A new CPI base, a clearer inflation signal

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A New CPI Base, A Clearer Inflation Signal

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1822 Joseph Lowe (England) — earliest articulation of the principle that goods/services should be weighted by importance in consumption, not treated equally; conceptual ancestor of modern CPI. [S1]
1943 India's first cost-of-living indices for industrial workers (CPI-IW).
1960 CPI for Agricultural Labourers (CPI-AL) introduced.
1986 CPI for Rural Labourers (CPI-RL) introduced.
2011 CPI-Combined (Rural+Urban) launched by MoSPI with base year 2010=100; first nationally representative combined CPI.
2014 RBI formally adopted CPI-Combined as the nominal anchor for monetary policy under FIT; target = 4% (±2%).
2015 Base year revised to 2012=100 (from 2010).
2024 HCES 2022-23 results released — first survey in 11 years; showed dramatic shift toward services, education, health in household spending.
2025-26 New CPI base year (2024=100 proposed) and 12-category COICOP 2018 alignment announced/operationalised by MoSPI. [S1]

Predecessor / Related Indices: - CPI-IW (base: 2016=100) — used for Dearness Allowance (DA) calculation for central govt employees. - CPI-AL/RL — used for minimum wages of agricultural workers (MGNREGS linkage). - WPI (Wholesale Price Index) — producer-level prices; base year 2011-12=100.


4. Core Static Facts

Definitional Framework

Term Definition
CPI Measures change in price of a fixed basket of goods/services representative of household consumption over time.
Base Year Reference year against which price changes are measured (index = 100).
COICOP 2018 UN's standard classification for household consumption; organises spending into 12 top-level divisions (food, clothing, housing, health, transport, communications, recreation, education, restaurants, miscellaneous, etc.).
HCES Household Consumption Expenditure Survey — MoSPI survey providing weights for the CPI basket.
Laspeyres Index Formula used in India's CPI — weights fixed at base period; prices change.
Headline CPI Overall CPI including food and fuel.
Core CPI CPI excluding food and fuel — tracks underlying demand-side inflation.

Institutional Details

Parameter Detail
Compiling Agency MoSPI (National Statistical Office, NSO)
Frequency Monthly
Release Lag ~12 days after end of reference month
Monetary Policy Target 4% CPI inflation (±2% tolerance band); mandated under RBI Act, 1934 (amended 2016) — Section 45ZA
MPC 6-member Monetary Policy Committee sets repo rate to achieve CPI target

Old vs. New CPI Structure

Parameter Old CPI (Base 2012) New CPI (Revised)
Categories 6 broad groups 12 distinct categories (COICOP 2018)
Services classification Health, education, transport, personal care aggregated into one head Each split into separate, visible categories
Food weight Higher Declined
Housing + Services weight Lower Increased
Survey basis NSSO 2011-12 HCES HCES 2022-23

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Governance / Administrative

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Historical

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's CPI-Combined was first launched in 2011 with base year 2010=100; revised to 2012=100 in 2015.
  2. COICOP stands for Classification of Individual Consumption According to Purpose — a UN standard; India adopted COICOP 2018 in its CPI revision.
  3. The new CPI basket uses data from HCES 2022-23 (Household Consumption Expenditure Survey); the previous basket used NSSO HCES 2011-12.
  4. Under the revised CPI, categories expanded from 6 to 12 distinct consumption heads.
  5. Food weight has declined and housing + services weight has increased in the revised CPI, reflecting structural consumption shifts.
  6. RBI's inflation target is 4% CPI (±2%), mandated under Section 45ZA of the RBI Act, 1934 (amended 2016).
  7. CPI-IW (Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers) — base year 2016=100 — is used for calculating Dearness Allowance for central government employees; compiled by Labour Bureau (not MoSPI).
  8. CPI-AL/RL (Agricultural/Rural Labourers) — compiled by Labour Bureau — used for setting MGNREGS minimum wages.
  9. WPI (Wholesale Price Index) — base year 2011-12=100 — compiled by DPIIT (Dept for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade), not MoSPI.
  10. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) has 6 members: 3 from RBI (Governor + 2 Deputy Governors/officials) + 3 external members appointed by Central Government.
  11. Joseph Lowe (1822) first articulated the principle of weighted price measurement — conceptual foundation of modern CPI. [S1]
  12. If RBI fails to meet the 4% ±2% target for 3 consecutive quarters, it must report to Parliament explaining reasons and remedial measures — a statutory obligation under RBI Act.
  13. The Laspeyres Index (fixed base-period weights) is the formula used in India's CPI construction.
  14. Under the new COICOP 2018 structure, services like health, education, transport, and personal care — earlier lumped in one head — are now separately identifiable categories.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III (Indian Economy — Inflation, Monetary Policy) Secondary: GS-II (Government Policies — Statistical Institutions, Governance)

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: Mobilisation of resources, growth, development, employment; Inflation - GS-III: Effects of liberalisation on the economy; changes in industrial policy - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The revision of India's Consumer Price Index basket to align with COICOP 2018 is not merely a statistical update but a policy necessity. Examine the significance of this revision for monetary policy management and equitable inflation measurement." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "The 11-year gap in conducting India's Household Consumption Expenditure Survey resulted in structurally distorted inflation measurement. Critically analyse the governance and institutional lapses this reflects and the corrective steps taken." (GS-II/III, 10 marks)

  3. "Services inflation in India has been systematically underweighted in the CPI. With reference to the revised CPI methodology, discuss how this distortion affected monetary policy decisions and what a more accurate index implies for RBI's policy stance." (GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) Framework CPI is the target variable; understanding the framework requires understanding the index
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) & Repo Rate MPC decisions directly hinge on CPI readings; revised CPI changes the MPC's information set
WPI vs. CPI — Differences & Uses Common exam confusion; WPI = producer prices, CPI = retail prices; different ministries, different uses
Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2022-23 Primary data source for CPI revision; also feeds into poverty estimates, GDP computation
Dearness Allowance (DA) Calculation Uses CPI-IW, not CPI-Combined; separate base, separate agency — common trap area
National Statistical Commission (NSC) & MoSPI Institutional architecture for official statistics in India
GDP Deflator vs. CPI Alternative measure of economy-wide inflation; used to compute real GDP
Core Inflation vs. Headline Inflation Policy debate on which measure RBI should target; services-weight revision affects core inflation significantly

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CPI-IW ≠ CPI-Combined: CPI-IW (base: 2016=100, compiled by Labour Bureau under Ministry of Labour) is used for DA calculations. CPI-Combined (compiled by MoSPI) is the RBI monetary policy anchor. Aspirants confuse the two.

  2. WPI compiled by DPIIT, not MoSPI: WPI falls under the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade. CPI falls under MoSPI. Both are different ministries.

  3. "Food weight declined" ≠ "Food is less important": The weight decline reflects that households proportionally spend less on food today (Engel's Law) — it does not mean food prices have fallen or food is less essential.

  4. COICOP is a UN classification, not an Indian invention: Aspirants sometimes attribute it to MoSPI or NITI Aayog. It is a UN Statistics Division standard; India adopted the 2018 version.

  5. RBI's inflation target: The 4% ±2% band means RBI must act if CPI exceeds 6% or falls below 2% for three consecutive quarters — aspirants often misstate this as any breach of 4%, ignoring the tolerance band.


11. Sources

Note: Both WebSearch queries to Tier 1/2 domains returned API access errors; no URLs were successfully retrieved. The above note is grounded entirely in the article excerpt [S1] and corroborated by training knowledge (base year: August 2025). All facts derived from training knowledge (institutional details, statutory provisions, base years of indices) should be verified against the latest MoSPI and RBI circulars before the exam.


Prepared for UPSC CSE 2026–27. Cross-check MoSPI and RBI press releases for the exact notified base year and effective date of the revised CPI.