Kerala Chief Minister V.D. Satheesan
| Photo Credit: PTI
The Congress-led UDF government’s Revised Budget for 2026-27, to be presented by Chief Minister V.D. Satheesan on Friday (June 19, 2026) faces the challenge of finding the middle ground between re-aligning Kerala’s fiscal space for tackling the concerns raised in the White Paper on State finances and mobilising additional revenue for development and welfare, notably the Indira Guarantees and the ‘dream projects.’
From the UDF government’s perspective, State finances present a key challenge. Its White Paper described the fiscal structure as being “under serious and growing strain.” The former Union Cabinet Secretary K.M. Chandrasekhar-led panel which drafted the document had noted that the Budget Estimates for 2026-27 (presented by the previous LDF government) had anticipated ₹20,500 crore more than what the 16th Finance Commission eventually assigned to Kerala. Bridging this shortfall may require “aggressive mobilisation of own revenue and prioritisation of expenditure” it said.
Commenting on his upcoming Budget presentation at a post-Cabinet briefing on Wednesday, Mr. Satheesan – who handles the Finance portfolio – said his government was operating “within limitations” due to the anticipated ₹20,500-crore shortfall. “Finding ₹20,500 crore is the challenge,” he said, adding that his government entertained different approaches to policy and the development paradigm.
Among the Indira Guarantees, the free bus travel for women announced in the Kerala State Road Transport Corporation’s ‘Ordinary’ buses alone is expected to drive up the additional expenses by another ₹750 crore-₹800 crore, according to the government. Other ‘guarantees’ include monthly ₹1,000 assistance to college-going female students, hiking welfare pensions to a monthly ₹3,000 and health insurance coverage up to ₹25 lakh for all families.
The Budget is also expected to earmark money for the ‘dream projects’ – ‘Mission Samudra,’ the State’s aviation sector and a tribal university in Wayanad. The development of coastal shipping in Phase 1 of Mission Samudra and Kerala as an aviation hub rank among the priorities of the UDF government.
On the policy front, of keen interest will be the Revised Budget’s approaches to the White Paper recommendations regarding privatisation and the Kerala Infrastructure Investment Fund Board (KIIFB), the entity used by the LDF for funding infrastructure projects. The White Paper wanted non-viable ‘non-strategic’ public sector enterprises to be considered for “disinvestment, privatisation or closure.” It also recommended a revamp of KIIFB and the KIIFB Act, 2016, and a forensic audit of its accounts. At the same time, it also argued that it would be “wasteful” to dismantle the entity’s framework.
Whether the Budget would present an alternative to the LDF’s SilverLine high-speed rail project remains another point of interest. After scrapping SilverLine, Mr. Satheesan had stated that the UDF was not averse to high-speed rail projects if they were viable environmentally and financially.
Presenting the Pinarayi Vijayan-led LDF government’s 2026-27 pre-poll Budget in January, then Finance Minister K.N. Balagopal had made a clutch of big-ticket announcements, including free undergraduate education in arts and science colleges and the 12th Pay Revision Commission. Sweeping aside the findings of the UDF White Paper, the LDF, now in Opposition, has opposed cuts in spending and schemes in the upcoming Budget, asserting that it had left State finances in a comfortable position for the UDF to build on.
While the Pay Commission is yet to file its recommendations, the previous pay revision, in 2021, had entailed an additional annual expenditure of ₹25,000 crore on the State government. According to the White Paper, committed expenditure on salaries and wages, pensions and interest payments consumed 77.6% of the revenue receipts in 2025-26.
With the government creating a separate department for the welfare of the elderly, the Revised Budget is expected to earmark ample space for senior citizens.
The 7th State Finance Commission (SFC) had pointed to an urban-rural mismatch in the 16th Union Finance Commission (UFC) allocations for local bodies which could require Kerala to restructure its local body Plans. The UFC allocations to municipalities and Corporations are disproportionately high, leaving rural local governments with lesser funds. The scenario presents a rapidly urbanising Kerala with unique challenges, but the UDF government is yet to comment on this matter.
While the UDF’s White Paper had painted a grim picture of Kerala’s finances, the Kerala Development Report 2026 (KDR), published by the State Planning Board earlier this year, had observed that fiscal stress was not a consequence of fiscal indiscipline, rather, it rose from “the structural constraints of federal fiscal architecture.” KDR 2026 had also noted an increase in the State’s own tax revenue and revenue self-sufficiency, attributing it to “improvements in tax administration, reforms under the GST framework and compliance efficiency.”
Published – June 17, 2026 01:41 pm IST




