On February 1, 2026, India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented the Union Budget 2026-27, described by many analysts as the most assured phase of “Modinomics” yet — emphasizing infrastructure investment, manufacturing depth, technological transformation, and steady fiscal consolidation. This budget narrates a broader economic vision aimed at positioning India for long-term growth and global competitiveness.
Capital Expenditure and Growth Strategy
A centerpiece of the Budget is the record capital expenditure (capex) outlay of ₹12.2 lakh crore, reinforced as the engine of India’s economic strategy. This allocation underscores the government’s commitment to infrastructure — from logistics and transport corridors to industrial clusters — and aims to sustain economic expansion even amid global volatility.
The fiscal math remains disciplined. The fiscal deficit is targeted at about 4.3 % of GDP for 2026-27, reflecting a continued path of consolidation while still enabling investment-led growth. GDP growth projections for the next fiscal year hover in the high 6 % to low 7 % range, indicating resilience in the face of global headwinds.
Manufacturing, Critical Minerals, and Industrial Expansion
The Budget carries forward a strategic push on manufacturing — moving beyond simple support toward deeper industry capabilities. New industrial clusters, revival of legacy sectors, and targeted missions for key industries are planned:
• Biopharma SHAKTI Mission with ₹10,000 crore to build India’s role in advanced therapeutics.
• Semiconductors and Electronics Components with a boosted outlay (as highlighted in other reports) aimed at reducing import dependence and enhancing domestic value chains.
• Rare-earth mineral corridors in multiple states to secure supply chains for high-tech manufacturing.
These efforts signal a maturation of Modinomics from earlier phases — which focused on fiscal reform and pandemic recovery — toward deeper structural transformations, such as import substitution and global integration.
Technology, AI, and Services Exports
Technology features prominently in Budget planning. Several initiatives are designed to harness India’s digital strengths:
• Expansion of AI-driven platforms like multilingual agricultural advisory systems.
• Incentives for data centres and cloud infrastructure, positioning India as a credible digital hub.
• A 10 % global services export target, recognizing India’s advantage in digital services and workforce skills.
This shift reflects the government’s recognition that future growth will increasingly depend on technological adoption and integration across sectors.
Social Sector, Jobs, and Human Capital
While infrastructure and industry draw headlines, the Budget also allocates resources toward human capital:
• Expanded healthcare spending via new hubs and partnerships under public-private frameworks.
• Emphasis on education and employment ecosystems to equip India’s young workforce for emerging technologies.
These investments aim to convert India’s demographic strength into productive capacity, addressing structural skills gaps and enabling long-term inclusivity.
Taxation and Market Reforms
The Budget does not focus on dramatic direct tax cuts, but rather on tax policy simplification and compliance ease. Extensions in timelines for filing and TDS/TCS rationalization reflect a move toward a maturing fiscal regime, designed to reduce friction for taxpayers and businesses.
Market participants also reacted to certain tax changes — including hikes in securities transaction tax (STT) on futures and options — which caused short-term volatility in equity markets, illustrating the balancing act between revenue generation and investor sentiment.
The Broader Modinomics Narrative
Across its three phases, Modinomics has evolved:
• Phase 1 focused on fiscal repair and foundational reform.
• Phase 2 navigated pandemic recovery and ramped up investment through Production Linked Incentives (PLI) and capex growth.
• Phase 3, embodied by Budget 2026, aims to integrate investment, technology, global competitiveness, and structural transformation.
This comprehensive approach — from infrastructure to innovation — is why many economists view the 2026 Budget as the most assured phase of Modinomics yet, setting a long-term roadmap for India’s advancement toward becoming a global economic powerhouse.