From briefcase to tablet in bahi khata: How budget moved from colonial tradition to cultural assertion to digital age
June 6, 2026
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From briefcase to tablet in bahi khata: How budget moved from colonial tradition to cultural assertion to digital age

As Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman prepares to present the Union Budget 2026-27, attention extends beyond fiscal numbers to the evolving symbols of Budget Day. The journey from colonial-era briefcases to the indigenous bahi khata and finally a paperless tablet mirrors India’s shifting economic identity and administrative modernisation

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Feb 1, 2026, 11:22 am IST
in Politics, Bharat, Business, Economy
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Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will on February 1 present her ninth straight Budget. (Photo: X)

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will on February 1 present her ninth straight Budget. (Photo: X)

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As the Union Budget 2026 gets tabeled, the focus is not only on policy announcements and fiscal arithmetic but also on a powerful visual symbol that has come to define Budget Day, the red pouch carried by the Finance Minister. For generations of Indians, this moment outside Parliament signals that the country’s most important financial blueprint is about to be unveiled.

On February 1, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will present her ninth consecutive Budget, further cementing her place in India’s fiscal history. Alongside the substance of her speech, the form in which the Budget is carried continues to draw public attention.

The association of the Budget with a red cover traces its origins to British parliamentary tradition. In the United Kingdom, financial papers were carried in red cases to signify authority and importance. The very word “budget” comes from the French term bougette, meaning a leather bag.

India’s early finance ministers adopted this practice, carrying Budget documents in leather briefcases, often modelled on the British “Gladstone Box.” Independent India followed this convention for decades, turning the red briefcase into a familiar ritual of Budget Day.

A symbolic break from this colonial legacy came in 2019, when Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman replaced the traditional briefcase with a red cloth bahi khata, a ledger historically used by Indian traders to maintain accounts.

Explaining her decision at the time, Sitharaman said she wanted to move away from the “British hangover” and adopt something rooted in Indian tradition. The shift was widely seen as a statement of cultural confidence, aligning the Budget presentation with indigenous practices while retaining the symbolic red colour.

The next major transformation came in 2021, when the Union Budget was made paperless. Sitharaman began carrying a made-in-India tablet wrapped in the traditional red pouch, blending symbolism with technological advancement.

This move marked a significant step towards digital governance, reducing paper use while modernising one of the most tradition-bound events in Indian public life. The red pouch was retained, preserving continuity even as the medium changed.

In Indian tradition, the colour red symbolises strength, prosperity and auspicious beginnings, making it particularly fitting for Budget Day. Over time, the red cover has evolved from a colonial emblem of authority into a culturally resonant symbol of national aspirations and economic planning.

Sitharaman will present the Union Budget for the financial year April 2026 to March 2027 on a Sunday, another first in independent India’s history. The Budget is expected to focus on sustaining economic growth, maintaining fiscal discipline and advancing reforms to shield the economy from global trade frictions, including US tariffs.

As India’s Budget presentation continues to evolve, from briefcase to bahi khata to tablet, it reflects a broader journey: one that blends respect for tradition with confidence in indigenous identity and readiness for a digital future.

Topics: Nirmala SitharamanUnion Budget 2026Budget traditionbahi khatared briefcasebudget history
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