Budget 2026 Must Fuel Skilling & Deep Tech for India's $7 Trillion Dream

The Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) states that the upcoming Union Budget is crucial for India's goal of becoming a $7 trillion economy by 2030. It calls for a shift to outcome-based skilling for the youth and decentralising deep tech training to tier-2 and tier-3 cities. The budget must facilitate patient capital for deep tech startups in sectors like AI and semiconductors. Additionally, incentives for domestic tech adoption and a stable tax regime for IT services are seen as vital for global competitiveness.

Key Points: Budget 2026: Skilling & Deep Tech Key to $7 Trillion Economy

  • Outcome-based skilling funding
  • Decentralise AI/deep tech training
  • Provide patient capital for startups
  • Incentivise adoption of homegrown tech
3 min read

Budget 2026: Skilling and Deep Tech must be twin engines for USD 7 trillion economy by 2030, says COAI

COAI urges focus on outcome-based skilling, deep tech funding, and patient capital in the upcoming budget to drive India towards a $7 trillion economy by 2030.

"We have to nurture the skilling centers on outcome based and not just on numbers. - Lt Gen Dr S P Kochhar"

New Delhi, January 31

India stands at a pivotal moment in its economic journey as it pursues the long-term goal of becoming a developed nation by 2047. This vision for a Viksit Bharat is supported by a more immediate target to reach a 7 trillion economy by 2030, says Lt Gen Dr S P Kochhar, Director General, Cellular Operators Association of India.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is scheduled to present the 2026-27 Union Budget on February 1.

According to Kochhar, the upcoming budget is a crucial moment for the country, particularly for strengthening the pillars of Skill Development and Deep Tech.

"Our youth, which is 65 % of our population, is below 35 years of age, is the largest youth population in the world. We have the opportunity to create this youth with skilling, not only on technology, but on behavioural and soft skills that will help them create businesses and also be job worthy in across not just in India, but globally," he believes.

To achieve this, a shift toward outcome-based skilling is necessary. "We have to nurture the skilling centers on outcome based and not just on numbers. The funding should go to people or the organisations that are enabling skilling and creating jobs and creating startups. That's the definition of what a good skilling organization should be."

A critical component of this strategy involves decentralising advanced learning. Expanding Deep Tech and AI training into tier-two and tier-three cities is essential to tap into widespread potential. By utilising vernacular-based learning systems, the workforce can be trained to meet global standards. This effort is closely linked to the broader Deep Tech ecosystem, where the focus is shifting from service-oriented models to product-based companies.

"Our country has produced some amazing startups over the last few years, some services economies that have become billion-dollar organisations. We have a great opportunity to create that for product companies that can come out of India because we don't lack in anything and therefore can create global companies out of India," he notes. Sectors such as AI, quantum computing, semiconductors, and green tech are identified as priority areas. However, these ventures require a different financial approach, specifically patient capital. "Startups in Deep Tech require patient capital. So one request would be to create the capital and the funding structure such that the companies remain as startups or can be called as startups for about 15 years," he added.

The growth of these companies also depends on their ability to penetrate both domestic and international markets. Incentives that encourage the adoption of homegrown technology within Indian corporations are seen as vital for creating the proof points needed to sell abroad. Additionally, for the established IT services and Global Capability Centers (GCCs), a more stable and simplified tax regime is requested to maintain a competitive edge. This includes faster refunds to release working capital, ensuring that the tax structure supports rather than hinders growth.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Patient capital for 15 years? That's a big ask. But he's right. Deep tech startups can't show profits in 5-7 years like e-commerce. The government needs to create special funds or tax breaks for investors in semiconductors, quantum, AI.
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Arjun K
Outcome-based skilling is the key phrase. So many ITI and training centres just focus on certificates, not actual job placement or skill quality. Funding should be linked to results, not just student numbers. Good point by COAI.
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Sarah B
As someone working in a GCC in Bengaluru, the call for a stable tax regime is very welcome. The uncertainty and delay in refunds really affect our planning and cash flow. Simplification would be a huge boost for the sector.
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Vikram M
The vision is great, but execution is everything. We've heard about skilling missions before. What's different now? Need clear accountability and maybe a public dashboard to track progress on these deep tech startups and jobs created.
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Kavya N
Soft skills and behavioural training mentioned here is so important! Technical knowledge alone isn't enough for global jobs. Our education system needs to integrate this from a younger age. Hope the budget has a plan for that too.
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Michael C

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