Budget 2026 stands out as a prudent and structurally focused roadmap aimed at sustaining economic growth while strengthening long-term fundamentals. Rather than short-term stimulus, the Finance Minister has opted for calibrated fiscal management combined with targeted public investment. The emphasis on strategic manufacturing reinforces India’s ambition to deepen its role in global supply chains, while large-scale investments in logistics and connectivity signal a clear push to lower transaction costs and enhance competitiveness. The announcement of new freight corridors, including 20 national waterways and seven high-speed rail corridors between major cities, positions infrastructure not merely as an enabler, but as a growth connector that binds manufacturing, consumption and exports into a more efficient ecosystem.
A defining feature of the Budget is its strong commitment to balanced and inclusive development. Prioritising rural development, alongside targeted measures to enhance farmer incomes, reflects an understanding that sustainable growth must be broad-based. At the same time, focused infrastructure development in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities aims to create new engines of economic activity, reduce pressure on metros, and support urbanisation that is more evenly distributed. Investments in housing, urban mobility, energy systems, and civic infrastructure in these cities will help unlock latent demand and employment potential across regions.
For the auto and mobility sector, the most important signal in Budget 2026 is the sharp rise in government capital expenditure. This capex push acts as a powerful tailwind for vehicle demand across segments -- commercial vehicles, construction equipment, passenger vehicles and farm mechanisation alike. The Finance Minister’s message is subtle but consistent: build roads, cities, energy systems and state capacity first -- vehicles will follow. Improved highways, freight corridors, urban infrastructure and rural connectivity directly translate into higher utilisation of vehicles, replacement demand and expansion of transport fleets.
In essence, Budget 2026 reinforces the idea that durable growth comes from investing in the foundations of the economy. By combining fiscal prudence with a strong capital expenditure thrust, strategic manufacturing support, and inclusive regional development, the Budget lays the groundwork for sustained economic momentum -- one where infrastructure-led growth fuels industrial expansion, rural prosperity, and long-term demand across sectors.
Onkar Kanwar is the Chairman of Apollo Tyres Ltd. Views expressed are the authors’ personal.