Jharkhand government presented its ₹1,58,560 crore Budget for FY 2026–27 in the State Assembly, themed “Abua Dishom” (meaning Our Own State). The Budget was tabled by Finance Minister Radhakrishna Kishore and positions itself around inclusive growth, social justice, rural livelihoods, and infrastructure expansion.
Named as a tribute to “Disom Guru” Shibu Soren, the Budget signals a push to ensure development reaches villages, women, farmers, youth and tribal communities.
Budget at a Glance
- Total Outlay: ₹1,58,560 crore
- Increase over FY 2025–26: ~9% (previous year ₹1.45 lakh crore)
- Theme: Inclusive, people-centric development
Fiscal Framework (₹ crore)
- Total Revenue Receipts: 1,36,210.04
- Revenue Expenditure: 1,20,851.90
- Capital Receipts: 22,349.96
- Capital Expenditure: 37,708.10
- Revenue Deficit: 15,358.14 (2.46% of GSDP)
- Effective Revenue Deficit: 28,102.28 (4.50% of GSDP)
- Fiscal Deficit: 13,595.79 (2.18% of GSDP)
- Primary Deficit: 7,075.83 (1.13% of GSDP)
- Debt-to-GSDP Ratio: 25.3%
- Total Receipts = Total Expenditure: ₹1,58,560 crore
Gender & Child Focus
- Gender Budget: ₹34,211.27 crore
- Child Budget: ₹10,793.16 crore
- Together, nearly 28.38% of total outlay is dedicated to women and child welfare.
Gender Budget:
- A gender budget tracks allocations benefiting women
- Aims to promote gender equity and empowerment
- Increasingly adopted by Indian states and the Union Government
Maiyan Samman Yojana
Under the Jharkhand Mukhyamantri Maiya Samman Yojana:
- Women aged 18–50 years receive ₹2,500 per month directly into bank accounts.
- Allocation: ₹14,065.57 crore.
Sector-Wise Allocation (₹ crore)
- Social Sector: 67,459.54
- Economic Sector: 59,044.63
- General Sector: 32,055.83
- Agriculture & Allied: 4,884.20
- Women & Child Development: 22,995.69
- Health: 7,990.30
- Energy: 11,197.89
Agriculture & Rural Push
Agriculture and rural livelihoods remain central:
- Birsa Seed Production Scheme: ₹145 crore
- Soil & Water Conservation: ₹475.50 crore
- Solar Irrigation: ₹75 crore
- Farm Machinery Distribution: ₹80 crore
- Millet Mission: ₹25 crore
- Crop Insurance: ₹400 crore
- Cold Storage & Warehousing: ₹322 crore
- Irrigation Projects: ₹1,137.10 crore
- Water Resources Dept: ₹2,714.71 crore
- Rural Development: ₹12,346.90 crore
Housing
- Abua Awas Yojana: ₹4,100 crore for housing projects.
Social Security & Pensions
- Universal Pension Scheme: ₹3,517.23 crore
- National Pension Schemes: ₹1,463.58 crore
The focus is on strengthening safety nets for vulnerable populations.
Education & Skill Development
- School Education: ₹16,251.43 crore
- Higher & Technical Education: ₹2,564.45 crore
Key priorities include:
- Teacher training
- Digital learning
- Expansion of universities
- Strengthening technical education
Healthcare Expansion
- Total Health Budget: ₹7,990.30 crore
- 750 Abua Dawakhana clinics to be launched across the state.
- Special provisions for cancer treatment and medical facility upgrades.
Infrastructure & Energy
- Major investments in:
- Road construction
- Rural works
- Energy infrastructure
- Renewable energy subsidies
- Free electricity units for eligible households
Industrial Growth & Global Outreach
- Investment proposals worth ₹1.24 lakh crore targeted.
- Potential for significant job creation.
- Jharkhand participated for the first time at the World Economic Forum, projecting itself as a destination for:
- Green energy
- Sustainable mineral-based industries
PESA Implementation
The Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act (PESA) was implemented from January 2, 2026 in Jharkhand.
PESA empowers:
- Gram Sabhas in Scheduled Areas
- Greater control over local resources
- Community-based decision making
This is significant for tribal self-governance.
Why Budget Matters
The ‘Abua Dishom’ Budget attempts to strike a balance between:
- Welfare spending
- Capital investment
- Fiscal discipline
It seeks to:
- Strengthen rural economy
- Empower women
- Enhance social security
- Improve healthcare & education
- Promote sustainable industrial growth
The focus is clearly on inclusive and sustainable development, ensuring that growth is not limited to urban centres but reaches villages and marginalised communities.