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DAILY NEWS ANALYSIS
18 February, 2026
4 Min Read
The Economic Survey 2025–26 presents a structured roadmap for India’s rise amid global fragmentation, supply-chain realignments, technological disruption, and climate stress. Rather than adopting a defensive posture, it advocates “strategic sobriety”—a calm, long-term policy stance that balances optimism with prudence. The Survey aligns this approach with the broader vision of Viksit Bharat @2047, emphasizing that durable growth requires institutional depth, technological capability, and governance reform.
Macroeconomic Strategy: From Resilience to Strategic Indispensability
The Survey argues that India must move beyond merely absorbing shocks (strategic resilience) and aim to become strategically indispensable—a reliable partner in global trade, technology, and manufacturing.
A key metaphor used is that India must simultaneously run a marathon and a sprint. The marathon represents sustained long-term growth driven by structural reforms and capital formation, while the sprint represents short-term macroeconomic management in response to inflation, capital flow volatility, and geopolitical shocks.
The Survey underscores the importance of buffers and redundancy in food, energy, and supply chains. In a fragmented world, such buffers are no longer inefficiencies but strategic assets. It also emphasizes institutional quality as a pillar of national power, alongside productive capacity and strategic focus.
On fiscal policy, the approach is described as credible consolidation. Instead of cutting deficits indiscriminately, the government prioritizes capital expenditure and human capital investments to sustain long-term growth.
State Capacity and Governance: From Ruler’s Raj to Citizen’s Raj
A major philosophical shift proposed in the Survey is the transition from “Ruler’s Raj” to “Citizen’s Raj.” This implies that the state should move from being a controller to an enabler.
The concept of the entrepreneurial state encourages the government to shift from compliance-heavy regulation to coordination and facilitation. Deregulation is framed not as withdrawal, but as institutional reorientation to reduce friction.
The Survey introduces the idea of trust-based compliance, replacing inspection-based systems with governance models built on transparency and incentive alignment. It also emphasizes contextual compliance, noting that citizens behave responsibly when institutions are well-designed.
Importantly, it stresses delayed gratification, arguing that long-term nation-building requires resisting short-term populism. It also calls for psychological safety in governance, enabling bureaucrats to make decisions without fear of punishment for honest mistakes.
Industry, Manufacturing, and Trade: Competing in a Fragmented Global Economy
The Survey promotes strategic indigenisation through a tiered framework. Instead of blanket import substitution, indigenisation is recommended only where strategic vulnerability or economic feasibility justifies it.
It highlights the servicification of manufacturing, where services such as design, logistics, and digital integration increase manufacturing value addition.
Global supply chains are being reshaped through friendshoring and nearshoring. India is encouraged to pursue geostrategic globalisation, positioning itself as a trusted alternative hub.
A critical goal is to shift toward higher-value production by improving India’s standing in the Product Complexity Index (PCI). Manufacturing exports are described as an “institutional stress test”, exposing weaknesses in logistics, regulation, and infrastructure.
The Survey also proposes a National Input Cost Reduction Strategy, treating energy, logistics, and raw materials as competitiveness infrastructure. It warns that restrictive urban land regulations create “dead capital”, limiting industrial growth.
The rise of the orange economy—media, arts, and creative industries—is identified as an emerging growth lever.
Technology and Artificial Intelligence: Sovereign and Frugal Innovation
Unlike Western frontier-model approaches, India is advised to adopt a bottom-up AI strategy focused on distributed, application-specific innovation.
The proposed AI-OS initiative envisions AI infrastructure as a public good, similar to India’s digital public infrastructure. Platforms such as e-Shram and Udyam demonstrate how digital systems can formalize labor and enterprises.
The Survey promotes frugal AI, meaning resource-efficient solutions tailored to local needs. It also emphasizes data stewardship, ensuring that domestic data creates domestic value.
The need for sovereign AI and compute capacity is framed as a strategic imperative. Integration of logistics and digital platforms through physical–digital fusion is expected to enhance efficiency and reduce transaction costs.
Agriculture and Rural Development: Resilience with Productivity
The Survey highlights nutrient imbalance in fertilizers, calling for a correction of the distorted N:P:K ratio to improve soil health.
It promotes climate-resilient agriculture through crop diversification and efficient irrigation. Bridging the gap between research and practice through a “Lab to Land” approach is essential for productivity gains.
The strengthening of rural employment through rights-based frameworks enhances income security. Additionally, mobilizing social capital, especially through community networks, is viewed as a pathway to sustainable rural livelihoods.
Urbanisation and Infrastructure: Designing Competitive Cities
Urban growth is framed around agglomeration economies, where clustering reduces costs and enhances innovation.
The Survey advocates polycentric growth, creating multiple urban nodes to reduce pressure on megacities. Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) is recommended to integrate land use and transport planning.
Urban design should follow the 8–80 philosophy, ensuring accessibility and safety for all age groups.
Infrastructure financing is strengthened through the financialisation of infrastructure, using instruments like InvITs and REITs to recycle capital.
Environment and Climate Strategy: Adaptation-Led Development
The Survey calls for a shift from mitigation-focused policy to adaptation-led development, emphasizing resilience to heatwaves, floods, and climate variability.
Reliable energy supply requires dispatchable power sources alongside renewables.
The circular economy model promotes recycling and resource recovery. The concept of greenium highlights lower borrowing costs through green bonds.
The behavioral dimension of climate action is emphasized through Mission LiFE, which encourages sustainable lifestyles.
Social Sector: Converting Demography into Capability
India’s demographic dividend can be realized only through investments in health and skills.
The country faces a double burden of disease, managing both communicable and non-communicable diseases. Regulation of ultra-processed foods (UPFs) and lifestyle reforms are necessary to tackle obesity.
Educational reform prioritizes Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) to ensure employability and productivity.
The Survey also highlights the pink tax, noting how gendered cost barriers restrict women’s labor force participation.
Finance and Banking: Stability with Innovation
India has avoided excessive financialisation, which has destabilized some advanced economies.
The Survey warns against the QE Infinity Trap, where prolonged monetary easing distorts asset prices.
It advocates refining the regulatory touch, balancing innovation and stability, while preventing evergreening of bad loans.
Behavioral tools such as NUDGE (Non-intrusive Usage of Data to Guide and Enable) are recommended to increase voluntary tax compliance.
Conclusion: Strategic Sobriety as the Foundation of Viksit Bharat
The Economic Survey 2025–26 marks a transition from a survival-oriented mindset to a possibility-driven developmental vision. Its central argument is that India must choose institutional depth over shortcuts, capability over comfort, and delayed gratification over populism.
By combining macroeconomic discipline, governance reform, intelligent indigenisation, frugal AI, climate adaptation, and human capital development, the Survey charts a coherent pathway toward strategic indispensability.
Source: THE HINDU
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