Why have India’s statistical databases been upgraded?

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Why Have India's Statistical Databases Been Upgraded?

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-III (Economy) | June 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Old Series New Series
GDP/National Accounts base year 2011-12 2022-23
IIP base year 2011-12 2022-23
CPI base year 2012 2024
GDP new series release date 27 February 2026
CPI new series release date 12 February 2026
IIP new series release date May 2026
Back-series release (GDP/IIP) December 2026 (expected)
Source & Methods publication August 2026 (expected)
IMF DQAF grade (Nov 2025) 'C' grade (2nd lowest)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Governance / Ethical

Administrative

Scientific / Technological

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12-18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The ministry responsible for GDP, IIP, and CPI in India is MoSPI (Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation), not the Finance Ministry. [S1]
  2. The new base year for GDP and IIP is 2022-23, replacing the 2011-12 base year. [S2]
  3. The new base year for CPI is 2024, replacing the 2012 base year. [S5]
  4. The new GDP series was released on 27 February 2026; the new CPI series on 12 February 2026. [S5]
  5. India received a 'C' grade (second-lowest) from the IMF for its national accounts statistics in November 2025. [S6]
  6. Double deflation replaces single deflation in the new GDP series for sectors like manufacturing and agriculture. [S2]
  7. The Supply and Use Table (SUT) framework has been integrated into India's national accounts for the first time to address statistical discrepancy. [S1]
  8. New data sources in the revised GDP: GST data and PFMS (Public Finance Management System). [S1]
  9. The informal sector is now measured using the Annual Survey of Unincorporated Sector Enterprises. [S1]
  10. Back-series data (linking old and new GDP series) is expected by December 2026. [S2]
  11. Items like DVD players and tape recorders were removed from the CPI basket in the 2026 revision. [S6]
  12. The IIP is now compiled at a more granular level in the new 2022-23 base series. [S1]
  13. The WPI base year revision is still in progress (as of June 2026); MoSPI also plans to introduce a Producer Price Index (PPI). [S1]
  14. India subscribes to the IMF's SDDS (Special Data Dissemination Standard) framework, which sets norms for statistical transparency. [S7]
  15. FY 2022-23 was selected as base year because it is a recent post-COVID normal year with comprehensive data availability. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III (Indian Economy — Growth, Development, Employment) Supplementary: GS-II (Governance, Institutions, Transparency)

Syllabus headings: - Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development, and employment - Government Budgeting; Inclusive Growth and issues arising from it - Role of institutions in economic governance

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "India's statistical infrastructure has long been criticised for methodological weaknesses. Critically examine the significance of the 2026 revision of GDP, IIP, and CPI base years in addressing these concerns." 2. "The IMF's 'C' grade to India's national accounts statistics in 2025 exposed systemic gaps in economic measurement. What reforms have been undertaken and what challenges remain?" 3. "Discuss the role of MoSPI in India's economic governance. How does the revision of statistical indices affect policymaking, investment decisions, and India's standing in international financial institutions?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Statistical Commission (NSC) Oversight body for MoSPI; its independence and role in statistical credibility debates
System of National Accounts (SNA 2008) UN framework India's revisions are aligning with; basis for GDP methodology globally
IMF SDDS and DQAF International data standards under which India was graded 'C'; understanding compliance obligations
Index of Industrial Production (IIP) Directly revised; key indicator for monetary policy and industrial policy decisions
Producer Price Index (PPI) vs WPI PPI is being planned to replace WPI; important methodological distinction
Informal Economy measurement in India AUSE survey, NSS, PLFS — understanding how the unorganised sector is captured
GDP vs GVA — distinction and usage Frequently confused in MCQs; GVA + net taxes = GDP; both covered in national accounts
Back-series controversy (2015 GDP revision) Historical precedent; political economy of statistical credibility

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: GDP, IIP, and CPI are all released by MoSPI, not the Finance Ministry or RBI. The RBI uses these figures but does not compile them.
  2. CPI base year confusion: The new CPI base is 2024, not 2022-23 (which is the base for GDP and IIP). All three were revised together but to different base years.
  3. 'C' grade agency confusion: The grade was awarded by the IMF (specifically under DQAF), not the World Bank or any domestic body.
  4. Single vs Double Deflation: Aspirants often think "deflation" here means falling prices — it is a methodology to convert nominal to real values. Double deflation separately deflates output and intermediate consumption; single deflation (the old method) used only output prices.
  5. WPI revision status: Unlike GDP, IIP, and CPI, the WPI base year revision is still in progress as of mid-2026 — do not assume all four indices have been updated.
  6. Back-series release timing: The back-series that links the old 2011-12 series to the new 2022-23 series is due December 2026 — it has not been released yet; long-run historical comparisons are therefore not yet possible.

11. Sources