Budget 2026-27 has provided ā¹20,000 crore under the ācapitalā head to the Research, Development and Innovation (RDI) scheme, whereby a ā¹1 lakh crore corpus is being put together for a ādeep-tech fund of fundsā, raising hopes for the operationalisation of the scheme in 2026-27.
Last yearās budget, too, had provided ā¹20,000 crore. But, going by the revised estimates for 2025-26, it appears that only ā¹3,000 crore was actually put in the corpus. And now, another ā¹20,000 crore has been given ā which is actually the bulk of the ā¹28,049 crore the finance ministry allocated to the Department of Science and Technology.
From the statement of implementation of last yearās budget proposals, it is seen there was delay in setting up the fund of funds. The RDI scheme was announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in January 2025; the Cabinet approved it on July 1, but it was not until October 11 that the rules and governance structure were āconcurredā to by the Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance.
The large corpus of ā¹1 lakh crore indicates the government attaches much importance to it. The RDI scheme āaims to catalyse private sector participation in high-impact R&Dā, according to a press release from the Department of Science and Technology. From the corpus, the scheme will provide long-term loans at ālow or nilā interest rates, make equity infusions into startups and contribute to deep-tech fund of funds; it will not, however, provide grants or short-term loans.
Growing need
India has a clutch of funds dedicated to deep-tech, such as Speciale Invest, pi Ventures, YourNest Venture Capital, seafund, Capital A, Blume Ventures and IIMA Ventures. These funds raised over a billion dollars last year, more than twice raised in the year before.
The government is now appointing āsecond-level fund managersā (SLFM) to manage the fund of funds. An SLFM is an intermediary investment manager that receives capital from a government-anchored fund of funds and deploys it in startups, venture funds, or projects.
The first level is the setting up of the āspecial purpose fundā, under the Anusandhan National Research Foundation.
Recently, Dr Abhay Karandikar, Secretary, Department of Science and Technology, said in a LinkedIn post that there had been āan overwhelming responseā to the governmentās call for applications for SLFMs from AIFs, FoFs, DFIs and NBFCs. āWe are expected to complete the process of appointing fund of funds, AIF, DFI, NBFC and FRO by April-May,ā Karandikar said.
Two government bodies had already been appointed āon nomination basisā as SLFM ā the Technology Development Board; and the Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council (BIRAC). The former had also āinitiated the process of inviting applications from corporates and startupsā, Karandikar said.
āThe two-tier fund structure and onboarding of experienced institutions like TDB and BIRAC are particularly reassuring,ā says Girij Pal Singh, Co-founder and Director, Athena Generics, IIT-Kanpur.
Karandikar said the RDI was a key milestone in Indiaās efforts to finance high-risk, high-impact technologies and strengthen the innovation pipeline.
āThe nature of financing includes low-interest, long-tenor debt, equity or optionally convertible debt on attractive and flexible terms,ā he said.
NQM up, NSM down
The budget has allocated slightly more to the National Quantum Mission, for its revenue expenditure. This is apparently because the mission had overspent last yearās allocation ā ā¹755 crore (revised estimate), against ā¹600 crore given under Budget 2025-26. Accordingly, the allocation has been raised to ā¹900 crore for 2026-27. Conversely, the National Supercomputing Mission has received a negligible ā¹1 lakh, against last yearās allocation of ā¹265 crore ā again because the mission ended up spending twice as much (ā¹530 crore).
Big boost
The government-owned semiconductor lab at Mohali, Punjab, has got a bonanza ā ā¹900 crore, against ā¹400 crore last year (budget estimate) and ā¹20 crore (revised estimate). This is part of the total allocation of ā¹8,000 crore for the āmodified programme for the development of semiconductors and display manufacturing ecosystem in Indiaā, compared with ā¹7,000 crore (budget 2025-26) and ā¹4,300 crore (revised 2025-26). VariousĀ schemes under the programme have been given higher allocations.
The India Semiconductor Mission 2.0 has got ā¹1,000 crore, against nil last year.
The budget has slashed the allocation under the head āProduction-linked incentive for large-scale electronics manufacturingā to ā¹1,345 crore, against ā¹8,885 crore (budget 2025-26) and ā¹6,690 crore (revised 2025-26). On the other hand, the electronic components manufacturing scheme has received a big boost of ā¹1,500 crore, against ā¹6.8 crore previously.
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Published on February 9, 2026