Financial Sector Demands Capital Ease, Credit Push in Budget 2026

Stakeholders in the financial sector are calling for foundational reforms in the upcoming Union Budget 2026. Experts emphasize the need to move beyond expanding access to improving the quality and sustainability of credit, particularly for underserved segments. Key demands include policy measures to ease capital constraints, deepen domestic liquidity, and strengthen risk-sharing frameworks like credit guarantees. The sector also seeks policy consistency and tax stability to reinforce investor confidence and support long-term market depth.

Key Points: Budget 2026: Financial Sector Seeks Capital Easing, Policy Stability

  • Ease capital constraints for institutions
  • Promote responsible credit expansion to MSMEs
  • Deepen domestic liquidity and risk-sharing
  • Ensure policy and tax stability for markets
  • Strengthen last-mile financial infrastructure
3 min read

Financial sector seeks capital easing, credit push and policy stability in Union Budget 2026

Industry experts outline key demands for Union Budget 2026: easing capital constraints, promoting sustainable credit, and ensuring policy stability for growth.

"The focus must shift from simply expanding credit to improving the quality, accessibility, and sustainability of finance. - Manish Shah"

New Delhi, January 21

As the Union Budget 2026 approaches, stakeholders across the financial sector have called on the government to strengthen the financial system through policy measures that ease capital constraints, promote responsible credit expansion, and deepen financial inclusion.

Industry experts said the next phase of growth will depend not just on expanding access to financial services, but on improving the quality of credit, the sustainability of financial institutions and last-mile delivery.

Lokanath Panda, COO, BLS E-Services, said, "As the Union Budget approaches, the focus should be on strengthening the financial ecosystem that supports inclusive growth across savings, credit and payments. While significant progress has been made in expanding account ownership and digital adoption, the next phase of financial inclusion will depend on improving account activity, credit flow to underserved segments, and last-mile service delivery."

According to him, this will require sustainable operating models, adequate liquidity support and aligned incentives for banks, intermediaries and service providers. Policy measures that ease capital constraints and strengthen on-ground financial infrastructure will be crucial to ensure that financial inclusion leads to meaningful economic participation.

Manish Shah, MD and CEO, Godrej Capital, said, "As India moves into the next phase of financial deepening, the focus must shift from simply expanding credit to improving the quality, accessibility, and sustainability of finance. While capital availability has improved, the real opportunity lies in making finance more affordable, flexible, and aligned to the cash-flow realities of households, MSMEs, and emerging entrepreneurs. The Union Budget 2026 can play a meaningful role by deepening domestic liquidity and strengthening risk-sharing frameworks such as credit guarantees and co-lending structures."

He also emphasised the need to encourage stable long-term savings and recognise high levels of tax compliance to strengthen trust and participation in the formal financial system.

Vivek Iyer, Partner and Financial Services Risk Advisory Leader at Grant Thornton Bharat, said banking sector reforms are expected to focus on consolidation, innovation, technology and private capital.

He said, "We expect reforms on the banking sector to be focused on consolidation, innovation, technology and private capital. Consolidation may be aimed at easing the process of mergers and acquisitions in the small finance bank and urban co-op bank space. Innovation announcements may be centred on the use of new technology such as AI and Quantum computing."

On private capital, he said reforms could include higher FDI limits for public sector banks and tax rationalisation for foreign banks to improve investor sentiment.

Pranav Haridasan, MD and CEO, Axis Securities, said markets are looking for continuity, credibility and execution in Budget 2026-27.

He added, "From a capital markets perspective, stability in taxation and policy consistency matter more than headline announcements. With India increasingly positioned as a structural growth market for global and domestic investors, a pragmatic approach to capital market taxation and long-term savings will be important to sustain participation and depth. A growth-supportive, fiscally disciplined Budget that reinforces confidence in India's macro framework would be a clear positive for both the economy and markets."

So the experts outlined that the financial sector is looking for a Union Budget 2026 that goes beyond headline reforms and focuses on strengthening the foundations of the financial system. They stressed the need for policy measures that ease capital constraints, improve liquidity availability and support responsible credit expansion.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
As a small business owner, the most important thing is tax stability. Every budget we are anxious about new changes. Please, no surprises in capital gains tax or anything that affects long-term savings like ELSS. Let us plan with confidence.
R
Rohit P
Consolidation of small finance banks is a double-edged sword. It might bring stability, but could also reduce competition and focus on the niche segments they serve. Hope the government ensures the 'last-mile' customer isn't forgotten in the pursuit of bigger banks.
M
Michael C
Working in fintech here in Bangalore, the mention of AI and Quantum computing is exciting. But the budget must also allocate funds for digital infrastructure and cybersecurity. A push for innovation is useless if people don't trust the system.
S
Shreya B
Absolutely agree with the need for credit guarantees and co-lending. Banks are still very risk-averse when it comes to lending to women entrepreneurs or first-time business owners. A strong framework to share the risk can unlock so much potential in tier-2 and tier-3 cities.
V
Vikram M
Policy stability is the key word. Foreign investors are watching. Frequent changes in FDI rules or tax treaties create uncertainty. For India to become a true financial hub, we need a predictable, long-term policy roadmap, not populist budget announcements.
K

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