In their Oxford Review of Economic Policy article, economists Dani Rodrik and Stefanie Stantcheva frame the central labour‑market issue as “the failure [of contemporary capitalism] to produce adequate numbers of good jobs to sustain a prosperous and growing middle class.” Against this backdrop, the Union Budget 2026 takes on heightened significance for employees and jobseekers alike. Beyond headline fiscal numbers, the Budget signals an intent to align growth with employment creation—through targeted support for labour-intensive sectors, industry-linked skilling, MSME financing, and public infrastructure investment.
1. Re-centring growth around labour-absorbing sectors
One of the key announcements of the Budget was to boost employment creation by strengthening labour-intensive sectorsuch as textiles and allied manufacturing. The government has introduced an Integrated Programme for the Textile Sector with an allocation of about ₹1,500 crore, including the National Fibre Scheme, Textile Expansion and Employment Scheme, and support for handloom and handicrafts.
These provisions are designed to modernise clusters, improve competitiveness, and create jobs across the value chain—from raw material production to exports. The establishment of Mega Textile Parks further aims to provide integrated infrastructure and scale efficiencies that can attract investment and enable large-scale employment. From an economic standpoint, such sector-specific capital and infrastructure support aligns with strategies employed by countries that have successfully expanded manufacturing employment.
2. Addressing the skills–jobs mismatch through industry-linked skilling
In a bid to correct structural mismatches between education and employability, the budget includes multiple skilling provisions. The upgraded Samarth 2.0 programme is intended to modernise textile training through collaboration with industry and academic institutions.
Beyond textiles, the Budget includes targeted workforce expansion initiatives—for example, adding 100,000 allied health professionals over five years and rolling out structured training programmes in healthcare and tourism. More broadly, the Budget emphasizes a national skilling push aimed at improving employability outcomes rather than merely increasing certifications. Together, these provisions signal a shift from supply-driven training schemes toward demand-aligned, sector-specific skill creation—an approach associated with higher productivity gains in labour economics literature.
3. Strengthening school-to-work transitions through applied learning
Practical exposure is another key focus of the Budget. Initiatives such as the establishment of AVGC (Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming, and Comics) Content Creator Labs across 15,000 schools and 500 colleges aim to build a talent pipeline for sectors projected to require millions of professionals. By embedding vocational and applied capabilities earlier in the education system, these programmes attempt to reduce transition frictions between education and employment—a persistent cause of youth underemployment.
4. Supporting MSMEs as primary engines of job creation
MSMEs account for a disproportionate share of employment, making their financing constraints a macro-level labour issue. The Budget proposes a ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund and an additional ₹2,000 crore infusion into the Self-Reliant India Fund to expand risk capital availability. Improved access to equity and credit is intended to enable small firms to scale operations and hire more workers. Since MSMEs dominate labour-intensive manufacturing and services, easing their financing bottlenecks is a direct employment lever rather than an indirect growth measure.
5. Using public investment to generate short- and long-term employment effects
The Budget continues a strategy of high public investment in infrastructure and industrial capacity. Capital expenditure spanning logistics equipment manufacturing to industrial corridors typically generates immediate construction employment while reducing long-term logistics and transaction costs. This dual effect—short-term job creation and long-term productivity improvement—is a standard macroeconomic rationale for sustained public capex during structural transformation.
6. Expanding care and social infrastructure to enable labour force participation
The Union Budget 2026 also includes funding for programmes such as Saksham Anganwadi, Poshan 2.0, and the Palna childcare scheme, alongside a broader push to build a “care ecosystem.” Economically, such social infrastructure reduces unpaid care burdens—particularly for women—thereby enabling higher labour force participation while simultaneously creating new jobs within the care economy.
Ultimately, while the Union Budget 2026 lays out a coherent framework to stimulate employment, its success hinges on execution. As Rodrik and Stantcheva highlight, the central challenge is not growth alone, but generating good jobs—sustainable, productive, and inclusive. All these initiatives must translate into actual labour absorption, quality employment, and broad-based opportunity. If implemented effectively, the Budget could help close India’s structural employment gap and deliver equitable growth and prosperity.