A Tightrope Walk Between Political Compulsions and Economic Imperatives

Budget 2026 walks a tightrope between election-year pressures and economic discipline, juggling jobs, rural distress and middle-class relief without undermining fiscal credibility.

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi at public rally in Thiruvananthapuram. January 23, 2026
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By Amitabh Tiwari

Amitabh Tiwari, formerly a corporate and investment banker, now follows his passion for politics and elections, startups and education. He is Founding Partner at VoteVibe.

January 28, 2026 at 8:59 AM IST

As Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman prepares to present the Union Budget for 2026-27, she faces a formidable challenge: balancing immediate political necessities with long-term economic stability. 

With five states heading to elections, a restive youth grappling with unemployment, agricultural distress deepening in rural India, and a middle class demanding more relief, this budget could well be a litmus test for the government's ability to respond to mounting pressures on multiple fronts.

The Electoral Arithmetic: Sops for Poll-Bound States
History has shown that pre-election budgets rarely resist the temptation of targeted allocations. With five states preparing for assembly elections, (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal, Assam and Puducherry) Budget 2026 is unlikely to break this pattern. 

Past budgets have demonstrated a clear correlation between electoral calendars and heightened spending in specific regions, whether through infrastructure projects, welfare schemes, or special packages.

Year State Election Announcements
2023-24 Karnataka (2023) Central assistance of ₹53 billion crore for drought prone central region
2025-2026 Bihar  (2025) Makhana Board to be set up 
A National Institute of Food Technology, Entrepreneurship & Management to be set up 
Greenfield airports announced in addition to the expansion of the capacity of Patna airport and a brownfield airport at Bihta
Western Koshi Canal Project in Mithilanchal

The government's challenge, however, lies in crafting these allocations in a manner that doesn't appear overtly political while still delivering tangible benefits to voters. Expect announcements of new highways, railway projects, irrigation schemes, and possibly special industrial corridors for some of these states. 

The fine print of budget documents could likely reveal substantially higher capital expenditure allocations for poll-bound regions, dressed up as part of broader national development goals.

The Demographic Time Bomb: Fixing India's Unemployment Crisis
India stands at a critical juncture. The demographic dividend that economists have long celebrated is at risk of becoming a demographic disaster if urgent steps aren't taken to create jobs. The unemployment crisis has been compounded by two simultaneous shocks: the rise of artificial intelligence and significant layoffs in the IT sector, once considered the most stable employment generator for educated youth. 

The Prime Minister Internship Scheme, a flagship initiative to skill one crore youth announced in the 2024-25 budget, announced with much fanfare has faced significant implementation challenges and low adoption. Reports indicate the program is currently struggling due to low uptake by companies and applicants, with only a small fraction of the budgeted funds being utilised. This shows it is imperative to design schemes in consultation with industry. 

There needs to be substantial investment in reskilling and upskilling programs that prepare the workforce for an AI-driven economy rather than resist it. Second, the government must create incentives for labour-intensive manufacturing sectors that can absorb workers displaced by technology, expansion of PLI to more sectors. 

More importantly, the budget should signal a clear focus on emerging sectors where India can build competitive advantages. Global Capability Centres, which have been mushrooming across Indian cities, represent a significant opportunity. Tax incentives, infrastructure support, and streamlined approvals for data centre projects could accelerate this growth. 

The youth's disenchantment with the incumbent across various states is fundamentally rooted in joblessness. No amount of welfare schemes like unemployment allowance that too just before polls can substitute for the dignity and economic security that employment provides. Budget 2026 must signal that job creation is not just a priority but an obsession.

Rural and Agricultural Distress: Time to Walk the Talk
Perhaps nowhere is the gap between government rhetoric and ground reality more stark than in rural India. The PM-Kisan Nidhi scheme, which provides direct income support to farmers, has remained stuck at ₹6,000 annually for seven years. Today, after years of inflation, its real value has eroded significantly. 

A realistic assessment suggests that this amount should be raised to at least ₹9,000 to maintain its original purchasing power. This would require an additional outlay of approximately ₹600 billionannually, a substantial but not insurmountable burden for a government that has shown willingness to spend on priorities it deems critical.

However, will the government carry this out is a big question mark as it is pushing for the rural employment program budget to be shared by state governments. The burden of NREGA, which provides guaranteed employment in rural areas, has been revamped with nearly 40% of the programme's costs now borne by states. 

Sustainable solutions require more than electoral expediency; they demand a genuine commitment to rural development that extends beyond election cycles. Agricultural reforms, better minimum support prices, improved market access for farmers, and investments in rural infrastructure must all feature prominently. The government cannot afford to ignore the rural economy, which still employs nearly half of India's workforce, even if its contribution to GDP has diminished.

Middle Class Expectations: Beyond Incremental Tax Cuts
Last year's budget offered some respite to the middle class by slashing tax rates for incomes up to ₹1.2 million. It was a welcome move, but as the popular refrain goes, "dil maange more." The middle class, squeezed by inflation, stagnant real wages, and rising costs of education and healthcare, flat to negative stock market returns, is looking for more innovative measures to boost consumption and provide genuine relief.

Simple tax rate adjustments may no longer be enough. The government needs to think creatively about consumption-linked incentives, possibly in the form of tax deductions for specific spending categories that also stimulate economic growth and 55%-60% of GDP is fuelled by consumption. Deductions for electric vehicle purchases, home renovation expenses, or investments in solar panels on rooftops could serve dual purposes of providing relief while advancing policy objectives.

The middle class also wants better public services, from healthcare to education to public transport. Tax relief is welcome, but investments that reduce out-of-pocket expenses on essential services would be equally valuable.

The Balancing Act
Finance Minister Sitharaman faces an unenviable task. She must craft a budget that addresses immediate political compulsions without mortgaging fiscal prudence, tackles unemployment without promising unrealistic job numbers, provides rural relief without unsustainable subsidies, and offers middle-class benefits without blowing a hole in tax revenues.

The success of Budget 2026 will ultimately be judged not by the headlines it generates on budget day but by whether it sets India on a path to inclusive, sustainable growth that creates opportunities for all sections of society. With demographic advantage slipping away, rural distress deepening, and youth impatience growing, the stakes have rarely been higher. 

This budget must be more than an accounting exercise; it must be a vision document for India's economic future