In India, Budget Day is usually the finance minister’s moment under the brightest lights in Parliament. Yet history shows that when political storms gather, prime ministers have occasionally stepped in to present the Union Budget themselves. Those rare departures from convention reveal how deeply economics and power are intertwined in New Delhi.
1958: Nehru Steps In Amid Scandal
India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, was not one to chase the spotlight on fiscal matters. But in 1958, circumstances forced his hand. His finance minister, T.T. Krishnamachari, resigned following the Haridas Mundhra financial scandal, leaving Nehru to temporarily handle the portfolio.
When Nehru presented the Budget, it carried the tone of a leader steadying the ship. He acknowledged the unusual situation before moving to policy. One of the most talked-about measures of that period was the introduction of the Gift Tax, aimed at curbing tax avoidance through the transfer of wealth. It signaled the government’s intent to tighten financial oversight at a time when public trust needed repair.
1970: Indira Gandhi’s Assertion of Authority
By 1970, political tensions within the Congress party had reached a boiling point. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s fallout with her finance minister, Morarji Desai, ended with Desai’s exit from the government. Gandhi took direct control of the Finance Ministry and presented the Budget herself.
Her Budget reflected a sharper ideological edge. It leaned toward stronger state intervention and higher taxation on select goods and wealth transfers, reinforcing her broader political message of redistributive economics. The move also underlined her consolidation of authority during a turbulent phase that would soon reshape Indian politics.
1987: Rajiv Gandhi During the Bofors Turmoil
Nearly two decades later, another crisis brought the prime minister to the Budget podium. In 1987, as the Bofors controversy shook Rajiv Gandhi’s government, Finance Minister V.P. Singh had already left the post after differences within the leadership.
Rajiv Gandhi held the finance portfolio for a period and presented the Budget during a time of intense scrutiny. His government pushed themes of modernization, technology, and economic efficiency — early signals of the reformist thinking that would gather pace in the following decade. The moment showed how economic messaging can become part of political damage control.
Budgets as Political Theatre
These episodes share a common thread: the Union Budget became more than a financial document. It turned into a stage for political reassurance, authority, and narrative control. When prime ministers personally delivered the Budget, the gesture itself sent a message — that the government was centralizing responsibility in uncertain times.
A Reminder for the Present
As India looks toward each new Budget, these historical detours serve as a reminder that the process is not immune to political drama. While institutions and procedures usually hold firm, moments of crisis can redraw the script — and occasionally place the prime minister at the center of the nation’s most important financial speech.