IES's Management College and
Research Centre

Union Budget 2026: Expectations of Taxpayers and What It Means for Future Managers

By
Saurabh Paradkar
January 27, 2026

The upcoming Union Budget 2026 of India brings rising taxpayer expectations especially from middle class citizens and working professionals and young wage earners. Budget 2025 increased fiscal capacity through income tax and GST changes but experts predict that Budget 2026 will centre its efforts on building fundamental tax system improvements which create easier tax processes and fairer tax distribution.

The management students and future business leaders need to understand these tax policy expectations because tax policy directly impacts their consumption and investment and real estate market and corporate decision making.

The Economic Context Behind Budget 2026

Policy experts argue that after aggressive reforms in recent years the government will adopt a calibrated approach in 2026. The primary focus will centre on two objectives which include replacing obsolete tax rules and establishing simpler tax regulations that match current market conditions. For MBA and PGDM students, this shift highlights the importance of fiscal discipline, sustainable growth, and long-term policymaking.

Why Are Taxpayers Expecting Reforms Instead of Big Tax Cuts? 

The urban areas of India have developed new patterns for workforce movement and investment distribution. Existing tax laws have become less relevant because of rising rent costs and healthcare expenses and changes in capital markets and international workforce availability. The three groups which include industry bodies and chartered accountants and economists believe that Budget 2026 needs to address existing gaps because these gaps hinder economic growth and cause difficulties in public finance management.

Key Areas Where Taxpayers Expect Relief

Taxpayers want relief for specific key areas which they consider important. The first expectation requires the government to change its current House Rent Allowance (HRA) limits. The existing metro and non-metro rental caps fail to match actual rental conditions which exist in Tier-2 cities. The establishment of a rationalised HRA system would help salaried workers deal with their financial challenges.

The public shows strong interest in the 182-day residency requirement which applies to NRIs and PIOs. Experts recommend reinstating the previous regulation because it would decrease regulatory uncertainties while making it easier for international businesspeople to work and study abroad.

The public demands a higher standard deduction for tax purposes. The current deduction needs to increase beyond ₹1 lakh because rising inflation costs create challenges for salaried workers and pensioners.

Capital Markets, Insurance, and Housing: Policy Gaps to Address

The research report identifies essential policy gaps which need resolution to improve Capital Markets and Insurance and Housing sectors. Taxpayers demand equitable capital gains taxation which includes Section 87A rebate benefits for investors who earn limited income from equities and mutual funds. This could encourage disciplined long-term investing - an important lesson for future finance professionals.

The new tax system would support India, which wants to increase preventive healthcare services and financial protection through extended health insurance deduction.

Experts recommend raising home loan interest deduction limits and permitting new tax system deductions for home loans in the housing market. This could revive housing demand and stimulate allied industries such as construction and finance.

Simplification and Digital Efficiency in Tax Administration

The process of tax administration gains advantages from both its simplified operations and its digital systems. The need for simplified governance procedures appears as a constant theme according to management experts. Public administration needs to establish transparent systems which use advanced technology to monitor actual rental income tax collection and decrease TDS rates and refund processing through live income tax refund tracking.

The 2025 refund delays revealed significant service delivery deficiencies which proved that operational efficiency and stakeholder experience systems require implementation in government operations - an important takeaway for management students.

Addressing Inequities: Surcharge, Gold, and Senior Citizens

Experts identified structural inequities in the new tax regime, which disproportionately impacts high-income professionals without deductions. Raising this threshold could make the regime more equitable.

The proposal suggests shortening the physical gold and silver ownership period until it matches the ETF investment duration which would eliminate investment decision-making obstacles. 

Policymakers need to provide tax benefits for senior citizens because they face higher medical expenses and financial challenges which require managers to learn about inclusive policymaking.

Workforce-Centric Reforms: NPS, ESOPs, and Joint Taxation

Budget 2026 will clarify NPS taxation rules and ESOPs as perquisite tax treatment and the absence of joint taxation for married couples through expert analysis according to three main areas of confusion. The proposed changes will help organisations keep their staff and improve their startup pay systems while achieving a fairer tax system for households which directly affects HR and strategic planning experts.

What Management Students Can Learn

The Budget 2026 expectations present MBA and PGDM students with genuine educational opportunities which teach them about public finance, stakeholder management, policy design and economic strategy. Understanding how taxation influences behaviour helps future managers make informed decisions in finance, consulting, HR, and entrepreneurship.

With evolving tax policies and rising economic complexity, how prepared are future management professionals to interpret budgets and translate policy changes into strategic decisions?

FAQs

When is union budget 2026?

The India Union Budget 2026-27 is expected to be presented on 1 February 2026

Why is Budget 2026 unlikely to offer major tax rate cuts?

Experts believe fiscal space was already stretched in Budget 2025, making structural reforms more feasible than headline tax reductions.

How are these tax expectations relevant for MBA and PGDM students?

They impact consumption, investment, housing, HR policies, and corporate strategy - core areas studied in management education.

What sectors may benefit most if these changes are implemented?

Real estate, capital markets, insurance, startups, and consumer-driven industries could see positive momentum.

Will the new tax regime become more attractive after Budget 2026?

If deductions, surcharge thresholds, and simplification measures are introduced, the new regime could see wider adoption.

How does understanding Union Budget trends help future managers?

It builds macroeconomic awareness, policy literacy, and strategic thinking - essential skills for leadership roles.

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