Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman set the tone for India’s fiscal future in the Rajya Sabha, proclaiming self-reliance as the pulsating heart of the government’s economic strategy. During Thursday’s debate on the 2026-27 budget, she detailed how domestic manufacturing expansion takes center stage, alongside energy security measures.
‘This budget is designed to make every citizen self-reliant,’ she stated, linking it to broader goals like easing daily life, spurring job creation, elevating farm outputs, and amplifying buying power at home.
Sitharaman described the current phase as a ‘Goldilocks moment’ – just right for growth – with a strong economy and subdued inflation. Crediting this to deliberate policies rather than chance, she cited NSO projections: 7.4% real GDP growth and 8% nominal for 2025-26.
Investments in people shone through in her address. Over five years, the government targets training 100,000 allied health workers, backed by Rs 1,000 crore this fiscal year. Expect ripple effects: more jobs, better health services, and thriving medical tourism.
A new high-powered panel on education-to-employment and startups was unveiled, eyeing a 10% slice of the $300 billion global services pie by 2047. Key sectors? IT, fintech, logistics, healthcare, tourism, and creative industries.
As global headwinds loom, Sitharaman’s vision charts a path of resilience, innovation, and self-sufficiency, positioning India as a global leader ready for tomorrow’s challenges.