Capex scale-up


UPSC Study Note: Capex Scale-Up — Union Budget 2026-27


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Capex (₹ lakh crore) Key Rationale
2019-20 ~3.4 Pre-pandemic baseline
2020-21 ~4.1 Post-COVID stimulus pivot
2021-22 5.5 NIP acceleration
2022-23 7.5 35% jump; crowd-in private investment
2023-24 10.0 Crossed ₹10 lakh crore milestone
2024-25 11.1 (BE) Moderated due to election year
2025-26 11.2 (BE) / 10.9 (RE) Slight compression at RE stage
2026-27 12.2 (BE) Record high

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Key Terms - Capital Expenditure: Spending that creates physical/financial assets or reduces liabilities; distinguished from Revenue Expenditure (operational costs). - Effective Capex: Capital Expenditure + Grants-in-Aid for Capital Assets to states/UTs. - Fiscal Multiplier: Estimated at 2.45–4.8x for infrastructure Capex in India (higher than revenue spending multiplier of ~0.98). [S1] - Capex-to-GDP Ratio: Targeted to cross 3.1% in 2026-27 (vs ~2.9% in 2025-26). [S1][S2]

Key Numbers — 2026-27 - Total Capex (BE): ₹12,21,821 crore [S1] - Increase over RE 2025-26: +11.5% (₹10.9 lakh crore → ₹12.2 lakh crore) [S1] - Top sectoral allocations: Roads & Transport, Railways, Defence [S1][S3]

Implementing Authority - Ministry of Finance (Budget formulation); Ministry of Road Transport & Highways, Ministry of Railways, Ministry of Defence (major spenders). [S3] - States: Centre allocates ₹1.5 lakh crore (approx.) as 50-year interest-free loans to states for Capex. [S2]

Enabling Framework - FRBM Act, 2003: Governs fiscal deficit ceiling; Capex is exempt from FRBM escape clause considerations under certain conditions. - Article 112: Requirement to present Annual Financial Statement (Budget) before Parliament.


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Social

Environmental

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's Capex in Union Budget 2026-27 is ₹12,21,821 crore (≈ ₹12.2 lakh crore) — the highest ever. [S1]
  2. This represents an 11.5% increase over Revised Estimates of 2025-26 (₹10.9 lakh crore). [S1]
  3. Nirmala Sitharaman presented Budget 2026-27 — her ninth consecutive Budget, a record for any Finance Minister. [Article]
  4. Effective Capex = Capital Expenditure + Grants-in-Aid for Capital Asset creation to states — a broader metric than headline Capex. [S1]
  5. Top three Capex-absorbing ministries in 2026-27: Road Transport & Highways, Railways, Defence. [S3]
  6. States receive ~₹1.5 lakh crore as 50-year interest-free loans from Centre for state-level Capex. [S2]
  7. Fiscal deficit target for 2026-27: 4.4% of GDP (balancing record Capex with consolidation path). [S2]
  8. NIP (National Infrastructure Pipeline) launched in 2019-20 targeted ₹111 lakh crore in infra over 2019–25 — foundation of Capex push. [S1]
  9. PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan (Oct 2021) provides multi-modal, GIS-based Capex coordination platform. [S1]
  10. Capital Goods sector strengthening scheme announced via PIB in 2026 to reduce import dependency for infrastructure machinery. [S3]
  11. India's Capex-to-GDP ratio in 2026-27 is targeted at ~3.1% — among the highest in post-reform history. [S1][S2]
  12. Customs duty reductions in Budget 2026-27 target: marine products, leather, textiles, energy transition inputs. [Article]
  13. FRBM Act, 2003 governs the fiscal deficit pathway within which Capex scale-up must operate.
  14. Infrastructure fiscal multiplier in India: ~2.45x to 4.8x — significantly higher than revenue expenditure multiplier (~0.98x). [S1]
  15. The revised estimate for Capex in 2025-26 was ₹10.9 lakh crore, down from the budgeted ₹11.2 lakh crore — a first significant downward revision. [Article]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Indian Economy — Government Budgeting; Infrastructure; Mobilisation of Resources
GS-II Government Policies & Interventions; Federalism (State Capex loans)
GS-III Effects of Liberalisation on the Economy; Employment; Growth

Plausible Mains Questions

  1. "Discuss the significance of sustained capital expenditure scale-up by the Government of India since 2020-21. What are the structural bottlenecks that constrain its effective utilisation?" (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "Critically examine the relationship between public Capex, private investment crowding-in, and employment generation in India's current economic context." (GS-III, 15 marks)
  3. "The Centre's interest-free loans to states for capital expenditure represent a significant evolution in fiscal federalism. Analyse its implications for cooperative federalism and sub-national debt sustainability." (GS-II, 10 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) Macro framework that justifies and channels Capex scale-up
PM Gati Shakti Master Plan Implementation architecture for multi-modal Capex deployment
Fiscal Responsibility & Budget Management (FRBM) Act Legal constraint on fiscal deficit within which Capex operates
Fiscal Federalism & Finance Commission State Capex loans, devolution, and sub-national infrastructure financing
Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Models Complement to public Capex; needed when government headroom is constrained
Capital Goods Sector Domestic supply-side enabler of cost-effective infrastructure creation
Fiscal Multiplier & Keynesian Economics Theoretical basis for Capex-led growth strategy
Union Budget Structure & Fiscal Policy Parent topic; Capex is one instrument within the broader fiscal toolkit

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing BE and RE figures: Budget Estimate (BE) for 2025-26 was ₹11.2 lakh crore; Revised Estimate (RE) was ₹10.9 lakh crore; 2026-27 BE is ₹12.2 lakh crore. Mixing these in an answer is a common factual error.
  2. Capex vs Effective Capex: MCQs may test whether students know "Effective Capex" includes grants to states for capital asset creation — it is always larger than headline Capex.
  3. Confusing Capex-to-GDP with Fiscal Deficit-to-GDP: These are separate ratios. A high Capex ratio is desirable; the fiscal deficit ratio is the constraining one.
  4. Attribution of NIP vs Gati Shakti: NIP is the financing framework (₹111 lakh crore pipeline); PM Gati Shakti is the implementation coordination platform (GIS-based). Students often conflate the two.
  5. Thinking Capex scale-up automatically implies fiscal irresponsibility: India is scaling Capex while simultaneously targeting fiscal consolidation (deficit at 4.4% of GDP in 2026-27 vs ~9.2% in 2020-21). The two are not mutually exclusive — compression of revenue expenditure accommodates Capex growth.

11. Sources