More money for defence, now fix the process


More Money for Defence, Now Fix the Process

India's Defence Budget 2026-27 — UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter FY 2025-26 FY 2026-27
Total MoD Allocation ₹6,81,210 crore ₹7,85,000+ crore
% Change (YoY) +9.53% +15%
% of Union Budget 13.45% ~13-14%
% of GDP ~1.9% ~2%
Capital Outlay ₹1,80,000 crore Higher (capex >22% rise)
Modernisation Budget ₹1,48,722 crore
Domestic Procurement Share 75% (₹1,11,544 cr)
R&D + Infrastructure Capex ₹31,277 crore

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative / Governance

Scientific / Technological

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. India's defence allocation for FY 2026-27: ₹7.85 lakh crore — all-time high. [S1]
  2. The FY 2026-27 hike is 15% over FY 2025-26 BEs — first double-digit rise in decades. [S1]
  3. Defence spending as % of GDP in 2026-27: approximately 2% (up from 1.9% in 2025-26). [S4]
  4. MoD's share of Union Budget in FY 2025-26: 13.45% — highest among all ministries. [S2]
  5. Domestic procurement earmark in FY 2025-26 modernisation budget: 75% (₹1,11,544 crore). [S2]
  6. Modernisation (Capital Acquisition) budget in FY 2025-26: ₹1,48,722.80 crore. [S2]
  7. MoD fully utilised capital budget of ₹1.86 lakh crore in FY 2025-26 — a rare full-utilisation achievement. [S3]
  8. Indian Air Force received the highest service-level hike in 2026-27: +32%. [S4]
  9. Indian Army hike for heavy vehicles and weapons: +30%. [S4]
  10. Indian Navy received only +3% — attributed to indigenisation success and fund-absorption capability. [S4]
  11. FY 2025-26 allocation was ₹6,81,210.27 crore — a 9.53% rise over FY 2024-25. [S2]
  12. Interim Budget 2024-25 defence allocation: ₹6.21 lakh crore — 4.72% more than FY 2023-24. [S5]
  13. CLAWS (Centre for Land Warfare Studies) authors of the Feb 2026 editorial: Lt. Gen. (Retd.) Dushyant Singh and Tara Kartha. [S4]
  14. Revenue budget in defence covers: pay, allowances, pensions, operational running costs (not capital acquisition).
  15. Capital outlay on defence in FY 2025-26 constituted 26.43% of total MoD allocation. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Security challenges and their management; Indigenisation of technology; Government budgeting
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development; Role of Civil Services
GS-IV (Ethics) Governance, accountability, and transparency in public spending

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's defence budget for 2026-27 marks a historic 15% hike. Critically examine whether increased allocation alone is sufficient to address India's defence modernisation challenges." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "The shift from revenue-heavy to capital-heavy defence budgets is a structural necessity. Discuss the systemic reforms needed in India's defence procurement process to ensure optimal utilisation of enhanced allocations." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. "Analyse the relationship between Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence and India's strategic autonomy. How does domestic procurement earmarking in the defence budget serve both economic and security objectives?" (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2020 Governs how the enlarged capital budget is spent; procurement categories (Buy Indian-IDDM, etc.)
Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence The policy framework driving 75% domestic procurement; links to DPSUs, DRDO, and private sector
DRDO and Defence R&D Capital R&D sub-head within MoD budget; long-term technology development pipeline
India's Defence Exports Budget-funded domestic production underpins the ₹50,000 crore export target by 2028-29
India-China Border Tensions (LAC) Strategic rationale for the stepped-up defence budget; Galwan to present
India's Maritime Strategy / IOR Explains the anomaly of Navy's low 3% hike vs. its strategic commitments
Revenue vs. Capital Expenditure in Union Budget Core fiscal concept tested in Prelims — apply to defence budgeting context
NATO 2% GDP Defence Benchmark International comparator; India reaching 2% GDP defence spend is geopolitically significant

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing % of GDP with % of Union Budget: In 2026-27, defence is ~2% of GDP but ~13-14% of the Union Budget. These are different metrics; MCQs exploit this conflation.

  2. Attributing the 15% hike to FY 2025-26: The 15% historic jump belongs to FY 2026-27. FY 2025-26 saw only 9.53% growth.

  3. Assuming Navy got the largest hike given India's Indo-Pacific focus: Counterintuitively, Navy got the lowest hike (+3%); IAF got the most (+32%). The reason is the Navy's indigenisation success, not neglect.

  4. Treating all capital budget as modernisation: Capital outlay includes R&D and infrastructure. The modernisation (Capital Acquisition) sub-head was ₹1,48,722 crore in 2025-26, not the full ₹1,80,000 crore.

  5. Ignoring the process critique: The article's core argument is that money alone is insufficient — systemic change in procurement/budgeting process is equally necessary. Mains answers that ignore this dimension will be marked down on analytical depth.


11. Sources