Union Budget 2026 has drawn a broadly positive response from education and hiring leaders, who said the government has signalled a shift from expanding access to education towards improving employability, skills alignment and workforce readiness in an economy increasingly shaped by technology.
Executives said proposals such as the Education to Employment and Enterprise Standing Committee, sector-specific skilling initiatives and investments linked to artificial intelligence reflect growing recognition that education outcomes must translate faster into productive jobs.
Anuj Vishwakarma, CEO, higher education programmes at upGrad, said the Budget acknowledged that growth would depend less on enrolment numbers and more on how effectively learning is converted into employable talent.
“The clear mandate around skilling, AI readiness and education to employment reflects an understanding that the future of work is already here,” Vishwakarma said, adding that linking education with industry and emerging technologies could enable large-scale reskilling across sectors.
Hiring platforms also pointed to a more targeted approach to bridging the employability gap. Sashi Kumar, managing director, Indeed India, said measures such as industry-linked training in healthcare, services and textiles could improve skills alignment, particularly in labour-intensive sectors and among small businesses.
“The real impact of this Budget is a workforce that is better prepared for the jobs employers are ready to create,” Kumar said, noting a shift from increasing hiring volumes to enabling better hiring outcomes.
Beyond skilling, business leaders said the Budget also addressed enterprise confidence through policy stability.
Thyagu Valliappa, founder of SCALE and vice chairman of the Sona Valliappa Group, said proposals such as safe harbour provisions and renewed incentives for special economic zones could support long-term investment, especially for global capability centres (GCC) and service-sector firms.
He said the focus on electronics, semiconductors,data centres, AYUSH and marine-related industries suggested a long-term direction even if headline reforms were limited.
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Education providers said the emphasis on modular and industry-aligned courses could strengthen professional talent pipelines. Anant Bengani, co-founder and director of Zell Education, said initiatives aimed at certifications and university-industry collaboration would benefit sectors such as finance, accounting and business services.
“The intent is clearly to make youth job-ready and globally competitive,” Bengani said.
Technology-led learning also featured prominently in responses. Raghav Gupta, founder and CEO, Futurense, said the Budget’s focus on capacity building in artificial intelligence and research signalled investment not just in infrastructure but in people.
He cited initiatives such as large-scale AI training, support for the National Quantum Mission and funding for research and innovation as steps towards building an AI-ready workforce.
Taken together, education leaders said Budget 2026 reflects a gradual shift towards outcome-led learning, closer industry alignment and long-term capability building, with execution likely to determine how quickly policy intent translates into jobs and productivity gains.






