Moving on


Moving On: India Revises Its Consumer Price Index (CPI) Base Year


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Old Series New Series
Base Year 2012 2024 (2024=100)
Launched ~2014 12 February 2026
Item Basket 299 items 358 items
Consumption Survey HCES 2011-12 HCES 2023-24
Classification Framework Older COICOP COICOP-2018 (UNSD)
Implementing body MoSPI / NSO MoSPI / NSO
Release Ministry Min. of Statistics & PI Min. of Statistics & PI
Revision frequency commitment Ad hoc Every 5 years

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Governance / Administrative

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. The final CPI data release under the 2012-base series was for December 2025, with a reading of 1.33%. [S1]
  2. The new CPI series uses base year 2024=100, launched on 12 February 2026 by MoSPI/NSO. [S2]
  3. The item basket in the new CPI series expanded from 299 items (old) to 358 items (new). [S2]
  4. The new series is based on HCES 2023-24 (Household Consumption Expenditure Survey); the old series used HCES 2011-12. [S2]
  5. The new CPI follows the COICOP-2018 (Classification of Individual Consumption According to Purpose) framework of the UN Statistical Division. [S2]
  6. India's RBI inflation target is 4% ± 2% under Section 45ZA, RBI Act, 1934; CPI is the legally mandated measure. [S4]
  7. RBI's Household Inflation Expectations Survey (December 2025): perceived inflation at 6.6%; expected to reach 8% in one year — vs. official 1.33%. [S1]
  8. India's average CPI inflation (April–December 2025) under the old series was 1.7%, vs. 4.9% in the same period of 2024. [S1]
  9. MoSPI committed to revising the CPI series every 5 years — announced by Saurabh Garg, Chief Statistician (August 2025). [S5]
  10. The 2017-18 HCES data was not officially released, leaving a ~12-year gap between consumption surveys used in successive CPI series. [S1]
  11. The implementing body for CPI is the National Statistical Office (NSO) under the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). [S2]
  12. New basket includes digital services such as OTT subscriptions and e-commerce pricing — absent from the 2012-base series. [S2]
  13. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is constituted under Section 45ZB, RBI Act, 1934 and uses CPI as its primary nominal anchor. [S4]
  14. CPI (new series) for January 2026: 2.75%; for April 2026: 3.48% (both provisional). [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-III: Indian Economy — Inflation, monetary policy, price indices, statistical systems - GS-II: Governance — Statistical institutions, credibility of government data, policy design

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: "Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment" / "Inclusive growth" - GS-II: "Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The significant divergence between India's official CPI and household-perceived inflation in 2025 has raised fundamental questions about the credibility of statistical governance. Analyse the causes of this divergence and suggest measures to strengthen India's price measurement architecture." 2. "With the transition to the new CPI series (base 2024), critically evaluate the implications for RBI's monetary policy framework and the inflation-targeting regime established under the RBI Act, 1934." 3. "What are the limitations of relying on a decade-old base year for measuring consumer price inflation? How does the revision to CPI 2024 address — and fail to address — these limitations?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
RBI Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) & Inflation Targeting CPI is the legally mandated nominal anchor; MPC decisions hinge on CPI accuracy
Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) Foundational data source for CPI weights; the 2023-24 HCES drove the new series
GDP measurement & National Accounts (base year revision) India's GDP series also periodically revises its base year (last: 2011-12); parallel methodological debate
Wholesale Price Index (WPI) vs CPI WPI uses a different methodology and base; understanding the distinction is a common Prelims trap
Core vs. Headline Inflation The new CPI's reduced food weight will change the gap between core and headline — important for MPC communication
Statistical governance in India — NSO, CSO, MoSPI Institutional architecture behind India's official statistics
Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) Framework The legal and policy architecture within which CPI operates; adopted 2016

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong implementing body: CPI is released by MoSPI/NSO — not the RBI. The RBI uses CPI for inflation targeting but does not produce it.
  2. Confusing CPI and WPI: WPI (Wholesale Price Index) measures producer-level prices; CPI measures consumer-level prices. RBI targets CPI, not WPI. A common MCQ trap.
  3. Wrong base year for old series: The outgoing series had base year 2012 (sometimes written 2012=100), not 2010 or 2011. The 2010=100 series preceded it.
  4. Assuming the suppressed HCES was 2019-20 or 2021-22: The suppressed survey was specifically 2017-18. The next completed and released survey was HCES 2023-24.
  5. Misattributing the inflation target to the Constitution: The 4% ± 2% target is set under Section 45ZA of the RBI Act, 1934 — a statutory provision, not a constitutional one. The target is reviewed every 5 years.

11. Sources


Note: All PIB URLs are Tier 1 (Government of India primary sources). The article excerpt is the primary trigger event (Tier 4). Facts have been cross-verified across tiers wherever possible.