Last year’s Budget made a quiet but important move. With the launch of the Gyan Bharatam Mission and fresh investment into spiritual and cultural corridors, it acknowledged something India has rarely framed in economic terms: that its intellectual and spiritual heritage is not just cultural memory, but productive capacity. The Economic Survey 2025–26 sharpens that context. It describes a world shaped by tariff wars, fractured trade routes, and persistent geopolitical uncertainty. In such an environment, growth alone is fragile. What matters more is resilience, decentralisation, and sectors that are difficult to replicate or displace.
This is where the Faith-Tech and spiritual economy begins to matter
What was once informal and belief-driven is now evolving into a structured, technology-enabled ecosystem. Spiritual tourism, astrology, wellness retreats, ritual products, digital guidance platforms, and preventive health services are converging into a single industry. Globally, this ecosystem is expected to reach USD 1 trillion by 2032. India is not discovering this space. It already anchors it.
What’s missing is policy structure
As Vanya Mishra, Founder and CEO of Astrosure.ai, notes,
“Budget 2024-25 is a chance to unlock India’s intellectual and cultural capital. Policy support for technology-led wellness and faith-based innovation can create new growth engines, decentralise opportunity, and position India as a global leader in holistic well-being.”
Decentralisation is the operative word here
Spiritual tourism already sustains livelihoods across temple towns and heritage regions, supporting hospitality, transport, retail, artisans, guides, and digital services. With continued Budget support for spiritual corridors, connectivity, clean infrastructure, and digital pilgrim platforms, these regions can evolve into local economic zones, generating employment where people already live rather than forcing migration to metros. The same applies beyond tourism. Spiritual products, wellness services, and knowledge-based platforms rooted in Indic systems are finding global demand. But scale requires capability. Training. Certification. Digital delivery. Export readiness. These are Budget choices.
As Sahil Kothari, Founder, Sahil Kothari Training & Consultancy, points out,
“This Budget has an opportunity to move beyond funding assets and start funding capability. Faith-Tech and spiritual education can become powerful engines for skilling, entrepreneurship, and employability if the Budget supports structured training, certification frameworks, and digital-first delivery. My expectation is clear: recognise this sector formally, enable skilling incentives, and allow India’s cultural knowledge to translate into decentralised jobs, future-ready trainers, and globally exportable expertise.”
There is also a larger strategic layer that ties all of this together
As Sidhharrth S Kumaar, Chief Astrologer, NumroVani, observes,
“Amid growing global uncertainty, fragmented trade flows, and tariff-driven realignments highlighted in the Economic Survey, India needs growth engines that are resilient, decentralised, and culturally differentiated. Faith-Tech and spiritual sciences offer exactly that. When structured with technology and trust, this sector can become a global soft-power superpower while simultaneously spurring local economic zones, strengthening spiritual tourism clusters, and creating decentralised employment across regions. This is not about belief alone. It is about converting India’s civilisational intelligence into sustainable economic and strategic advantage.”
That framing brings the conversation back to first principles
Faith-Tech does not compete with manufacturing or digital services. It complements them. It converts heritage into systems, culture into capability, and meaning into measurable value. Handled with intent, this sector can move from the margins into the mainstream by 2032 not as nostalgia, but as one of India’s most distinctive and resilient growth engines in an uncertain world.
