Wednesday, April 1, 2026
28.1 C
New Delhi

Budget 2026 Expectations: Operation Sindoor Shows Why Defence Spend Must Rise To 2.5% Of GDP

Show Quick Read

Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

Operation Sindoor has just reminded New Delhi that the Pak-China military axis is deepening in real time. The only credible answer is to lift defence spending to 2.5% of GDP, push capital outlays above ₹1 trillion and double the R&D slice before the next crisis rings
the doorbell.

On the morning after Operation Sindoor, two facts became undeniable. First, Rawalpindi and Beijing are no longer “parallel” irritants; they are synchronising doctrine, logistics and even missile footprints. Second, the eastern border is no longer a dormant flank-Dhaka’s internal churn has opened a third potential front. A country that once planned for a “two-and-a-half front” contingency must now insure against a full “three-front” war. That insurance premium is called the Union Budget 2026-27.

The finance ministry has reportedly received a 20% hike request from South Block-well above the customary 8-10% annual increment. Applied to the current year’s ₹6.81 lakh crore (81 billion), the number crosses ₹8.17 lakh crore, nudging India towards the psychological 100 billion mark. Is it large? Yes. Is it abnormal? Not if you realise that a single Multi-Role Fighter Aircraft (MRFA) tender, six Project-75(I) nuclear submarines and two additional S-400 squadrons will swallow almost ₹2 lakh crore over the next seven years-money that
cannot be “found” through the usual year-end juggling.

The headline figure, however, will matter only if the capital outlay (CAPEX) jumps correspondingly. This year’s capex is a meagre 24-25 billion-barely 0.7% of GDP and less than one-third of the total defence pie. For a nation ring-fenced by adversaries, that is abysmal. Industry and the Services have therefore pitched for a ₹45,000 crore capex bump in 2026-27, which would push the hardware wallet past the 40 billion mark (≈1% of GDP). The medium-term goal is clearer: defence capex must climb to 2% of GDP so that India stops importing emergency spares on the eve of every stand-off.

DRDO Chief Samir V. Kamat’s slide that went viral last month said it plainly: India devotes 5.75% of its defence budget to research and development; the United States allocates more than 10%. That gap explains why we still import engines for the Tejas, seek foreign seekers for our missiles and rent satellite bandwidth on the eve of every operation. A 20% overall hike gives the government head-room to double the R&D share to 10% without cutting a single bullet from the pension book. When folded into the new “mission-mode” funding route-where private start-ups can bid alongside HAL, BEL and shipyards-the extra ₹16,000 crore for science could seed an Indian version of DARPA within this decade.

Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu have built swanky defence industrial corridors; ribbon-cuttings are over, but the assembly lines are thirsty for firm orders. A 20% budgetary surge, with 25% of it ear-marked for domestic procurement, translates into ₹50,000 crore of local
contracts-enough to keep drone, missile and radar factories humming through the next downturn. More importantly, the government is finalising a rule-change that will allow private consortia to “co-develop” prototypes with the Services, ending the monopoly of PSU-led
development teams and compressing 10-year cycles into four.

China’s DF-41 brigades in Xinjiang and Pakistan’s Babur-III sea-launched cruise missile together compress India’s nuclear response window. MIRV-ing India’s own Agni-P, stationing a third SSBN on patrol and building hardened silos in the foothills all cost money-precisely the kind of “black” line-items that get sacrificed when the topline is frozen. A 2.5% GDP defence envelope would let the Strategic Forces Command modernise without cannibalising the conventional slice.

Can a developing economy afford 100 billion on defence? Flip the question: can a 4 trillion economy afford to be invaded? India’s debt-to-GDP ratio has stabilised, the tax base is widening and the fiscal deficit is targeted below 4.5% next year. A one-time 50-basis-point
re-prioritisation-roughly what the country spends annually on petroleum subsidies-will buy a decade of deterrence. Moreover, every additional rupee spent on indigenous hardware comes back as GST, corporate tax and employee income-tax within three financial years,
making the “net” cost of defence spending significantly lower than the headline outlay.

Operation Sindoor was not just a military success; it was a geopolitical invoice. The bill lists three aggressive fronts, a tightening technology denial regime and the urgent need to field unmanned swarms, long-range precision fires and underwater leg of the nuclear triad. Paying that bill through a 20% defence hike is therefore not fiscal adventurism-it is the minimum insurance premium for a nation that intends to survive the 21st century on its own terms. If the finance minister signs the cheque in July, she will not be buying weapons; she will be buying time for India to become the very great power it aspires to be.

Go to Source

Hot this week

PM Modi chairs CCS meet to review fuel, fertiliser, essential supplies amid West Asia conflict

A special meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Wednesday reviewed the steps taken in view of the ongoing conflict in West Asia and assessed the availability of critical needs of the common man. Read More

‘April Fools’ Joke’: Iran Mocks Trump’s ‘New Regime’ Claim, Denies Ceasefire Request

Iran mocks Trump for claiming a new Iranian regime sought a ceasefire, calls his remarks an April Fools joke and false, denies requesting any truce tied to reopening Hormuz Go to Source Read More

India To Host Iran, UAE In May As Part Of BRICS Foreign Ministers’ Meet Amid West Asia Crisis

India is actively seeking a common position on the West Asia crisis, and has said BRICS members are directly involved in the situation making it difficult to forge consensus Go to Source Read More

Mahima Chaudhry recalls almost rejecting Big B’s Baghban

Baghban, directed by Ravi Chopra, remains one of those rare films that continues to divide audiences even decades after its release. Read More

MS Dhoni To Play On April 3 Against Punjab? Major Update Before CSK vs PBKS Match

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom IPL 2026: Chennai Super Kings (CSK) fans have received a massive boost as legendary wicketkeeper batter MS Dhoni has officially returned to the practice nets. Read More

Topics

PM Modi chairs CCS meet to review fuel, fertiliser, essential supplies amid West Asia conflict

A special meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Wednesday reviewed the steps taken in view of the ongoing conflict in West Asia and assessed the availability of critical needs of the common man. Read More

‘April Fools’ Joke’: Iran Mocks Trump’s ‘New Regime’ Claim, Denies Ceasefire Request

Iran mocks Trump for claiming a new Iranian regime sought a ceasefire, calls his remarks an April Fools joke and false, denies requesting any truce tied to reopening Hormuz Go to Source Read More

India To Host Iran, UAE In May As Part Of BRICS Foreign Ministers’ Meet Amid West Asia Crisis

India is actively seeking a common position on the West Asia crisis, and has said BRICS members are directly involved in the situation making it difficult to forge consensus Go to Source Read More

Mahima Chaudhry recalls almost rejecting Big B’s Baghban

Baghban, directed by Ravi Chopra, remains one of those rare films that continues to divide audiences even decades after its release. Read More

MS Dhoni To Play On April 3 Against Punjab? Major Update Before CSK vs PBKS Match

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom IPL 2026: Chennai Super Kings (CSK) fans have received a massive boost as legendary wicketkeeper batter MS Dhoni has officially returned to the practice nets. Read More

Sheikh Hasina Challenges Death Sentence From Exile, Demands Fair Trial

Former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has demanded that the death sentence handed to her last year be set aside as “legally void”, and that any further proceedings comply with international fair trial standards. Read More

Indian Navy was minutes away from striking Pakistan from sea during Op Sindoor, says Navy chief

The Indian Navy was minutes away from striking Pakistan from the sea during Operation Sindoor when Islamabad requested stoppage of kinetic actions, Navy chief Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi said on Wednesday. Read More

IPL 2026: Sameer Rizvi’s Fearless Fifty Steers Delhi Capitals To 6-Wicket Win Over LSG

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom IPL 2026: LSG vs DC – TheDelhi Capitals (DC) started theirIPL 2026 campaign with a dominant performance at theEkana Stadium, chasing down a target of 142 with 17 bal Read More

Related Articles