Chandigarh, Feb 01: As the Union Budget 2026–27 approaches, leaders across sectors have shared their perspectives on policy priorities that can accelerate India’s economic growth, strengthen global competitiveness, and support innovation-led development.

Accounting, Compliance, and Global Business Structuring
Mr. Satya Yeruva, Co-Founder & CEO, FinStackk, highlighted the importance of tax certainty and procedural simplification for startups and global businesses.

“Faster and fully automated GST refunds, clearer guidance on transfer pricing and foreign remittances, and rationalised compliance timelines would significantly ease the burden on businesses. Additional incentives for SaaS and fintech-led service providers, investment in digital public infrastructure for finance, and continued support for MSME formalisation will strengthen India as a preferred base for global entrepreneurship. A stable policy environment enables businesses to scale confidently while maintaining strong governance and financial transparency,” he said.

Digital Marketing and AI Adoption
Mr. Akhil Nair, Founder & CEO, BigTrunk Communications, emphasised the need for the Budget to align with modern marketing realities.

“Marketing is now a core driver of India’s digital economy, and policy support must enable AI-led innovation and advanced analytics. Allocations supporting AI/ML research for marketing, along with incentives for MSMEs to adopt MarTech tools like CRM, automation, and analytics, can accelerate ecosystem maturity. Simpler compliance and clearer taxation for digital service exports will help Indian agencies compete globally, while continued investment in Digital Public Infrastructure will strengthen omnichannel growth and export-readiness,” he said.

Food Processing and Frozen Foods
Mr. Ekansh Garg, Co-founder & CEO, Cravicious Foods, called for stronger policy support for value-added agriculture and food processing.

“With rising demand for hygienic, convenient, and ready-to-cook foods, the Budget should prioritise cold-chain infrastructure, modern processing facilities, and advanced freezing technologies. Incentives for in-house manufacturing, quality certification, and energy-efficient cold storage will help domestic brands scale sustainably and reduce wastage. Simplified compliance, GST rationalisation, and easier access to working capital will accelerate growth for bootstrapped manufacturers, positioning India as a global hub for high-quality frozen foods,” he said.

Gems and Jewellery
Mr. C Vinod Hayagriv, Managing Director & Director, C. Krishniah Chetty Group of Jewellers, stressed pragmatic reforms to restore sector momentum.

“A reduction in gold import duty to 3% would ease cost pressures and revive livelihoods across the value chain. Greater transparency through publication of gold bar numbers on customs portals and more flexible inventory management can help mitigate challenges from high metal prices and lower sales. These steps are critical to sustaining small and medium jewellery businesses in a challenging global environment,” he said.

Electronics and Original Design Manufacturing
Mr. Shishir Gupta, Co-founder & CEO, Oakter, urged the Budget to support India’s journey from assembly-led production to innovation-driven manufacturing.

“Priority areas should include design-linked incentives, deeper component localisation, easier access to working capital, and expansion of PLI support for ODM-led manufacturing. Incentives for batteries, power electronics, IoT hardware, and semiconductor supply chains, coupled with stable GST structures and faster input tax credits, will help Indian manufacturers move up the value chain, create IP-driven products, and emerge as trusted global suppliers,” he said.

Electric Mobility
Mr. Sameer Moidin, Founder & CEO, EVeium Smart Mobility, called for policies that scale domestic EV manufacturing.

“The Union Budget must focus on Make-in-India electric two-wheelers that are designed, manufactured, and scaled domestically. Incentives should support battery localisation, affordable financing, mass production, and robust charging infrastructure, making EVs practical for all users. This will strengthen supply chains, create jobs, and position India as a global EV leader,” he said.

Healthcare
As India’s healthcare sector evolves, industry leaders emphasised that the Budget should strategically support digital health, medical infrastructure, skill development, and research-led innovation to improve access, quality, and affordability for all citizens.