, indicating improving long-term sustainability.
Why is higher capital expenditure important?
- Capital expenditure (capex) creates productive assets (roads, railways, ports).
- Capex increased from ₹4.26 lakh crore (2020– 21) to ₹12.21 lakh crore (2026–27).
- Capex has a higher multiplier effect than revenue expenditure.
Why is the manufacturing push significant?
- Focus on strategic sectors like semiconductors, rare earths, biologics.
- These sectors are critical for: Supply chain resilience
- Reducing import dependence (especially on China)
- National security and technology leadership
Why are tax litigation reforms relevant?
- Criminal cases for minor tax defaults discouraged investment.
- Budget replaces prosecution with penalties for technical offences.
- Safe harbour limits expanded to ₹2,000 crore for IT services.
Why was the STT hike criticised?
- Securities Transaction Tax on futures and options was increased.
- At a time of FPI outflows, this reduced market attractiveness.
- Markets reacted negatively (Sensex fell sharply).
Why is subsidy spending a concern?
- Food + fertiliser subsidy reached ₹4.15 lakh crore (2025–26).
- Overshooting indicates:
- Open-ended procurement Underpriced urea
- No roadmap for subsidy rationalisation provided.
Why is lack of privatisation highlighted?
- Economic Survey suggested lowering government stake from 51% to 26%.
- Budget did not announce major privatisation or disinvestment.
- Political economy constraints may delay reforms.
Why does pollution matter in Budget analysis?
- Pollution affects: Public health
- Labour productivity Investor perception
- Budget did not create a dedicated pollution- control fund