Director, Birla Institute of Management Technology (BIMTECH), Greater Noida
The Union Budget 2026–27 marks a decisive shift from incremental welfare spending to strategic nation-building, anchored in the long-term vision of Viksit Bharat @2047. India aims to emerge as a global hub for high-value services, healthcare innovation, and next-generation technologies, with education, research, and skill development at its core, turning its demographic advantage into a knowledge-driven economy.
A 2025 McKinsey study underscores the impact of early exposure to digital and analytical skills, highlighting that such investments can dramatically enhance workforce productivity, particularly in emerging economies like India. The Budget reflects this evidence-based approach, allocating ₹1.39 lakh crore to the Ministry of Education a 14.2% increase over last year’s revised estimates. School Education and Literacy receive ₹83,562 crore, while Higher Education is allocated ₹55,727 crore, demonstrating a balanced focus on foundational learning and advanced research. Notably, flagship schemes like Samagra Shiksha, PM POSHAN, and PM SHRI Schools receive substantial boosts, and Atal Tinkering Labs see increased funding, embedding STEM, innovation, and problem-solving skills early in the education journey.
SKILLS, SERVICES, AND EMPLOYMENT
The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report warns that nearly 44% of existing skills will require transformation by 2030, underscoring the critical need to bridge the gap between education and employability.
The Budget introduces a high-powered
“Education to Employment to Enterprise” Standing Committee to align education systems with India’s services sector ambitions. Its mandate includes assessing AI’s impact on jobs and productivity. Allied health sciences, with a target of 1 lakh allied health professionals over five years and 1.5 lakh caregivers in the coming year. This initiative not only addresses workforce shortages but also opens new career pathways in healthcare administration, regulatory affairs, and clinical research management.
STRENGTHENING RESEARCH AND INNOVATION
A notable allocation of ₹10,000 crore to the Biopharma SHAKTI initiative aims to reinforce India’s life sciences research and manufacturing ecosystem. Plans include establishing three new NIPERs, upgrading existing ones, and accrediting 1,000 clinical trial sites nationwide. This focus underscores India’s ambition to become a global leader in biopharma innovation, a sector where advanced research and skilled professionals will be critical.
The PM Research Chair scheme further promotes advanced research leadership in universities, although modest allocations to some institutions highlight the need for sustained funding to match global peers like China and South Korea, where R&D spending exceeds 2% of GDP.
CREATIVE, DIGITAL, AND NEW-AGE INDUSTRIES
A 2025 EY report, A Studio Called India, consistently highlights the country’s comparative advantage in creative digital services, driven by scale, talent, and cost efficiency. Additionally, the McKinsey Global Institute projects that AI could contribute up to $1 trillion to India’s economy by 2035, provided the workforce is adequately trained.
India’s creative and digital services sector is set to expand through the establishment of AVGC (Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming, and Comics) labs in 15,000 schools and 500 colleges, aiming to cultivate a skilled pipeline of 2 million professionals by 2030.
MSMES, STARTUPS, AND INCLUSIVE GROWTH
The Budget also champions entrepreneurship and inclusivity. The ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund and a ₹2,000 crore boost to the Self-Reliant India Fund support startups, MSMEs, and student-led enterprises. Gender inclusion is moving beyond rhetoric, with rural women increasingly benefiting from skilling and enterprise programs. Initiatives like SHE Marts and support for the caregiver ecosystem integrate women-led and social enterprises into mainstream economic growth.
CONCLUSION
Union Budget 2026–27 represents a strategic attempt to transform India’s demographic advantage into a sustainable economic asset. By integrating education, healthcare, services, and innovation, it lays the foundation for a workforce capable of competing globally.
However, as highlighted in the Economic Survey 2025–26, the success of initiatives, particularly NEP-driven industry-academia integration, will hinge on effective execution, state-level coordination, and sustained monitoring. Implementation remains the ultimate test.
Also read what Directors / Deans of other B Schools had to say.
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What does the Union Budget 2026-2027 mean to Higher Education? ~ By Prof. (Dr.) V. Jayashree Director, VVISM Hyderabad
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Union Budget 2026: Nirmala Sitharaman to Engage With Students Post-Budget Presentation
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From Manpower Supplier to Skill Superpower: Why India Must Invest in Merit ~ Prof B C Patnaik Director NIA Pune
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Union Budget 2026 – “Human capital at the centre of India’s growth story” – Dr. Debashis Chatterjee, Director, IIM Kozhikode
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Union Budget 2026 and Indian Education: Vision with Velocity, But Not Yet at Scale ~By Ravi Kumar Jain, Pro Vice Chancellor / Director, School of Management, IILM University, Gurugram.

