The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:
A Thoroughly Anti-People, Anti-Federal Budget
The ninth Union Budget presented by the Finance Minister in Parliament today was a stark testimony to the uncritical commitment of the Modi Government to promoting the narrow interests of a few big business houses and the rich and the wealthy, at the cost of the working people and socially oppressed sections of society, as well as larger national economic interests. The ‘fiscal discipline’ that Nirmala Sitharaman claimed as a credit for the Government has always been another way of describing tax concessions to the corporate sector and the rich, while squeezing expenditures necessary for improving the conditions of the working people. This has expressed itself in the current year and the budget for next year by a massive contraction in revenues and a slashing of expenditure.
In 2025-26, the year that is now ending, tax revenue realizations have fallen far short of even the modest estimates made in last year’s budget – even though part of the shortfall in income taxes and in GST revenues was quietly compensated by growth in excise duties, which fall mainly on oil. The FM took no note of this crisis in revenues, and what they reflect about the underlying economy, and omitted to even mention the revenue implications of the tax proposals she announced. Their reality, however, is obvious from the fact that the anticipated revenues for 2026-27 are almost the same as in the Budget estimates for 2025-26, which in effect means a sharp decline in the proportion of national income received as revenue.
Meeting the objective of reducing the fiscal deficit in such circumstances, in 2025-26 and 2026-27, has to obviously rely on cutting expenditures – and a naked assault on peasants and workers is the way in which this is being achieved. Compared to the Budget Estimates of 2025-26, expenditures have been drastically reduced under several Central and Centrally Sponsored Schemes – like Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana, PM POSHAN, PM-SHRI, PM-JAY, PM-MSY, PMAY (Rural and Urban), Crop Insurance Scheme, etc. Allocations for the welfare of the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and North Eastern Areas have also experienced cuts. Also, there has been a slashing of expenditures for Agriculture and Allied Activities, Rural Development, Education, Health and Social Welfare. The Gender Budget has been slashed by Rs. 51,144 crores. In the coming year, 2026-27, further cuts are proposed in fertiliser, food and petroleum subsidies. This represents especially an attack on agriculture at a time when government data itself shows that the agriculture sector is facing a deflationary situation or a collapse of price realizations for the output produced.
Even the much touted increase in capital expenditures has fallen victim to the expenditure cuts, with revised estimates for 2025-26 being lower than budgeted. On the other hand, the capital expenditures through resources of public enterprises were lower in 2025-26 than in 2024-25 and are budgeted to remain lower even in 2026-27.
State Governments and their ability to meet the aspirations of their people are also being choked by the Modi Government’s approach. The transfers to states under centrally sponsored schemes, finance commission grants, and other transfers have been cut by 2,03,801 crores in 2025-26 as compared to the Budget Estimates. The Budget estimates for 2026-27 show a further drop of Rs. 59,456 crores compared to the 2025-26 Budget Estimates. This is taking place at a time when states are facing a severe financial crunch due to poor GST revenue realizations and the VB-G RAM G has already imposed an effective cut on states’ resources by shifting part of the burden of expenditure onto them.
The Finance Minister in her budget speech mentioned that the Modi government’s tenure has been marked by ‘stability, fiscal discipline, sustained growth, and moderate inflation’. What she failed to mention was that the only stability has been in the distress of the working people marked by rampant unemployment and limited earnings from work, while ‘sustained growth’ has marked only the incomes and wealth of the rich and the corporate sector. It is this growing inequality that Budget 2026-27 is going to further promote and further aggravate the crisis that is afflicting the Indian economy. It is also a woefully inadequate response to the issues arising from what is happening in the world economy.