2026 POST-BUDGET REACTION (CONSUMER TECH BRANDS)
Rajeev Singh, Managing Director, BenQ India and South Asia
“The Union Budget 2026 makes a clear statement on reimagining education as a direct driver of employability and economic growth. The proposed Education-to-Employment Standing Committee acknowledges the urgent need to align learning with industry demand and the accelerating impact of technologies such as artificial intelligence.
Initiatives such as Content Creator Labs in 15,000 schools and the development of university townships near industry corridors mark an important shift towards hands-on, technology-enabled, and industry-connected learning environments. These measures will encourage creativity, collaboration, and real-world skill development across K-12 and higher education.
Together with continued support for domestic manufacturing and the semiconductor ecosystem, the Budget creates a strong foundation for modern digital classrooms and future-ready campuses. It enables education and enterprise technology providers to play a meaningful role in building skills, improving learning outcomes, and preparing India’s talent base for global competitiveness. It will be good to see how these initiatives take shape in the coming days, and we will support them to the best of our ability.”
Ravi Agarwal, Co-Founder and Managing Director, Cellecor
“The Union Budget 2026 reflects a steady and constructive approach toward strengthening India’s consumer electronics and technology manufacturing ecosystem. The near doubling of the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme outlay from ₹22,919 crore to ₹40,000 crore is a meaningful step toward building a stronger domestic component supply chain. Alongside the expansion of the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) 2.0 into a broader, full-stack programme covering materials, equipment, design, and R&D, this signals strong momentum toward positioning India higher on the global electronics value chain.
The parallel focus on employment generation and large-scale skilling in electronics manufacturing and emerging technologies will help create a future-ready workforce across factories, assembly lines, and service ecosystems.
Overall, the Budget creates a supportive environment for consumer electronics brands to invest with confidence. We look forward to contributing to this growth journey through innovation, localisation, and product development.”
Pankaj Rana, CEO, Hisense India
“The Union Budget 2026 outlines a forward-looking technology roadmap that strengthens India’s position as a global electronics and innovation hub. The sustained focus on semiconductor manufacturing, electronics components, and AI-led innovation reflects a strong policy commitment to building a resilient domestic ecosystem. Initiatives like India Semiconductor Mission 2.0 and the enhanced outlay for electronics manufacturing are expected to deepen local value creation and strengthen supply chains. For the consumer electronics industry, this creates a stable, growth-oriented environment that encourages long-term investments, innovation, and localisation.”
Aditya Khemka, Founder & Managing Director, CP PLUS
“The Union Budget 2026 signals a decisive shift in India’s technology and security journey, with a clear focus on building capability at home. The strengthened push under the India Semiconductor Mission 2.0 is not only about self-reliance, but about ensuring that the intelligence, computing power, and hardware powering next-generation AI systems are designed and manufactured in India.
The government’s emphasis on artificial intelligence reflects a move from experimentation to real-world, mission-critical deployment. As AI becomes central to public safety, surveillance, and smart infrastructure, this Budget lays the foundation for scalable, secure, and responsible adoption across the country.
For homegrown technology companies, this policy clarity creates long-term confidence to invest locally, innovate for Indian needs, and build globally competitive solutions. It positions India not just as a consumer of advanced technologies, but as a trusted creator of AI-led security and infrastructure solutions aligned with the vision of Make in India.”
Rahul Garg, Founder-CEO, Moglix
“The Budget’s emphasis on artificial intelligence, quantum research and innovation-led missions strengthens India’s technology backbone. These investments enable enterprises to deploy AI across manufacturing optimisation, procurement automation and supply chain forecasting. When combined with sectoral programmes such as textile modernisation and industrial cluster rejuvenation, emerging technologies will play a critical role in improving productivity, quality control and operational efficiency across traditional and advanced industries.”
Murali Mantravadi, Joint Managing Director, Energy Bots – Flosenso
“Reading the Union Budget 2026, what becomes clear is a steady shift in how technology is being viewed. The push through India Semiconductor Mission 2.0 and higher investment in electronic components suggests the government wants India to build deeper capability, not just scale services. That is an important signal. Sustainable advantage comes from owning design, supply chains and execution, not only distribution. The continued emphasis on AI, industry-linked research and creative skills points to an understanding that technology outcomes depend as much on people and process as on policy. The real test now is execution, but the intent feels more structural than symbolic.”
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