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Feb 06, 2026

India’s Union Budget 2026–27 reinforces an investment-led growth strategy built on sustained public capital expenditure, targeted manufacturing incentives and greater regulatory predictability.


India is positioning itself as a long-term operating base, not just a low-cost entry market

What the budget delivers

Several Indian industries stand to gain immediate and measurable advantages:

  • Public capital expenditure has been raised to ₹12.2 lakh crore for FY27, extending the government’s infrastructure push to reduce logistics costs and attract private investment

  • A key structural shift is the creation of City Economic Regions (CERs), with ₹5,000 crore allocated per region over five years

Alongside accelerated Tier-II and Tier-III urbanization, this initiative fosters new industrial and services clusters beyond congested metros.


Companies operating in life sciences, advanced electronics and export-oriented manufacturing are some of the beneficiaries of the Budget’s multi-year incentive framework. Some of the programs rolled out are not just capacity creation, but ecosystem depth covering talent, infrastructure and regulatory facilitation.


Improvements in logistics infrastructure and integrated textile clusters enhance India’s competitiveness for firms with complex supply chains and distributed manufacturing footprints.


For services and IT, the Budget improves predictability through clearer tax frameworks, expanded safe-harbor rules, and extended incentives for data centers and cloud infrastructure.

The extension of tax holidays for foreign cloud providers using Indian data centers through 2047 underlines India’s ambition to remain a stable global delivery hub.

The changes for first-time India entrants

Companies are now evaluating India as a long-horizon platform within global operations. This places greater emphasis on site selection, state-level policy differences and execution certainty. At the same time, the margin for error has narrowed. Missteps in tax, customs or employment structuring can delay operations going-live and erode early gains.

Moving beyond metros

The Budget strengthens the case for moving beyond metros. Lower land and wage inflation, faster approvals linked to CER development and improving infrastructure make Tier-II and Tier-III clusters increasingly viable. Early entrants also gain the advantage of building local talent pipelines before competition intensifies.

Issues that slow expansion in India

Despite favorable policy signals, companies that want to expand in India continue to underestimate three issues that repeatedly slow expansion:

  • The gap between entity setup and operational readiness

  • Differences between central incentives and state-level execution

  • The complexity of multi-state labor compliance and employment models

Turning incentives into operating reality

Budget incentives reduce friction but do not eliminate complexity. Companies often need to hire teams, test locations or start operations before full entities and long-term structures are in place.


This is where P.R.GLOLINKS supports global companies as a risk-reducing entry and scaling partner. Through our EOR platform and advisory team, we enable pre-entity hiring, pilot teams and distributed workforce setups, while advising on when an EOR model is appropriate and when a local entity becomes essential. The focus remains on aligning location strategy, workforce planning and compliance as India-based operations scale.

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