What does the Budget offer urban India?
UPSC Study Note — What Does the Budget Offer Urban India?
(Union Budget 2026-27 | Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs)
1. At a Glance
- Union Budget 2026-27 (presented February 1, 2026) reduced the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) Budget Estimate from ₹96,777 crore (BE 2025-26) to ₹85,522 crore (BE 2026-27) — a nominal cut of 11.6% or ₹11,255 crore. [S1][S2]
- Urban India hosts ~36% of the national population and contributes ~60% of GDP; budget allocations here are a proxy for the government's urbanisation seriousness.
- The topic is central to GS-II (governance, welfare schemes) and GS-III (infrastructure, inclusive growth) and frequently appears in both Prelims and Mains.
- The apparent contradiction — cities called "engines of development" in rhetoric but absorbing a fiscal contraction in numbers — is a classic Mains analytical theme. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- Union Budget 2026-27 presented by the Finance Minister on 1 February 2026 triggered debate when the headline MoHUA allocation showed an 11.6% cut in Budget Estimates year-on-year. [S1][S2]
- Critics, including urban policy analyst Tikender Singh Panwar writing in The Hindu (2 February 2026), argued that cities face mounting pressures — mass migration, climate stress, infrastructure fatigue — and the real cut (inflation-adjusted) is even sharper than the nominal figure. [S1]
- PRS India's Demand for Grants 2026-27 Analysis: Housing and Urban Affairs provided the granular scheme-level breakdown that underpins this debate. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2005 | JNNURM (Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission) — first major centrally-sponsored urban mission; targeted 65 cities |
| 2015 | Smart Cities Mission launched (100 cities); AMRUT (Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation) launched |
| 2015 | PMAY-Urban launched (housing for all by 2022 target) |
| 2022 | PMAY-Urban original deadline passed; target revised; PMAY-U 2.0 announced in Union Budget 2024-25 |
| 2024-25 | Smart Cities Mission substantially wound down; focus shifted to PMAY-U 2.0 and urban infrastructure |
| 2026-27 | BE cut by 11.6% even as PMAY-U BE rose 179% over RE 2025-26 — driven by prior-year underspending [S2] |
4. Core Static Facts
Ministry & Institutional Framework
- Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA)
- Constitutional basis: Urban local bodies — 74th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 (Articles 243P–243ZG); 12th Schedule lists 18 functions of municipalities
- Key regulatory body: None exclusive; scheme-wise implementation via State Urban Development Authorities / ULBs
Budget Numbers (BE 2026-27) [S2][S3]
| Scheme | BE 2025-26 (₹ cr) | RE 2025-26 (₹ cr) | BE 2026-27 (₹ cr) | Change (BE-to-BE) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MoHUA total | 96,777 | ~57,204 | 85,522 | −11.6% |
| PMAY-U (classic) | — | 3,200 | 6,000 | +87.5% |
| PMAY-U 2.0 | — | 4,300 | 12,625 | +193.6% |
| PMAY-U combined | — | ~7,900 (RE actual spend) | 22,025 | +179% over RE |
Note: The 49.5% increase cited by PRS compares BE 2026-27 vs. RE 2025-26 (not BE 2025-26). Both figures are correct depending on baseline. [S2]
Key Schemes under MoHUA
- PMAY-Urban 2.0 — 1 crore new urban houses targeted; interest subsidy + direct benefit transfer model
- AMRUT 2.0 — water supply & sanitation in cities with population >1 lakh; ₹10,000 crore outlay
- Smart Cities Mission — nearing closure; most funds already released to 100 cities
- PM SVANidhi — micro-credit for urban street vendors
- SWACHH Bharat Mission – Urban (SBM-U) 2.0 — solid waste management, ODF+
Underspending Problem [S2]
- In 2025-26, MoHUA could spend only ₹57,204 crore (RE) against a BE of ₹96,777 crore — an underspend of approximately ₹17,894 crore (~18.5%)
- This chronic underspending partly explains why BE 2026-27 has been pruned
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Urban areas contribute ~60% of India's GDP; underinvestment risks slowing productivity growth.
- Real estate and construction are among the largest employment generators; PMAY-U 2.0's ₹22,025 crore has strong multiplier effects on cement, steel, and labour markets. [S1]
- Inflation-adjusted urban capex is contracting faster than nominal numbers suggest — a deflationary signal for urban infrastructure bonds and PPP pipelines. [S1]
Social
- India's urban population (~500 million, 2026) faces acute affordable housing shortage — estimated at 18.78 million units (EWS/LIG segments).
- PMAY-U 2.0 explicitly targets Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) and Low-Income Groups (LIG), with a gender mandate: house ownership or joint ownership for women.
- PM SVANidhi directly addresses the livelihoods of ~50 lakh urban street vendors, a predominantly informal and marginalised workforce.
Environmental
- Urban areas account for ~70% of India's GHG emissions; budget allocations for green buildings, transit-oriented development, and climate-resilient infrastructure remain thin. [S1]
- SBM-U 2.0's focus on zero-waste cities and faecal sludge management has direct public health co-benefits.
- Climate stress (urban heat islands, flooding) identified by the article as a mounting challenge cities must absorb with shrinking budgets. [S1]
Administrative / Governance
- Persistent underspending (~18.5% in 2025-26) reveals capacity constraints at State/ULB level — not just fund availability, but absorptive capacity.
- 74th Amendment devolved 18 functions to ULBs in theory; in practice, most ULBs lack own-source revenue, remaining grant-dependent.
- Tension between centrally-sponsored scheme architecture (conditionalities, utilisation certificates) and ULB-level last-mile delivery is a structural bottleneck.
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 243W mandates State legislatures to endow ULBs with requisite powers; implementation varies sharply across States.
- 12th Schedule functions (urban planning, land use, regulation of slums, public health) are devolved on paper but States retain significant control.
- SC ruling in Bondu Ramaswamy v. BBMP (2010) and subsequent cases affirm ULBs' right to adequate resources for devolved functions.
Historical
- JNNURM (2005–14) released ~₹66,000 crore; its successor missions (2015 onwards) shifted to mission-mode with hard timelines rather than open-ended grants.
- Pre-JNNURM, urban investment was largely State-sector, with minimal Centre participation beyond slum clearance.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Feb 2026: Union Budget 2026-27 presented; MoHUA BE cut 11.6% to ₹85,522 crore; PMAY-U 2.0 BE raised to ₹12,625 crore. [S2][S3]
- Feb 2026: Finance Minister reaffirmed "Viksit Bharat" and cities as "engines of development" in Budget speech — widely critiqued as rhetorical given the allocation cut. [S1]
- 2025-26 RE: MoHUA severely underspent its Budget; only ~₹57,204 crore released vs ₹96,777 crore budgeted — indicating systemic absorption failure. [S2]
- 2024-25: PMAY-U 2.0 announced — targets 1 crore urban houses with a revised financing model (direct benefit transfer + credit-linked subsidy).
- Smart Cities Mission: Effectively wound down post-2024 after most funds utilised; no fresh allocations in 2026-27 of significance. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- MoHUA's Budget Estimate 2026-27: ₹85,522 crore — down 11.6% from BE 2025-26 (₹96,777 crore). [S2]
- 74th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 — constitutional basis for urban local self-government; added Part IX-A and 12th Schedule to the Constitution.
- 12th Schedule lists 18 functions that may be assigned to municipalities.
- PMAY-U 2.0 BE 2026-27: ₹12,625 crore; combined PMAY-U (both phases): ₹22,025 crore — a 179% jump over RE 2025-26. [S2]
- AMRUT 2.0 targets cities with population >1 lakh (AMRUT 1.0 covered 500 cities with population >1 lakh or special category).
- Smart Cities Mission originally covered 100 cities; launched 2015; nearing closure by 2025.
- PM SVANidhi — micro-credit scheme for urban street vendors; implementing Ministry: MoHUA (not Ministry of Finance).
- Urban underspending in 2025-26: approximately ₹17,894 crore below Budget Estimate. [S2]
- Urban areas contribute approximately 60% of India's GDP while housing ~36% of population.
- JNNURM (2005–14) was the predecessor to the current cluster of urban missions; targeted 65 cities in its core phase.
- SBM-U 2.0 (Swachh Bharat Mission–Urban 2.0) focuses on ODF++ and zero-landfill cities — launched 2021.
- The constitutional provision enabling States to devolve urban functions is Article 243W (not 243D, which pertains to rural bodies).
- MoHUA — implementing ministry for PMAY-U, Smart Cities, AMRUT, SBM-U, PM SVANidhi, HRIDAY.
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development; welfare schemes; issues relating to poverty and hunger; urbanisation |
| GS-III | Infrastructure: housing, urban planning; inclusive growth; mobilisation of resources |
| GS-I | Urbanisation, their problems and their remedies; population and associated issues |
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Union Budget 2026-27 treats cities as residual rather than growth-critical investment spaces." Critically examine with reference to allocations for housing and urban infrastructure. (GS-III) 2. Analyse the structural reasons for chronic underspending in centrally-sponsored urban schemes. What reforms are needed to improve absorptive capacity of Urban Local Bodies? (GS-II) 3. The 74th Constitutional Amendment devolved 18 functions to municipalities, yet urban governance in India remains fragmented and fiscally weak. Discuss. (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| 74th Constitutional Amendment & Devolution | Constitutional backbone of ULB autonomy; directly linked to urban governance debates |
| PMAY (Urban & Rural) — comparative analysis | Both fall under "Housing for All"; comparing urban vs rural allocation trends is a common Mains angle |
| Smart Cities Mission — outcomes audit | Mission nearing closure; evaluating what 100 cities achieved vs. promised is a live governance question |
| Urban Heat Islands & Climate Adaptation | Budget cuts + climate stress intersection; relevant to GS-I & GS-III environment-urbanisation nexus |
| Fiscal Federalism & Own-Source Revenue of ULBs | ULB financial dependency on Centre/State grants is root cause of absorption failures |
| Informal Economy & Urban Poverty (SECC, NSS data) | Context for PMAY-U targeting and street vendor schemes |
| National Urban Policy Framework | Proposed umbrella policy for Indian cities — links to Viksit Bharat 2047 urbanisation vision |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing BE-to-BE vs RE-to-BE comparisons: The 11.6% cut (article) uses BE 2025-26 as baseline. The 49.5% increase (PRS) uses RE 2025-26. Both are correct; examiners may test which comparison is methodologically sound.
- AMRUT vs Smart Cities target cities: AMRUT targets 500 cities (population-based); Smart Cities Mission selected 100 cities (competitive challenge process). Don't conflate.
- PMAY-U implementing ministry: It is MoHUA, not the Ministry of Finance or NITI Aayog.
- 12th Schedule vs 11th Schedule: 11th Schedule = Panchayats (29 subjects); 12th Schedule = Municipalities (18 subjects). Common swap error.
- Article 243W vs 243D: 243W = powers/authority/responsibilities of municipalities; 243D = reservation of seats in Panchayats. Do not mix these up.
11. Sources
- [S1] Tikender Singh Panwar, "What does the Budget offer urban India?" — The Hindu, 2 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-02/ (Tier 4 — article excerpt provided as primary source)
- [S2] PRS India, "Demand for Grants 2026-27 Analysis: Housing and Urban Affairs" — https://prsindia.org/budgets/parliament/demand-for-grants-2026-27-analysis-housing-and-urban-affairs (Tier 1)
- [S3] Ministry of Finance / IndiabudGet.gov.in, "Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs — Demand for Grants Statements BE 2026-27" — https://www.indiabudget.gov.in/doc/eb/sbe60.pdf (Tier 1)
Sources: - Demand for Grants 2026-27 Analysis : Housing and Urban Affairs (PRS India) - Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs Demand for Grants — IndiabudGet.gov.in - Union Budget 2026-27 Analysis — PRS India