Thursday marked a high point in New Delhi’s legislative calendar as Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman unveiled the Economic Survey 2026 in Parliament. Defying global uncertainties and prospective American tariffs, India’s economy shines brightly per the findings.
Projections for GDP in FY25-26 and FY26-27 anchor this pre-budget staple, summarizing yearly achievements and peering into future prospects.
V. Anantha Nageswaran, Chief Economic Adviser, will decode major reform suggestions, from rupee slides to burgeoning international tensions.
PM Modi spotlighted Sitharaman’s unparalleled ninth budget tabling, making her the pioneer woman in this realm—a glorious parliamentary milestone.
Budget session remarks from the PM framed it as national honor. The February 1 budget is the government’s 15th, second full post-2024 NDA return.
Ten years of strategic builds across sectors herald rapid, enduring growth. Spanning 65 days and 30 sittings, the session breaks February 13, restarts March 9 amid two phases since January 28, aiding demand reviews.
The survey emerges as a testament to resilience, fueling expectations for bold budgetary moves.