A job well done
UPSC Study Note: Economic Survey 2025-26 — "A Job Well Done"
(Editorial Analysis, The Hindu, 31 January 2026)
1. At a Glance
- Economic Survey 2025-26 was tabled in Parliament on 29 January 2026 by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, one day before the Union Budget; authored by Chief Economic Adviser (CEA) V. Anantha Nageswaran. [S1][S2]
- Central conceptual pillar: the 'Entrepreneurial State' — a state that acts before certainty emerges, structures risk rather than avoids it, and learns systematically from experimentation. [S1]
- The Survey projects real GDP growth of ~6.4–6.7% for FY 2025-26 (first advance estimates) and frames India as a zone of macro-stability amid global flux. [S3]
- UPSC relevance spans GS-II (government policy), GS-III (Indian economy, growth, development), and is a near-certain source of both Prelims MCQs and Mains questions in any exam cycle following a Budget year.
2. Why in the News
- Economic Survey 2025-26 was presented to Parliament on 29 January 2026, the day before Union Budget 2026-27. [S2]
- The Survey's framing of an 'entrepreneurial state' and its frank acknowledgement of a 10–20% probability of a global economic crisis worse than 2008 generated significant editorial and policy commentary. [S4]
- The rupee's depreciation — attributed in the Survey not to domestic fundamentals but to capital flight toward AI-intensive economies and safe-haven assets — drew widespread debate. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
- The Economic Survey is an annual flagship document of the Ministry of Finance (Department of Economic Affairs), tabled the day before the Union Budget since the post-Independence era.
- V. Anantha Nageswaran was appointed CEA in January 2022; the 2025-26 Survey is his fourth.
- Earlier landmark Surveys under different CEAs introduced signature concepts: the 'hockey stick' growth projection (Arvind Subramanian era), Universal Basic Income debate (2016-17), 'Blue Economy' emphasis, etc. — each Survey anchoring the policy discourse of its year.
- The 2025-26 Survey follows the 2024-25 Survey, which flagged slowing private capex and over-reliance on government capital expenditure as key risks.
- The 'entrepreneurial state' concept draws on political economist Mariana Mazzucato's work (The Entrepreneurial State, 2013), adapted to India's development context. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Document | Economic Survey 2025-26 |
| Presented by | Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman |
| Date of presentation | 29 January 2026 |
| Authored by | CEA V. Anantha Nageswaran |
| Parent Ministry | Ministry of Finance → Department of Economic Affairs |
| Real GDP growth (FY26 estimate) | ~6.4–6.7% (First Advance Estimates); nominal GDP growth ~8.6% [S3] |
| FY25 actual growth | 7.1% real GDP |
| Central theme | 'Entrepreneurial State' — risk-taking, agile, experimentative policymaking |
| Global crisis probability (Survey's estimate) | 10–20% chance of crisis worse than 2008 by 2026 [S4] |
| Rupee depreciation cause (Survey's attribution) | Capital flows to AI-intensive economies + safe-haven assets, NOT domestic fundamentals [S4] |
| OECD global GDP forecast | 3.1% (2025), 3.0% (2026) [S3] |
| Mission-mode sectors cited | Semiconductors, Green Hydrogen [S1] |
| Strategic framing | Swadeshi → Strategic Resilience → Strategic Indispensability [S2] |
| Financial sector assessment | Monetary & financial sectors described as robust despite global uncertainty [S5] |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Survey projects India's macro fundamentals as stable even under adverse global scenarios; favourable picture backed by data on fiscal consolidation and financial sector health. [S5]
- Rupee depreciation flagged as import-cost risk (India is a net importer); weak rupee helps exporters but structurally burdens current account. [S4]
- Advocates private-sector capex revival as the critical next engine; government capex alone cannot sustain high-growth trajectory. [S3]
- OECD's downward revision of global GDP to 3.0–3.1% adds external headwinds for India's export-led growth ambitions. [S3]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Survey introduces India's three-stage strategic arc: Swadeshi → Strategic Resilience → Strategic Indispensability — signalling ambition to move from import-substitution to becoming an indispensable node in global supply chains. [S2]
- Capital flight to AI-intensive economies (US, China) is explicitly named as a macro-risk factor driving rupee weakness — first time an official document so directly links AI-sector competition to currency dynamics. [S4]
- Assigns 10–20% probability to a 2026 global downturn worse than 2008 — partly linked to protectionism, trade restrictions, and geopolitical fragmentation. [S4]
Governance / Administrative
- 'Entrepreneurial State' model requires mission-mode governance: pre-competitive public investment, restructured procurement enabling first-of-a-kind domestic innovation, trust-based compliance replacing inspection-based control. [S1]
- Survey urges a shift from compliance culture to capability culture in state institutions — a governance reform agenda, not merely an economic one. [S1]
- State-level deregulation compacts cited as early evidence of entrepreneurial governance in action. [S1]
Scientific / Technological
- Semiconductors and Green Hydrogen elevated to mission-mode platforms — indicative of state-backed deep-tech investment strategy. [S1]
- AI's economic impact appears prominently — both as a global capital-attracting force India is losing out to, and as a future frontier India must build capacity in. [S4]
Legal / Constitutional
- The Economic Survey itself is not a statutory document but is a convention-based instrument presented under Article 112 (Budget convention); its recommendations inform but do not bind Budget allocations or legislative action.
- Policy directions in the Survey (e.g., deregulation, procurement reform) typically require subordinate legislation amendments or executive orders for operationalisation.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 2025: Economic Survey 2024-25 tabled; flagged need for private capex acceleration and cautioned on global trade uncertainty.
- July 2025: Union Budget 2025-26 implemented several Survey-aligned measures including PLI extension and semiconductor mission funding boost.
- January 2026 (29th): Economic Survey 2025-26 tabled. Key highlights: entrepreneurial state framework, rupee depreciation attribution to AI capital flows, 10–20% global crisis probability. [S1][S4]
- January 2026 (30th): Union Budget 2026-27 presented; Survey's recommendations expected to be operationalised through Budget allocation and policy announcements.
- Ongoing: OECD, IMF downgrading global growth forecasts — validating Survey's cautious global outlook. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Economic Survey 2025-26 was tabled in Parliament on 29 January 2026 — the day before Union Budget 2026-27. [S2]
- The Chief Economic Adviser who authored Economic Survey 2025-26 is V. Anantha Nageswaran (appointed January 2022). [S1]
- The Survey assigns 10–20% probability to the global economy descending into a crisis worse than 2008 during 2026. [S4]
- The Survey attributes INR depreciation primarily to capital outflows toward AI-intensive economies and safe-haven assets, not domestic economic fundamentals. [S4]
- The central governance concept in Economic Survey 2025-26 is the 'Entrepreneurial State' — a state that acts under uncertainty, structures risk, and learns from experimentation. [S1]
- The Survey's three-stage strategic arc for India is: Swadeshi → Strategic Resilience → Strategic Indispensability. [S2]
- Mission-mode platforms cited in the Survey include Semiconductors and Green Hydrogen. [S1]
- The Survey advocates replacing inspection-based control with trust-based compliance at the state level. [S1]
- The Economic Survey is published by the Ministry of Finance (Department of Economic Affairs) — NOT NITI Aayog. [S2]
- OECD's global GDP growth forecast cited in the Survey: 3.1% for 2025 and 3.0% for 2026. [S3]
- The 'Entrepreneurial State' concept in the Survey draws on the intellectual framework associated with economist Mariana Mazzucato.
- The Survey notes India's monetary and financial sectors are robust despite uncertain global geopolitical scenario. [S5]
- Even the best-case global scenario in the Survey involves a worsening of 2025 conditions — no full recovery scenario is projected. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-II: Government policies and interventions; role of the state in economic development; accountability and governance reforms. - GS-III: Indian economy — growth, development; mobilisation of resources; effects of globalisation; infrastructure; technology and economic development.
Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment; Effects of liberalisation on the economy; Changes in industrial policy and their effects on industrial growth. - GS-II: Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability; Role of civil services in a democracy.
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Economic Survey 2025-26 advocates for an 'Entrepreneurial State' in India. Critically examine what this concept entails, and whether India's institutional architecture is ready for such a shift." (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 2. "The rupee's depreciation in 2025-26 has been attributed by the Economic Survey to structural global factors rather than domestic weaknesses. Analyse the implications of this view for India's monetary and trade policy." (GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Discuss how the Economic Survey functions as a policy instrument in India's fiscal governance framework. To what extent do its recommendations translate into budgetary action?" (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Union Budget 2026-27 | Directly implements (or diverges from) Survey's policy recommendations — study both together |
| India's GDP Measurement & New Framework | Survey cites revised GDP data; new measurement framework (base year revision) is a concurrent Prelims topic [S3] |
| Mariana Mazzucato & Developmental State Theory | Intellectual basis of 'Entrepreneurial State' concept in the Survey |
| India's Semiconductor Mission (ISM) | Cited as mission-mode platform in Survey; key GS-III industrial policy topic |
| Green Hydrogen Mission | Co-cited with semiconductors; links to energy transition and climate policy (GS-III/Environment) |
| Currency & Exchange Rate Management (RBI) | Survey's rupee depreciation analysis links to RBI's forex intervention mandate |
| Global Trade Wars & Protectionism (WTO context) | Survey's global crisis probability is driven partly by rising protectionism — study WTO dispute mechanisms |
| Chief Economic Adviser's role & DEA | Institutional knowledge: who prepares Survey, how it feeds into Budget, distinction from NITI Aayog |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry: The Economic Survey is prepared by Ministry of Finance (CEA/DEA) — NOT NITI Aayog and NOT the Ministry of Statistics (MoSPI). NITI Aayog publishes separate documents (India@2047 vision, SDG Index etc.).
- Wrong date: The Survey is tabled the day before the Budget — aspirants often conflate the two dates (29 January vs 30 January 2026 in this cycle).
- 'Entrepreneurial State' ≠ 'Welfare State': The Survey explicitly frames this as a market-enabling, risk-structuring model, not expanded government welfare spending — do not conflate.
- Rupee depreciation cause: The Survey attributes it to global AI capital flows and safe-haven demand — NOT to India's current account deficit or fiscal slippage. Examiners may test this nuance.
- GDP figure confusion: Multiple GDP estimates circulate simultaneously — First Advance Estimate, Second Advance Estimate, RBI projections, IMF projections. The Survey's cited figure is the First Advance Estimate for FY26; do not mix with previous year actuals or RBI's independent projections.
11. Sources
- [S1] Economic Survey 2025-26 — Preface (PIB) — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2220007®=3&lang=1 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] "India's Movement from Swadeshi to Strategic Resilience..." — PIB Press Release, Economic Survey 2025-26 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2219918®=3&lang=1 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Economic Survey 2025-26 — Chapter 1: State of the Economy — https://www.indiabudget.gov.in/economicsurvey/doc/eschapter/echap01.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "A job well done" — The Hindu Editorial, 31 January 2026 (article excerpt provided as primary source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-31/th_international/articleGUPFGUJE0-13307697.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S5] "India's Monetary and Financial Sectors Robust Despite Uncertain Global Geopolitical Scenario" — PIB, Economic Survey 2025-26 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2219997®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1)