The Retailers Association of India (RAI) has welcomed the Union Budget 2026–27, noting its focus on fiscal consolidation, public investment and long-term capacity creation. While the Budget does not prioritise short-term consumption stimulus, RAI observed that it lays out an enabling framework for the retail sector by strengthening operating conditions across supply chains, MSMEs, skilling, infrastructure and technology.
Overall View
- Budget 2026–27 focuses on fiscal consolidation, public investment, and long-term capacity
creation - For retail, the emphasis is on shaping operating conditions rather than driving short-term
consumption - Demand impact is expected to be gradual and uneven
MSMEs and Supply Chains
- MSMEs remain central to retail manufacturing, sourcing, logistics, and store operations
- Compliance simplification, access to capital, and TReDS-based payment systems address
key constraints - Measures can improve vendor stability and working capital cycles
- Rising formalisation will require closer retailer–supplier collaboration
Rural and Women-Led Growth
- Continued focus on improving farmers’ incomes across agriculture, fisheries, and animal
husbandry - Rural consumption remains a key driver for food, FMCG, and apparel categories
- Support for women-led enterprises and SHG-linked retail outlets can expand last-mile retail
Skilling, Employment, and Workforce
- Emphasis on skilling and employment across tourism, healthcare, sports, and hospitality
- Retail, as a major youth employer, stands to benefit from a broader skilling ecosystem
- Competition for skilled labour in urban centres may increase
Demand and Market Sentiment
- Fiscal deficit projected at 4.3 percent of GDP, with focus on capex over consumption
stimulus - Tax simplification and lower TCS rates ease compliance but do not materially raise
disposable incomes - Higher STT on futures and options may affect market sentiment in the near term
Infrastructure, Non-Metro Growth, and Technology
- Public capital expenditure proposed at ₹12.2 lakh crore
- Investments in logistics and freight corridors can lower supply chain costs over time
- Focus on City Economic Regions reinforces retail expansion beyond metros
- AI and simplified compliance favour organised and technology-ready retailers
What This Means for Retail
- Budget provides an enabling framework rather than direct demand support
- Retailers will need to align with structural shifts in supply chains, workforce, and regional
growth - Cost discipline and adaptability remain critical
Kumar Rajagopalan, CEO, Retailers Association of India, on the Union Budget 2026-27:
“Union Budget 2026–27 is not designed to stimulate consumption in the short term. Instead, it focuses on shaping the operating environment for retail through fiscal consolidation, infrastructure investment, MSME enablement, skilling, and regional growth. For the retail sector, its impact will be gradual and uneven, driven more by improvements in supply chains, workforce readiness, and rural and non-metro demand than by direct policy support.”
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