Overview
- Nodal ministry for official statistics and monitoring of Central Sector Schemes in India
- Ensures timely, reliable, and credible data for evidence-based policymaking
- Plays a critical role in national accounts, price statistics, surveys, and programme evaluation
Core Functions
- Statistical Policy & Coordination
- Formulation of statistical standards and methodologies
- Coordination with States/UTs for uniform statistical practices
- National Accounts
- Compilation of GDP, GVA, savings, capital formation
- Periodic base year revision of national accounts
- Price Statistics
- Compilation of Consumer Price Index (CPI) (Rural, Urban, Combined)
- Wholesale Price Index (WPI) support functions (currently under DPIIT, but historical linkage exists)
- Large-scale Surveys
- Conducts Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES)
- Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS)
- Economic Census (now transitioned to administrative datasets)
- Monitoring & Evaluation
- Monitoring implementation of Central Sector Projects
- Outcome-based performance evaluation
- Appraisal through Programme Evaluation Organisation (PEO)
Key Organisations under MoSPI
- National Statistical Office (NSO)
- Formed by merging CSO and NSSO
- Responsible for surveys, national accounts, price statistics
- Computer Centre
- Data processing, IT infrastructure, dissemination platforms
Important Statistical Outputs
- GDP and sectoral growth data
- CPI Inflation (used by RBI for inflation targeting)
- Employment and unemployment estimates
- Household consumption and poverty-related datasets
Recent Reforms & Initiatives
- Data Modernisation
- Shift from traditional surveys to administrative and big data sources
- Base Year Updates
- CPI base year updated to 2024
- National Accounts base year revisions to improve accuracy
- Transparency Measures
- Advance release calendars
- Improved metadata and public dissemination
Significance for Governance
- Backbone of economic policymaking, monetary policy, and fiscal planning
- Enables:
- Evidence-based welfare targeting
- Accurate inflation and growth assessment
- International comparability of Indian data
Challenges
- Balancing timeliness with data accuracy
- Capturing informal sector dynamics
- Addressing perception gaps between official statistics and lived experience
Consumer Price Index (CPI):
What is CPI
- Consumer Price Index measures changes in the average prices of a fixed basket of goods and services consumed by households
- It reflects retail inflation, i.e. inflation experienced directly by consumers
- CPI is the primary inflation indicator used for monetary policy in India
Why Base Year Matters
- CPI is calculated with reference to a base year, which represents consumption patterns and prices of a chosen reference period
- Over time, consumption behaviour changes due to:
- Income growth
- Urbanisation
- Technology adoption
- Subsidies and welfare schemes
- If the base year is outdated, CPI may misrepresent actual inflation experienced by households
Issues with the 2012 Base Year
- Consumption weights were based on 2011–12 Household Consumption Expenditure Survey
- Since then:
- Share of food in household spending has declined
- Spending on services, health, transport, education and communication has increased
- Subsidised food and energy altered effective household expenditure
- Resulted in lower measured inflation, even when households felt prices rising
Perception vs Official Inflation
- Official CPI inflation (Dec 2025): 1.33%
- Household inflation perception (RBI Inflation Expectations Survey):
- Current: ~6.6%
- Expected in one year: ~8%
- This divergence highlighted:
- Under-weighting of frequently used items
- Poor capture of service-sector inflation
- Weak representation of regional and income-group variation
New CPI Series (Base Year 2024)
- Base year updated from 2012 to 2024
- New weights derived from Household Consumption Expenditure Survey 2023–24
- Expected improvements:
- Better reflection of current consumption patterns
- Higher weight to services and non-food items
- Improved credibility of inflation data
- First inflation data under new series released from January 2026
Implications for Policy
- More accurate CPI improves:
- Interest rate decisions by RBI
- Real wage and pension indexation
- Fiscal planning and welfare adjustments
- Reduces disconnect between:
- Statistical inflation
- Lived inflation experience of households
Structural Limitation of CPI
- National CPI aggregates prices across:
- Diverse regions
- Rural and urban areas
- Income groups
- Even with updated base year:
- A single number cannot fully capture heterogeneous inflation experiences
- Supplementary indicators remain important
Overall Significance
- Base year revision is essential for statistical integrity
- Updated CPI strengthens:
- Inflation targeting framework
- Public trust in economic data
- Policy responsiveness to ground realities
A regularly updated CPI is critical for aligning macroeconomic policy with everyday economic experience.