Union Budget 2026-27: Strategy and Challenges

Nature and Policy Role of the Union Budget

  • The annual Budget is a political and financial statement addressing short- to medium-term challenges.
  • It outlines revenue, expenditure, and government priorities, with emphasis on fine print over headlines.
  • The Budget offers insight into broad economic direction due to absence of long-term policy frameworks.

Geopolitical Context Shaping Budget 2026–27

  • The Budget is framed amid heightened global turmoil during the second Trump presidency.
  • Steep U.S. tariffs have weakened prospects for closer India-U.S. economic engagement.
  • India is pursuing stronger ties with the European Union through a major free trade agreement.
  • China has imposed restrictions on critical minerals, machinery exports, and skilled workers for EVs.
  • India’s import dependence on China remains high despite policy efforts since 2020.

Manufacturing Performance and Structural Concerns

  • The manufacturing sector shows weak performance despite headline GDP growth of 6.5%–7% annually.
  • Manufacturing’s share in GDP and total employment has declined or stagnated.
  • Official GDP estimates appear overstated compared to Annual Survey of Industries data.
  • Fixed investment growth has remained modest, eroding industrial capacity over the last decade.

Import Dependence and Policy Limitations

  • Rising reliance on imported capital and intermediate goods constrains domestic industrial performance.
  • An inverted duty structure raises tariffs on intermediates above final goods, discouraging investment.
  • Initiatives like Make in India, Aatma Nirbhar Bharat, and PLI show limited impact on import reduction.
  • Mobile phone assembly success reflects high import content rather than deep domestic value addition.

Tariff Reforms and Ease of Production

  • The Budget proposes customs duty rationalisation to correct inverted duty structures.
  • Lower duties on capital and intermediate goods aim to encourage domestic value addition.
  • Simplified import procedures seek to reduce delays and improve export competitiveness.

Electronics, Rare Earths, and Strategic Inputs

  • Electronics components remain India’s largest import dependence category, mainly sourced from China.
  • The Budget proposes dedicated rare earth corridors across mineral-rich coastal and southern States.
  • Rare earths support EV manufacturing, electronics, and critical technology supply chains.
  • Tax exemptions on capital goods extend to lithium-ion cell production for battery storage.

Labour-Intensive Exports and MSME Clusters

  • Trade integration is seen to begin with labour-intensive goods for export diversification.
  • The Budget promotes new MSME clusters and modernisation of 120 legacy industrial clusters.
  • Financial support aims to enable MSMEs to access capital markets and improve productivity.

Investment Gaps and Centre-State Fiscal Silence

  • High-technology manufacturing requires foreign direct investment and proprietary multinational technologies.
  • Net FDI as a ratio of GDP has approached zero in recent years.
  • SEZ firms are allowed limited domestic sales instead of stronger export facilitation measures.
  • The Budget remains silent on Centre–State fiscal challenges amid Finance Commission recommendations.

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