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In a challenging environment of volatile intergovernmental fiscal transfers and heightened macroeconomic uncertainties, Finance Minister presented the Kerala state’s budget for 2026-27, the final full budget of the current Left Democratic Front government ahead of assembly elections. This budget demonstrates notable subnational fiscal resilience within India’s cooperative federalism framework, for more reasons than one.

The Federal Context and Fiscal Constraints

India’s federal structure has experienced increasing centralisation of revenue-raising powers in recent years, that reinforce the Union government’s core role in macroeconomic stabilisation -particularly amid geopolitical risks. Yet, subnational governments, equally faced the growing macroeconomic uncertainties and public expenditure responsibilities with limited fiscal space. Kerala’s budget explicitly highlights constraints imposed by reduced fiscal transfers, unpredictable grants, and tighter borrowing limits from the Centre. These factors have systematically compressed state finances, prompting protests—over perceived inequities in fiscal federalism.

Yet, the State managed to maintain the “size of the government” (public expenditure to GDP ratio) from a drastic decline. Despite these headwinds, Kerala has prioritised high-quality public service delivery and development-oriented expenditure. The state has achieved this through strengthened own-revenue mobilisation, avoiding treasury disruptions, and maintaining fiscal discipline. Over the current government’s tenure, Kerala mobilised an additional ₹1,27,747 crore in own-tax revenue and more than ₹1,52,645 crore including non-tax sources, underscoring a strategic quiet reliance, and it was not an easy call. 

Revenue Predictability and Fiscal Marksmanship

A key strength lies in improved fiscal marksmanship—the alignment between budget estimates and actuals—for own revenues. Deviations have narrowed significantly, reflecting robust revenue forecasting and administrative efficiency. In contrast, volatility in central grants continues to complicate subnational budgeting, highlighting the need for more predictable intergovernmental transfers.

For 2026-27, revenue receipts are estimated at ₹1,82,972 crore, while revenue expenditure is projected at ₹2,17,559 crore, resulting in a revenue deficit of ₹34,587 crore (2.12 % of Gsdp). The fiscal deficit to gsdp ratio is pegged at 3.40 % this FY. Net capital expenditure stands at ₹19,385 crore, sustaining investment in infrastructure despite constraints. These parameters keep Kerala within the fiscal responsibility norms recommended by successive Finance Commissions, balancing development priorities with deficit control. However, the forthcoming Union Budget 2026-27 and the 16th Finance Commission interse share will affect this fiscal arithmetic. 

Prudent Public Debt Management

Kerala’s public debt management merits particular attention. The public debt-to-GSDP ratio has declined from 38.47 percent in 2021 to 33.44 percent, a marked improvement driven primarily by revenue buoyancy rather than expenditure compression or fiscal austerity. This places Kerala in a stronger position than several peers, 2026 RBI report shows Punjab’s debt gdp ratio exceeds 44 percent, while West Bengal’s stands around 38 percent.

The state’s ability to “grow out of debt” is evident, as nominal GSDP growth consistently outpaces the effective interest rate on state government securities, refuting the plausibility of classic debt unsustainability condition (r > g). The 2026 Economic Review published a day back recorded that the State above 6.19 percent real growth. While detailed debt maturity profiles are long-term in nature, as revealed by recent RBI data, the overall trajectory signals prudent fiscal consolidation and reduced rollover risks and elongated refinancing risks. 

Prioritising Social Welfare and Inclusive Growth

With elections approaching, the budget naturally emphasises welfare and inclusive growth, yet it does so through structural rather than populist measures. The announcement of the 12th Pay Commission, with a report expected within three months, provides a systematic approach to enhancing the disposable income in the hands of people. Targeted social assistance includes monthly transfers of ₹1,000 to women in the care economy, salary enhancements for frontline workers such as ASHA personnel, and expanded social welfare pensions.

Recognising poverty’s dynamic nature, the budget sustains allocations to prevent anyone’s slippage back into deprivation due to unseen factors, despite the State systematically eradicated ultra-poverty. It also strengthens “employer of last resort” initiatives through job guarantee schemes and infrastructure-linked employment programs. 

Kerala’s longstanding commitment to human development remains evident: the state’s infant mortality rate (IMR) of 5 per 1,000 live births is lower than the United States (5.6) and far below India’s national average of around 25. Sustained investments in education and health continue to underpin these outcomes.

The budget introduces India’s first “elderly budgeting” framework, responding to Kerala’s advanced demographic transition—a point recently flagged in the Reserve Bank of India’s state finances 2026report published this week. This forward-looking approach addresses emerging challenges of an ageing population while preserving fiscal space for physical, social, digital and care-economy infrastructure. The term infrastructure is really thought out, beyond being just physical. 

Investment Climate, AI and Innovation

Kerala has worked to shed outdated perceptions as a difficult investment destination. Its top rankings in ease-of-doing-business, high human capital indices, and proactive industrial relations reforms position it as an attractive hub. 

Engagements at global forums such as the World Economic Forum in Davos have yielded top investment partnerships in critical sectors.

Emerging areas received focused attention in the budget with allocations for artificial intelligence and quantum computing, plausibility of “blue bonds” in future through marine public-private partnerships, a Critical Mineral Mission, and the establishment of a rare-earths hub leveraging coastal mineral deposits. 

The space economy also features prominently, signaling ambition beyond traditional sectors.
Climate-resilient policies address critical climate related risks and uncertainties, including sea-rise.

Strengthening Fiscal Decentralisation

The budget reinforces fiscal decentralisation, a cornerstone of effective fiscal federalism. Enhanced transfers to local bodies via the State Finance Commission, coupled with investments in urban mobility and the big ticket decision for rapid transit systems, promote sophisticated governance in making world class cites as investment destinations. 
Initiatives incorporating citizen-centric progress reports and budget transparency at the decentralised levels are particularly commendable, and other States can emulate.

High own-tax-to-GSDP ratios and tax buoyancy above unity have enabled Kerala to offset transfer volatility while sustaining social sector commitments. Gender budgeting and care-economy transfers remain integral, aligning expenditures with the state’s hallmark strengths in health and education.

A Blueprint for Subnational Resilience

Kerala’s 2026-27 budget is more than an annual financial statement; it serves as a blueprint for navigating global disorder and domestic fiscal challenges. By prioritising revenue-led fiscal consolidation, prudent debt management, inclusive welfare, and innovative investments, the state demonstrates how subnational governments can maintain fiscal resilience amid volatile intergovernmental transfers.

In an era of volatile geopolitics and intergovernmental fiscal relations, Kerala 2026-27 budget stands out with fiscal resilience. The potential shifts in global trade patterns and lack of global order is a reminder to be alert against any global fascist forces, the Minister reminded us, as much as he reminded the State to think about ‘what holds a country together and why nations federate’.

(This was first published in The Hindu on January 30, 2026)

 
Lekha Chakraborty is Professor, NIPFP and Research Associate of Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, New York and Member, Governing Board of International Institute of Public Finance (IIPF) Munich.
 
The views expressed in the post are those of the authors only. No responsibility for them should be attributed to NIPFP.