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Editorial- Union Budget 2025-26 – Beyond Tax Cuts

Introduction

The Union Budget 2025-26, presented by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, was framed against the backdrop of macroeconomic challenges such as high taxation, unemployment, subdued private investment, and external vulnerabilities. The Budget aimed at fiscal consolidation, tax relief, infrastructure development, manufacturing growth, agricultural reform, and climate action. However, a deeper analysis reveals overly optimistic revenue targets, gaps in strategic planning, and concerns over long-term economic sustainability.


Key Areas of Analysis

1. Fiscal Consolidation and Revenue Targets

  • Fiscal deficit target for FY26: 4.4% of GDP
    • This target is ambitious given the 11.2% projected growth in total tax revenue and a 14.4% rise in income tax revenue, despite significant tax cuts.
    • The reliance on asset monetization for fiscal correction is concerning since past monetization efforts have underperformed.
    • ₹11.54 lakh crore in market borrowings could lead to crowding out private investment at a time when credit demand remains weak.

Key Concern: Sustainability of Fiscal Policy

  • Tax cuts, while increasing disposable income, could result in ₹1 lakh crore revenue loss, impacting government-funded development programs.
  • Household savings have declined to 18.4% of GDP, raising concerns about domestic investment capacity.

2. Personal Income Tax Relief vs. Economic Impact

  • Exemption limit raised to ₹12 lakh under the new tax regime reduces tax burdens across various brackets.
  • While this will boost consumption, it comes at the cost of direct tax revenue loss.
  • Long-term concern: Will lower tax collections affect funding for infrastructure and welfare programs?

Economic Trade-Off

  • A balance between stimulating demand through tax cuts and maintaining government spending for long-term growth is crucial.
  • The lack of alternative revenue sources (such as GST or corporate tax increases) makes the fiscal strategy vulnerable.

3. Manufacturing and MSME Growth Strategy

  • India’s manufacturing sector contributes only 17% of GDP, far below the target of becoming a global manufacturing hub.
  • The Budget introduced:
    • Enhanced credit facilities for MSMEs
    • National Manufacturing Mission (aimed at ease of doing business, workforce training, and clean-tech promotion)
    • Revised MSME classification (investment limits increased 2.5x, turnover thresholds doubled)

Challenges in Execution

  • Regulatory inefficiencies, infrastructure gaps, and low innovation capacity remain key challenges.
  • Industrial R&D expenditure in India is only 0.64% of GDP, compared to China and Germany’s significantly higher investments.
  • Without structural reforms, these measures may fail to boost competitiveness in the global market.

4. Agricultural Sector: Incremental Reforms, Not Transformational Change

  • Key Announcements:
    • Prime Minister Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana
    • National Mission on High-Yielding Seeds
    • Kisan Credit Card (KCC) loan limit increased from ₹3 lakh to ₹5 lakh
    • Targeted interventions in 100 low-productivity districts

Gaps in Agricultural Reforms

  • The shift from blanket subsidies to targeted credit is welcome, but short-term credit expansion does not solve fundamental problems such as:
    • Price volatility and market access barriers.
    • Lack of export promotion for agricultural products, despite India’s ambition to lead in millets and natural farming.
    • No clear roadmap for agri-tech innovation or farmer income security.

5. External Sector and Export Competitiveness

  • IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) exports are growing at 10.5% CAGR, but the export portfolio remains undiversified.
  • New trade facilitation initiatives such as:
    • Bharat Trade Net (BTN)
    • Export credit support for MSMEs

Key Concerns

  • These initiatives lack scale and do not adequately address:
    • Trade deficits.
    • Depreciation of the rupee.
    • Declining forex reserves.
  • Missed opportunity to strengthen value-added exports in pharmaceuticals, electronics, renewable energy, and high-value agricultural products.

6. Climate Action and Clean Energy: A Cautious Approach

  • The Budget introduced measures to:
    • Promote supply-chain resilience for lithium-ion battery recycling.
    • Provide duty exemptions on critical minerals.
    • Support domestic solar photovoltaic and battery manufacturing.

Challenges in Achieving a Green Economy

  • These are incremental steps, but without:
    • Investment in grid modernization.
    • Better energy storage solutions.
    • Stronger industrial decarbonization efforts.
    • The transition to a low-carbon economy will remain fragmented.

Key Takeaways: Strengths and Weaknesses of the Budget

Strengths

  • Tax relief for middle-class consumers could boost short-term consumption-driven growth.
  • Credit enhancements for MSMEs aim to strengthen small businesses.
  • Targeted agricultural credit and productivity measures signal a shift from blanket subsidies.
  • Push for clean-tech manufacturing shows commitment to energy security.

Weaknesses

  • Revenue projections are overly optimistic, raising concerns about fiscal sustainability.
  • Tax cuts reduce fiscal space, which could impact social welfare and infrastructure spending.
  • Manufacturing incentives lack focus on R&D and innovation, which is critical for long-term global competitiveness.
  • Agricultural measures do not adequately address price volatility and exports.
  • Climate strategy lacks comprehensive policies on grid modernization and industrial decarbonization.

Conclusion

While the Union Budget 2025-26 attempts to balance fiscal consolidation, tax relief, and sectoral growth, execution challenges remain. Many initiatives in manufacturing, agriculture, and climate action lack a holistic strategy. The success of the budget will depend on implementation efficiency, adaptability to economic uncertainties, and long-term structural reforms.

The government’s willingness to adjust policies, based on real-time economic challenges, will determine whether the Viksit Bharat roadmap translates into tangible growth.

 

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