Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman  
Economy

Budget bucket list: reform push and fiscal discipline over populist measures

Global investment bank Morgan Stanley expects the government to stay focused on fiscal discipline, capital spending and long-term growth, rather than populist measures.

Dhanam News Desk

As finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman prepares to present the Union Budget for 2026–27 on February 1, global investment bank Morgan Stanley expects the government to stay focused on fiscal discipline, capital spending and long-term growth, rather than populist measures.

Despite global headwinds from tariff tensions and geopolitical uncertainty, India’s economy remains resilient. According to Morgan Stanley, Budget 2026 is likely to reinforce the government’s medium-term consolidation roadmap while pushing reforms across infrastructure, manufacturing and job creation.

Fiscal roadmap

Morgan Stanley expects the Centre to:

  • Target a fiscal deficit of 4.2 percent of GDP in FY27, lower than the 4.4 percent target for FY26

  • Maintain the slowest pace of consolidation since FY23, allowing room for growth spending

  • Reduce central government debt from 56.1 percent of GDP in FY26 to 55.1 percent in FY27

Over the medium term, the government is expected to continue gradual consolidation to reach its debt-to-GDP target of 50 percent (±1 percentage point) by FY31. Strong nominal growth is expected to support tax collections and fund capital expenditure and social infrastructure.

Core themes of Budget 2026

Morgan Stanley expects the Budget to focus on:

  • Expansion of social and physical infrastructure

  • Improving ease of doing business to boost private investment

  • Creating productive jobs alongside skill development

  • Strengthening domestic manufacturing

  • Enhancing ease of living for citizens

Sector-wise expectations

Real estate and housing

  • Home loan interest deduction for self-occupied houses under the new tax regime

  • Revival of Credit Linked Subsidy Scheme (CLSS) with 3–4 percent subsidy

  • Raising affordable housing price cap to ₹75 lakh from ₹45 lakh

Automobile

  • Higher spending on EV charging infrastructure

  • Clarity on incentives for domestic production of rare earth magnets

Financial sector

  • Incentives for digital payments

  • Uniform tax treatment on interest income

  • Expanded credit guarantees for MSMEs and MFIs

  • Simplified interest subsidy under PMAY 2.0

Telecom and digital infrastructure

  • Relief on USOF charges until existing funds are used

  • Possible reforms on AGR dues and licence fees

  • Extended loss carry-forward period from 8 to 16 years

  • Incentives for data centres, including duty waivers on GPUs

Railways and defence

  • Railways allocation growth of 5–6 percent, with focus on safety, new corridors and trains

  • Defence spending seen rising 12–15 percent, benefiting domestic manufacturers

Energy, metals and cement

  • Higher outlays for infrastructure-linked sectors

  • Focus on clean energy, battery storage, nuclear and pumped storage

  • Policy push for critical minerals and rare earths

Consumption and healthcare

Morgan Stanley expects broad measures to revive consumption, along with continued emphasis on healthcare spending, pharma R&D incentives, API self-reliance and expansion of Ayushman Bharat.

Overall, Budget 2026 is expected to balance fiscal discipline with growth-oriented reforms, keeping long-term competitiveness firmly in focus.

(By arrangement with livemint.com)

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