“The ₹1.27 lakh crore J&K Budget (2026–27)presented by Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Friday this week acts as a “fiscal compass,” aiming to drive economic growth while managing the region’s structural deficits and reliance on federal funding.”
Chief Minister Omar Abdullah’s Rs 1.27 lakh crore Budget for 2026–27 marks an important moment for Jammu and Kashmir, not merely because of its size, but for the political and economic signals it seeks to send. Presented as a “fiscal compass”, the Budget reflects an attempt to balance growth ambitions with the hard constraints of a Union Territory still dependent on central support and burdened by structural fiscal challenges. At the macro level, the Budget projects continuity rather than disruption. With gross receipts and expenditure pegged at Rs 1,27,767 crore and net estimates at Rs 1,13,767 crore, the government has chosen stability over populist excess. The division between revenue expenditure (Rs 80,640 crore) and capital expenditure (Rs 33,127 crore) underlines a familiar tension: the need to invest in future growth while meeting present obligations. Nearly 60 per cent of expenditure being committed to salaries, pensions and debt servicing leaves limited fiscal space, a reality the Chief Minister acknowledged with unusual candour. The growth projections—GDP rising to Rs 3.15 lakh crore with a steady 9.5 per cent increase—are optimistic but not implausible. Yet the decline in the tax-to-GDP ratio from 7.5 per cent to 6.6 per cent raises questions about revenue buoyancy. With Jammu and Kashmir’s own revenues meeting barely a quarter of its budgetary needs, dependence on central assistance—Rs 42,752 crore in aid and Rs 13,400 crore under centrally sponsored schemes—remains unavoidable. This structural imbalance continues to limit fiscal autonomy, even as elected governance has returned. Where the Budget gains political and moral weight is in its welfare orientation. Full fee waivers for economically weaker students, support for orphans, free LPG cylinders, transport concessions for persons with disabilities, and scholarships for tribal students reflect a conscious effort to cushion vulnerable sections after a year marked by terror attacks, floods and economic disruption. These measures are not fiscally transformative, but they are socially significant in a region where trust in governance remains fragile.
This year’s Jammu and Kashmir budget maintains a manageable 3.69% fiscal deficit, prioritizing incremental progress over radical change. By focusing on power sector reforms and capital investment for infrastructure, the budget aims to restore institutional confidence and governance through careful planning. Its ultimate success depends on tangible ground-level outcomes rather than political rhetoric.”
The emphasis on agriculture, horticulture and allied sectors—crop insurance for apple and saffron growers, irrigation expansion, storage facilities and livestock improvement—addresses the backbone of the rural economy. Equally notable is the focus on youth and education through JK e-Pathshala DTH channels, modernised anganwadis and sports infrastructure. However, the success of these initiatives will depend less on announcements and more on execution, an area where past budgets have often fallen short. Abdullah’s repeated stress on fiscal discipline, austerity measures and debt management signals an awareness of limits. The projected fiscal deficit of 3.69 per cent, though slightly higher than revised estimates, remains within manageable bounds. Reforms in the power sector and the use of Special Assistance to States for Capital Investment funds for infrastructure and disaster mitigation could, if effectively implemented, ease long-term financial stress. Ultimately, this Budget is cautious, consultative and incremental. It does not promise miracles, nor does it radically alter Jammu and Kashmir’s economic trajectory. Instead, it seeks to restore confidence—among citizens, investors and institutions that governance is again about planning, prioritising and listening. Whether this fiscal compass truly points towards sustainable prosperity will be judged not in speeches, but in outcomes on the ground.


