Research

How employment and work have been framed in Budget speeches 

Over the last eight years, the Union Budget has spoken more about work systems than about jobs themselves

How employment and work have been framed in Budget speeches 

This analysis is based on Thurro’s AI-led reading of Union Budget speeches between FY2019 and FY2026. Instead of examining each Budget as a standalone event, Thurro’s AI-driven platform processes Budget speeches across years, allowing shifts in language, structure, emphasis, and time horizon to be identified at scale. 

By structuring Budget documents into a searchable, comparable database and applying AI-assisted thematic and linguistic analysis, Thurro enables patterns to emerge that are difficult to detect through manual reading alone. This approach makes it possible to trace how the function of the Union Budget itself has evolved over time—beyond individual announcements or headline measures. 

Rather than treating employment as a standalone policy category, the speeches consistently embed work within broader themes—skills, sectors, platforms, and systems—often framed around building a ‘future-ready workforce’. Read across years, a clear pattern emerges. Employment is framed as an outcome that follows growth, not as a direct target of fiscal policy.

Phase I: Skilling as aspiration (FY2019–FY2021)

Phase II: Employability pipelines (FY2022-FY2024)

Phase III: Systems create work (FY2025–FY2026)

What this framing implies

View disclaimer

This is the third in a series of Thurro analysis notes in the run-up to the Union Budget 2026. You can explore the underlying analysis interactively on our Thurro Answers Notebook or download the PDF version below to read offline.

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