Current Affairs

Union Budget 2026–27 Explained: What It Means in Plain Terms

On Sunday, February 1, 2026, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented India’s Union Budget 2026 27, the first time a budget was presented on a Sunday. Here’s a peek into what it actually means for you and the country.

What’s the Budget About? (The Three Core Ideas)

The government structured this budget around three core principles they call “kartavyas” (duties):

First: Speed up economic growth while staying strong amid global economic shocks. This means making our industries more competitive and productive.

Second: Help everyday people build their skills and reach their aspirations. Think of this as building human capacity: better jobs, better training, better opportunities.

Third: Make sure every region, every community, and every type of business gets a fair shot at resources and opportunity. No one’s left out.

The Money Numbers

Here’s what the government is working with:

– Total spending planned: ₹53.5 lakh crore (about $583 billion)

– Money coming in (non-debt): ₹36.5 lakh crore

– Fiscal deficit: Controlled at 4.3% of GDP (down from 4.4% last year)

– Debt compared to GDP: 55.6% (coming down from 56.1%)

What does this mean? The government is spending less than it takes in and gradually reducing the debt burden. It’s basically tightening the belt while still investing in growth.

Likely to Get Cheaper

CategoryItems
Healthcare17 cancer drugs, medicines and food for special medical purposes for 7 rare diseases
Daily-use importsPersonal-use imported goods
Clothing & footwearLeather footwear, textile garments
Food & seafoodSeafood products
Travel & educationOverseas tour packages, foreign education expenses
Energy & clean techLithium-ion cells, solar glass, critical minerals
Green fuelsBiogas-blended CNG
ManufacturingAircraft manufacturing components
ElectronicsMicrowave ovens

Likely to Get Costlier

CategoryItems
Alcohol & tobaccoAlcohol, cigarettes
Energy & mineralsCoal, iron ore, other minerals
InfrastructureNuclear power project components
Finance & investingFutures and options trading (higher STT)
Tax compliancePenalties due to income tax misreporting

Capital Spending: Building for the Future

The government raised capital expenditure to ₹12.2 lakh crore, that’s a 9% increase. This money goes to physical things you can see: roads, railways, airports, and factories. It’s not wasted on daily operations; it’s invested in long-term infrastructure.

Railways got a record ₹2,77,830 crore, the highest ever. This includes new train lines, locomotives, and coaches. That’s 10% more than last year.

Manufacturing and Industry

The budget doubles down on boosting domestic manufacturing across key sectors.

Semiconductors
Funding for the India Semiconductor Mission 2.0 has been raised to ₹40,000 crore. States such as Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu are being encouraged to develop rare earth processing facilities to support chip production.

Textiles
Mega textile parks will focus on high-grade technical textiles, while Samarth 2.0 will train workers in specialised textile skills.

Biopharma
An outlay of ₹10,000 crore over five years aims to position India as a global biopharmaceutical hub by combining healthcare and advanced technology.

Cloud and data
Global firms setting up data centres in India for international operations will get tax relief until 2047.

Support for Small Businesses

A ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund will provide equity support, not just loans, helping small firms scale up. The TReDS platform will also be expanded to improve cash flow by cutting payment delays.

Jobs, Skills, and Livelihoods: What’s in the Budget

Women’s income

The Lakhpati Didi scheme is set to reach more women, with a clear target: annual earnings of ₹1 lakh or more. The plan also includes setting up she-marts, which are local retail spaces owned and run by women, giving them direct access to markets.

Youth and new-age skills

The focus for young people is on practical training in areas like AI, cloud computing, and other fast-growing tech fields. Professional bodies such as ICAI will introduce “Corporate Mitras”, trained support staff who can help businesses, especially in smaller cities and towns, handle compliance and regulatory work.

Persons with disabilities

A new initiative, Divyang Kaushal Yojana, aims to open up skill training in sectors like IT, animation, and hospitality, with the goal of better job access and steady income options.

Sports goods manufacturing

The budget also flags India’s growing role in making low-cost sports equipment for global markets. Support is being planned for manufacturing as well as research, to help Indian products compete internationally.

Infrastructure Push: Linking Regions, Cutting Distance

High-speed rail

Seven new fast rail corridors are on the anvil, including Mumbai–Pune, Pune–Hyderabad, Hyderabad–Bengaluru, and Bengaluru–Chennai. The goal is straightforward: shorter journeys and stronger links between major economic centres.

Eastern India

The budget lays out plans for an industrial corridor along the East Coast, aimed at strengthening manufacturing and logistics in eastern states. Public transport also gets a lift here, with a proposal to roll out 4,000 electric buses across the region.

North-East

Funds have been set aside to upgrade Buddhist tourism circuits across Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Assam, Manipur, Mizoram, and Tripura. The idea is to support tourism while protecting the region’s cultural and religious heritage.

Tax Changes: Simpler Compliance

For individuals

Tax forms will be simplified. The deadline for revised returns moves from December 31 to March 31, allowing corrections with a small fee. Interest received from motor accident compensation will be tax-free.

For travellers

TCS on overseas travel drops to 2%, down from 5–20%. The same 2% rate applies to foreign remittances for education and medical expenses.

For insurance

Foreign insurers can now hold 100% ownership in Indian insurance companies, up from 74%, with mandatory reinvestment in India.

For businesses

Companies opting for the new tax regime will get benefits but must pay a 14% Minimum Alternate Tax.

Customs and Exports

The budget focuses on faster cargo movement. A single digital clearance system will be in place by the end of the year. Key imports like food, medicines, and animal products will be cleared by April 2026. A new customs platform will roll out over two years, with low-risk goods cleared immediately after online filing. Fish caught by Indian vessels in the exclusive economic zone will now be duty-free, giving a boost to the fishing sector.

Health and Mental Healthcare

The Health Ministry gets ₹1,06,530 crore, a 10% increase from last year. A new NIMHANS-2 will come up in north India, while existing mental health institutes in Ranchi and Tezpur will be upgraded. Ayurveda also gets support, with three new All India Institutes planned for education, research, and treatment.

Focus on Eastern States

Under the Purvodaya initiative, Odisha, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Bihar, and Assam will receive ₹1.4 lakh crore in Finance Commission grants to help narrow regional economic gaps.

Fiscal Discipline

Despite global uncertainty, the government is staying on course with debt reduction. A lower debt-to-GDP ratio means reduced interest costs and more funds for public services and infrastructure.

The Big Picture

This budget aims to accomplish three goals simultaneously:

1. Make India manufacture products that the world wants (electronics, pharmaceuticals, textiles)

2. Provide decent employment and future-ready training

3. Do all this without spending frantically

It’s far from a budget full of freebies or significant tax cuts. It’s a working paper focused on creating capacity: industrial capacity, human capacity, and financial stability. In contrast to short-term popularity, the government is focused on long-term growth.

Whether this succeeds relies on how successfully these plans are implemented and how global conditions evolve. But the objective is clear: India is attempting to become a developed nation via its manufacturing industry and human capital development.

India Budget Portal, Ministry of Finance, Government of India, Official Press Information Bureau (PIB)

Riddhi Thakur

Riddhi is a journalism graduate who’s always felt more at ease asking the questions than answering them. For her, writing is a way to make sense of the noise, the silences, and everything in between. She’s drawn not just to the headlines, but digging into the quieter stories, the ones that often go unnoticed but deserve to be heard.

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