Tamil Nadu's election-year budget focuses on welfare, growth and trillion-dollar promise

Tamil Nadu's interim budget for 2026-27, presented as the last of the DMK government's current term, emphasizes social justice, industrial growth and a one-trillion-dollar economy goal by Finance Minister Thangam Thennarasu. It argues that high growth and high redistribution can coexist. The budget criticizes the central government for financial hurdles while allocating funds to key schemes ahead of elections.

On Tuesday, February 18, 2026, Tamil Nadu Finance Minister Thangam Thennarasu presented the state's interim budget for 2026-27 worth ₹2.55 lakh crore in the assembly, allocating funds to key schemes ahead of elections. The budget blends welfare initiatives like the Kalaignar Magalir Urimai Thittam and Vidiyal Payanam free bus scheme with industrial ambitions.

Invoking poet Thiruvalluvar and recalling former Chief Minister M Karunanidhi's 1971 advice, Thennarasu stated: “The focus should be on identifying the means to mobilise the necessary financial resources for a well-conceived plan, rather than reducing plan expenditure or slowing the pace of development.” Tamil Nadu recorded 11.19% economic growth in 2024-25, topping major states, and contributes 41.23% to India's electronics exports.

It highlighted 1,179 investment MoUs worth ₹12.37 lakh crore, promising 36 lakh jobs. Industrial plans include 54 operational SIPCOT parks across 49,468 acres, a ₹5,200-crore shipbuilding cluster in Thoothukudi, and new TIDEL parks in tier-two cities. Welfare measures provide ₹1,000 monthly to 1.31 crore women under Kalaignar Magalir Urimai Thittam, with a recent ₹5,000 one-time credit. The Vidiyal Payanam scheme has enabled 881 crore trips, saving women an average ₹888 monthly. Social security pensions cover 35.33 lakh beneficiaries with ₹5,463 crore.

Allocations include ₹48,534 crore for school education, ₹22,090 crore for health, and ₹8,505 crore for higher education. The Chennai Metro Phase II, costing ₹63,246 crore for 118.9 km, is progressing, though the state accused the Union government of delaying approvals for Coimbatore and Madurai metros. On climate, Tamil Nadu ranked first in the NITI Aayog SDG Index 2023-24 and plans 100 billion units of renewable energy, with ₹18,091 crore to the energy department.

Thennarasu criticized the central government for withholding funds and unfair tax devolution. The 16th Finance Commission was termed disappointing, with Tamil Nadu's share growing by just 0.44%, compared to 23.7% for Kerala and 13.2% for Karnataka. Opposition leaders reacted: AIADMK chief Edappadi K Palaniswami called it “lacking substance” amid rising fiscal deficit to ₹1.22 lakh crore; BJP's Narayanan Thirupathy labeled it “deceptive self-promotion.” The budget seeks to balance industrial dynamism with social protection in an election year.

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Political rally in Puducherry with BJP leaders pledging development and warning against rivals ahead of elections.
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BJP pledges Puducherry development, warns against rivals

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Ahead of April 9 polls, BJP national president Nitin Nabin pledged to develop Puducherry. AIADMK general secretary Edappadi K. Palaniswami warned against DMK over alleged looting of liquor revenues. BJP leader A. Namassivayam criticised Congress on the Statehood issue.

AIADMK senior leader and former minister S. Semmalai urged political parties in Tamil Nadu to avoid announcing excessive freebies ahead of the assembly elections. He highlighted the state's rising debt and called for prioritizing capital expenditure on development over vote-bank welfare schemes.

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Kerala, renowned for its high literacy and life expectancy, is now grappling with mounting fiscal pressures that threaten its pro-people policies. The state's economy recorded a robust 6.5% growth in 2023-24, but high committed expenditures and reduced central shares pose significant hurdles. Remittances continue to bolster growth, yet unemployment and sectoral imbalances persist.

Karnataka has urged the 16th Finance Commission to revise funding formulas for a fairer share of central taxes, highlighting a drop in its allocation and the need for better disaster relief. Chief Minister Siddaramaiah emphasized the state's economic contributions and called for restoring its previous tax devolution percentage. The plea includes demands for infrastructure funding and incentives for decentralization.

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The 16th finance commission has released its recommendations for 2026-2031, retaining states' share in the divisible tax pool at 41 percent. Southern states' allocation has risen from 15.8 percent to 17 percent, while emphasizing privatization of the power distribution sector and debt cleanup. The commission urged states to discontinue off-budget borrowings and rationalize subsidy schemes.

India's Economic Survey 2025-26, tabled in Parliament on January 30, 2026, projects robust GDP growth amid global uncertainties and recommends key reforms for strategic resilience. It emphasizes manufacturing revival, digital curbs and policy overhauls to bolster economic stability. Prime Minister Narendra Modi praised it as a roadmap for inclusive development.

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The Cabinet has approved a massive Ksh4.7 trillion budget for the 2026/27 financial year, a significant rise from the previous year's allocation. This plan shifts focus to scaled-up investments across sectors to drive economic growth. The government expects to collect Ksh3.53 trillion in revenues against Ksh4.7 trillion in spending.

 

 

 

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