Modi's Budget Reforms Drive India Towards Viksit Bharat 2047 Goal

Union Budgets under Prime Minister Narendra Modi since 2014 have served as key instruments for economic transformation and policy reform. Initial budgets focused on raising tax exemption limits, increasing FDI caps, and launching the ambitious 100 Smart Cities mission. The recent 2025-26 budget introduces a landmark new Income Tax Bill, provides significant relief to salaried individuals, and launches major initiatives for farmers, manufacturing, and technology. These cumulative reforms aim to boost ease of doing business, increase disposable income, and set India firmly on the path to becoming a developed nation by 2047.

Key Points: Modi's Budget Reforms Pave Road to Viksit Bharat

  • Income tax exemption raised & new regime introduced
  • FDI cap in defence/insurance raised to 49%
  • 100 Smart Cities plan launched with Rs 7,060 crore
  • New Income Tax Bill 2025 replaces 60-year-old law
  • Major push for manufacturing, farming, and tech with new missions
3 min read

Union Budget: PM Modi govt on road to reform towards 'Viksit Bharat' goal

How Union Budgets from 2014 to 2025 transformed taxes, boosted FDI, and fueled reforms for a developed India by 2047.

"Fiscal deficit to be reduced to 4.4 per cent in FY26... the PM Modi government is firmly on the road to reform towards Viksit Bharat at 2047. - Budget Analysis"

New Delhi, Jan 25

The Union Budgets under Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the last 11 years have become a vehicle of transformation and policy reforms, ensuring ease of doing business for industries, including MSMEs and startups, and more purchasing power for the common people.

In the first Union Budget 2014-15 under the PM Modi government, the personal income tax exemption limit was raised from Rs 2 lakh to Rs 2.5 lakh (and to Rs 3 lakh for senior citizens). Additionally, the investment limit under Section 80C was increased from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 1.5 lakh.

Notably, in a move to attract global capital and modernise infrastructure, the FDI cap in the defence and insurance sectors was raised from 26 per cent to 49 per cent.

The government also announced an ambitious plan to develop 100 Smart Cities across the country as satellite towns of larger cities and by modernising existing mid-sized cities, allocating an initial Rs 7,060 crore.

The budget had emphasised the "Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana" for rural roads and proposed the development of new airports and facilitating the wide use of the PPP Models.

Fast forward to Union Budget 2025-26, and we can see how the government has not only kept its promises but doubled down on reforms.

The Income Tax Bill, 2025, marks a significant step towards replacing India's six-decade-old direct tax framework, with the government seeking to balance investor confidence, taxpayer relief, and administrative efficiency with the new law.

The tax policy reforms include those in corporate tax, where a tax rate of 22 per cent was provided to those companies that do not claim specified deductions and exemptions and a 15 per cent tax rate for new manufacturing companies for a specified period, and in individual taxation, where the new tax regime provides for liberal slabs and lower rates with increased rebates.

The individuals earning up to Rs 12 lakh (Rs 12.75 lakh effectively for salaried taxpayers, due to standard deduction of Rs 75,000) are not required to pay tax by these slabs, rates and rebates -- thus boosting savings, consumption, and disposable income of salaried households.

Moreover, Rs 1.7 crore farmers are set to benefit under PM Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana, covering 100 low-productivity districts, along with Mission Aatmanirbharta in Pulses and higher KCC loans up to Rs 5 lakh.

The credit guarantee limit was doubled from Rs 5 crore to Rs 10 crore, the National Manufacturing Mission was launched, and major customs duty exemptions were announced in the last Budget to strengthen the 'Make in India' initiative and job creation.

Moreover, Rs 20,000 crore for private R&D, Rs 20,000 crore Nuclear SMR Mission, Rs 500 crore AI Centre for Education, and 50,000 Atal Tinkering Labs to build tech leadership were some other notable announcements in the Budget 2025-26.

"Fiscal deficit to be reduced to 4.4 per cent in FY26, FDI in insurance raised to 100 per cent, Jan Vishwas 2.0 to decriminalise laws, and major ease-of-doing-business tax and compliance reforms," show that the PM Modi government is firmly on the road to reform towards Viksit Bharat at 2047.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see benefits for farmers through PM Dhan-Dhaanya Yojana. My uncle in a village will be happy. However, I hope the Smart Cities and rural road funds actually reach the ground level and aren't just announcements on paper.
R
Rohit P
As someone working in a startup, the doubling of the credit guarantee limit to Rs 10 crore is a big relief! Ease of doing business has genuinely improved. The AI and R&D allocations show we are thinking about the future. 👍
S
Sarah B
The fiscal discipline to reduce deficit is impressive and sends a strong signal to global investors. 100% FDI in insurance will bring in much-needed capital and expertise. The roadmap for Viksit Bharat seems clear.
K
Karthik V
While the tax relief for salaried class is good, what about tackling inflation? My monthly grocery bill is still pinching. The budget talks about pulses, but prices need to come down for the common man to feel truly 'viksit'.
M
Meera T
50,000 Atal Tinkering Labs is a fantastic vision! Nurturing innovation from school level itself. This, along with the nuclear SMR mission, shows we are building capacity in critical tech. Future looks bright for our children.

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