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India’s US$576 billion budget bets on growth over populist politics

  • Modi’s new budget balances fiscal discipline with job-boosting measures, but its short shelf life makes the true impact difficult to gauge

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A market vendor counts money in Mumbai. Modi’s government pledged billions to boost jobs and improve education in India, while also targeting a smaller fiscal deficit. Photo: Bloomberg
India’s new federal budget offers a clear signal from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government that economic development, not populist politics, will remain the priority – even as the leader leans heavily on coalition partners for his third term.

The budget unveiled on Tuesday struck a careful balance, promising vital financing for two key coalition states while adhering to a stringent programme to cut the fiscal deficit, a move that analysts say will ensure policy continuity.

Surprising observers, the budget pruned the deficit to 4.9 per cent from an earlier 5.1 per cent estimate for the year ending March 2025, aided by a US$25 billion surplus from the central bank. A high deficit can hamper economic growth, so this fiscal discipline was seen as a positive signal.

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Yet with Modi facing criticism over high youth unemployment and growing inequality, the budget also featured schemes to upskill young people and incentives for employers to expand their workforce.

“This is a pretty growth-oriented budget,” said Sujan Hajra, group chief economist and executive director at Mumbai-based Anand Rathi Financial Services. “It has recognised the need for coalition governance and sought to dispel criticism about high youth unemployment and income gaps between the rich and the poor.”

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks to the media in June amid post-election coalition-building talks in New Delhi. Photo: Reuters
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks to the media in June amid post-election coalition-building talks in New Delhi. Photo: Reuters

The overall package totalled US$576 billion in outlays, including US$32 billion for rural programmes, US$24 billion over five years for job creation, and more than US$5 billion for the two coalition-ruled states.

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