ADVERTISEMENT

As the Union Budget 2026 approaches on 1 February 2026, employment generation and workforce skilling are expected to take centre stage, with policymakers balancing economic growth and job creation. While India has maintained robust GDP growth, the distribution, quality, and sustainability of jobs remain under scrutiny.
With a large young labour force entering the market annually, Budget 2026 is anticipated to focus on measures that expand formal employment, enhance employability, and support labour-intensive sectors.
Recent Budgets have shaped the employment ecosystem through incentives and reforms. Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes across manufacturing sectors since 2021 have aimed to boost output and create jobs through domestic value addition. Infrastructure investments in roads, railways, logistics, and housing have supported construction-led employment, particularly for semi-skilled workers.
Skilling initiatives, including the expansion of Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY) and digital training platforms, have sought to align workforce capabilities with industry needs. Budgets have also emphasised startups and MSMEs, recognising their role as major employment generators.
January 2026
Netflix, which has been in India for a decade, has successfully struck a balance between high-class premium content and pricing that attracts a range of customers. Find out how the U.S. streaming giant evolved in India, plus an exclusive interview with CEO Ted Sarandos. Also read about the Best Investments for 2026, and how rising growth and easing inflation will come in handy for finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman as she prepares Budget 2026.
Despite these efforts, formal employment growth has remained uneven. Services have absorbed most new workers, while manufacturing-led job expansion has lagged. Stakeholders highlight skill mismatches, compliance burdens, and constrained MSME financing as challenges, calling for targeted incentives to promote labour-intensive hiring.
Skilling is expected to be a focus, with closer alignment between vocational training, higher education, and sectors such as electronics, green energy, AI, and advanced manufacturing. MSMEs are seeking improved credit access and simplified compliance to expand formal employment and scale operations.
Beyond new schemes, experts emphasise policy stability, sustained public investment, and private-sector participation as critical to converting growth into durable employment gains. Budget 2026 is seen as an opportunity to establish a framework that balances short-term job creation with long-term workforce development.