The Economic Survey 2025–26 does not read like a manifesto, nor does it indulge in celebratory rhetoric. Its tone is sober, even restrained. Yet beneath its careful language lies a significant shift in India’s economic thinking—one that resonates strongly with Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya’s doctrine of Integral Humanism.
At its core, the Survey suggests that India is moving away from a narrow obsession with speed and scale towards a more balanced idea of development—one rooted in resilience, self-strengthening, and long-term national capability. In an era of global instability, this is not merely a policy adjustment; it is a philosophical recalibration.
Integral Humanism and the limits of imported models
Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya had argued that economic systems borrowed wholesale from foreign contexts inevitably create imbalance—between growth and equity, markets and society, material prosperity and human dignity. Development, he insisted, must be rooted in a nation’s civilisational ethos and social realities.
The Survey’s implicit critique of excessive global dependence echoes this insight. The global economic order today is marked by fractured supply chains, weaponised trade, and strategic control over technology and capital flows. In such a world, uncritical dependence on external systems becomes a source of vulnerability.
By reframing the central economic question—from how fast India can grow to how securely it can progress—the Survey aligns with Deendayal ji’s emphasis on Swadeshi not as isolation, but as self-reliant participation in the world.
The state as a facilitator of national capability
Integral Humanism rejected both unrestrained capitalism and statist centralisation. It envisaged a state that enables social harmony, economic balance, and decentralised strength. The Survey’s portrayal of the state closely mirrors this vision.
Public capital expenditure is not presented as short-term stimulus, but as long-term nation-building. Investments in roads, railways, ports, logistics, power, and digital public infrastructure are framed as productivity multipliers and shock absorbers. These assets strengthen the economic body of the nation, much as Deendayal ji spoke of harmony between the individual, society, nation, and humanity.
Fiscal discipline alongside sustained investment reinforces this approach: growth anchored in prudence, not excess.
Human beings at the centre of economics
A defining feature of Integral Humanism is its insistence that the human being—not capital or the state—must remain at the centre of economic life. The Survey’s treatment of education, health, nutrition, and skills reflects this principle.
Social sectors are no longer framed solely as welfare obligations. They are integrated into a productivity and capability narrative. Improvements in foundational learning, health outcomes, and labour participation—especially among women—are seen as investments in human potential.
This is a departure from both charity-driven welfare and purely market-driven efficiency. It reflects Deendayal ji’s belief that economic policy must serve the holistic development of the individual, while strengthening society and the nation.
Swadeshi through institutional strength
The emphasis on formalisation and financial deepening further reinforces the Integral Humanist worldview. A broader tax base, a stabilised GST regime, improved access to institutional credit for small enterprises, and healthier banks are not merely technocratic goals. They represent the strengthening of the nation’s economic spine.
Deendayal ji viewed decentralised enterprise, small producers, and local entrepreneurship as essential to social balance. The Survey’s approach supports this vision—not through protectionism, but by integrating these actors into formal systems that provide stability, credit, and opportunity.
Swadeshi, in this sense, is about empowering domestic enterprise within a strong national framework.
Strategic openness with civilisational confidence
Integral Humanism does not reject engagement with the world; it cautions against dependence without self-strength. The Survey reflects this balance. It does not argue for withdrawal from global trade or capital flows. Instead, it emphasises diversification, buffers, and strategic preparedness.
Services exports, remittances, and foreign exchange reserves are treated as instruments of stability rather than symbols of global submission. This is openness with confidence—engagement on India’s terms, grounded in domestic capability.
Preparing for the future without losing balance
The Survey’s cautious stance on emerging domains such as artificial intelligence, energy transition, and urbanisation also reflects Integral Humanist thinking. Rather than chasing fashionable global narratives, it stresses sequencing, institutional readiness, and alignment with national capacity.
Deendayal ji warned against development paths that disrupt social harmony or create new dependencies. The Survey’s realism suggests an awareness of these risks.
Resilience as modern Integral Humanism
Taken together, the Economic Survey 2025–26 reveals a deeper transformation in India’s economic philosophy. Growth remains essential, but it is no longer pursued in isolation from stability, dignity, and national self-reliance. The organising principle has become resilience—economic staying power rooted in infrastructure, human capability, institutional depth, and strategic autonomy.
This is Integral Humanism adapted to a 21st-century economy.
Swadeshi, in this context, is not nostalgia or retreat. It is the practical expression of a civilisational idea: that true prosperity emerges when development is balanced, rooted, and humane.
In an unsettled world, the Survey quietly affirms a timeless insight articulated by Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya decades ago—that a nation which strengthens its inner foundations can engage the world without losing itself.


















