This Union budget is about building capacity, not chasing short-term consumption Union Budget Sona College of Technology Vice Chairman praises Union Budget. Photo Courtesy: By Special Arrangement

This Union budget is about building capacity, not chasing short-term consumption

by By Chocko Valliappa, Founder and Managing Director, Vee Technologies and Vice Chairman, Sona Group of Education Institutions | @indiablooms 02 Feb 2026, 01:18 am

This budget is about building capacity, not chasing short-term consumption. It focuses on aligning talent with industry, strengthening advanced manufacturing, and reducing friction for technology-led services. The direction is clear: build depth, improve execution and let productivity compound over time.

The education focus:

The most important shift is that education is being treated as an economic engine rather than a standalone social spend. By linking universities to industrial corridors and explicitly connecting education to employment and enterprise, the budget recognises that skills, research, and jobs must move together.

Manufacturing:

The emphasis on electronics, semiconductors, rare earths, chemicals, and aerospace shows a clear intent to move manufacturing up the value chain. This is less about incentives in isolation and more about building ecosystems that support strategic autonomy and long-term competitiveness.

MSMEs:

The strengthening of receivables financing and platforms like TReDS addresses a real pain point—working capital. Improving cash-flow reliability for MSMEs is one of the most effective ways to boost manufacturing output and job creation without increasing fiscal stress.

Impact the IT services sector

The big positive for IT services is predictability. Simplified transfer pricing norms, higher safe-harbour thresholds, and faster dispute resolution reduce uncertainty. This matters as the sector transitions from cost-arbitrage to higher-value, AI-enabled services.

Emerging technologies like AI:

While it doesn’t over-promise, the budget clearly acknowledges AI and advanced technologies as productivity multipliers—both in governance and in industry. The real opportunity will be in how education, skilling, and digital infrastructure are executed around this intent.

Missing or underplayed:

The intent is strong, but execution will be the real test. Success will depend on how quickly institutions translate policy into outcomes—placements, factory output, research commercialization—not just allocations and announcements.”

Overall verdict:

This is a structurally sound, reform-oriented budget. It may not be flashy, but it strengthens the foundations of growth. If implemented well, it positions India for sustainable, technology-driven expansion rather than cyclical spurts.