Industrial output growth hits 5-month high of 5.1%

Good — I have sufficient Tier 1 facts from PIB/MoSPI to proceed.


Industrial Output Growth Hits 5-Month High of 5.1% — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Base Year Key Change
Original 1980-81 First modern series
Revision 1993-94 Expanded coverage
Revision 2004-05 Sector rebalancing
Revision 2011-12 Current long-running series
2026 2022-23 New item basket, revised weights, PPI replaces WPI for value-based outputs

4. Core Static Facts

Index of Industrial Production (IIP)

Parameter Detail
Compiled by National Statistical Office (NSO), MoSPI
Released by Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation (MoSPI)
Release frequency Monthly (with ~6-week lag; e.g., May data in late June)
Old base year 2011-12
New base year 2022-23 (effective June 2026)
Three broad sectors Mining & Quarrying, Manufacturing, Electricity
Use-based classification Primary Goods, Capital Goods, Intermediate Goods, Infrastructure/Construction Goods, Consumer Durables, Consumer Non-Durables
Value deflator (old) Wholesale Price Index (WPI)
Value deflator (new) Producer Price Index (PPI) [S2][S3]
New WPI base year 2022-23 (released 15 June 2026; replaces 2011-12 series) [S4]

New IIP 2022-23 Series — Key Changes - Updated item basket with broader sectoral coverage. [S2] - Revised weighting structure to reflect current economic structure. [S2] - Adoption of PPI over WPI for value-based outputs: PPI measures prices received by domestic producers (ex-factory), unlike WPI which includes trade margins. [S3][S4] - New Output PPI (OPPI), Input PPI (IPPI), and Service PPI (Banking, Insurance, Railways, Telecom, Air Passenger, Securities, Pension Funds) also released. [S4]

May 2026 IIP Data

Sector/Category May 2026 Growth Comparator
Overall IIP +5.1% (5-month high) May 2025: lower
Manufacturing +5.5% April 2026: 6.1%; May 2025: 4.2%
Electricity Positive (sector driver)
Capital Goods Positive (sector driver)
Consumer Goods Positive (sector driver)
Mining & Quarrying Negative (5th consecutive month of contraction)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Scientific / Methodological

Administrative / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. IIP is compiled and released by the National Statistical Office (NSO) under MoSPI — not RBI, not DPIIT.
  2. The new IIP series has base year 2022-23, replacing the earlier 2011-12 series. [S2]
  3. The first release of the new IIP 2022-23 series was on 1 June 2026; superseded on 30 June 2026 by a PPI-based revision. [S2]
  4. The revised series uses Producer Price Index (PPI) — not WPI — for deflating value-based industrial outputs. [S3]
  5. India's IIP has three broad sector components: Mining & Quarrying, Manufacturing, and Electricity.
  6. Manufacturing carries the largest weight (~75%) in the IIP basket.
  7. IIP growth in May 2026 was 5.1% — a five-month high; Manufacturing grew 5.5%. [S5]
  8. Mining & Quarrying contracted for the fifth consecutive month in May 2026. [S5]
  9. The new WPI 2022-23 series covers 957 items (up from 697 in the 2011-12 series). [S4]
  10. New WPI uses Gross Value of Output (GVO) for weights, replacing Net Traded Value. [S4]
  11. New Service PPIs were released for 7 services: Banking, Securities, Insurance, Pension Funds, Railways, Air (Passenger), Telecom. [S4]
  12. Capital Goods index in IIP is widely used as a proxy for investment demand / gross fixed capital formation trends.
  13. IIP data is released with approximately a 6-week lag (May data in late June).
  14. WPI base year revision (2011-12 → 2022-23) was approved on 25 May 2026 and released on 15 June 2026. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III — Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilization of Resources, Growth, Development, and Employment

Specific Syllabus Headings: - Inclusive growth and issues arising from it - Government budgeting; effects of liberalisation on the economy - Index numbers and data interpretation in economic governance

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The transition from WPI to PPI as a deflator in India's Index of Industrial Production (IIP) is a significant methodological improvement. Discuss the rationale for this change and its implications for macroeconomic data quality and GDP estimation." (GS-III, 250 words)

  2. "Persistent contraction in India's mining and quarrying sector despite overall IIP recovery raises structural concerns. Examine the causes and policy measures needed to revive the sector." (GS-III, 250 words)

  3. "Base year revisions in statistical indices are more than a technical exercise — they are a reflection of structural economic transformation. Discuss in the context of India's IIP 2022-23 revision." (GS-III, 150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
GDP Estimation Methodology (CSO/NSO) IIP feeds into GDP (value added approach); PPI switch will revise GDP numbers
Wholesale Price Index (WPI) vs Consumer Price Index (CPI) WPI is being revised; understanding WPI-CPI divergence is a recurring exam theme
Producer Price Index (PPI) Newly introduced; concept, coverage, and difference from WPI/CPI
Eight Core Industries Index Covers 8 key sectors (coal, steel, cement, etc.); leads IIP and is released earlier
Mining Sector Governance in India MMDR Act, environmental clearances, tribal rights — relevant to mining contraction
Capital Goods and Investment Demand Capital goods index as GFCF proxy; National Investment and Infrastructure Fund
MoSPI and India's Statistical System National Statistical Commission, NSSO, NSO — institutional architecture for Prelims
National Accounts Statistics (Base Year Revisions) GDP base year (currently 2011-12 under review); parallel to IIP revision

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong agency: IIP is released by MoSPI/NSO — aspirants often confuse it with DPIIT (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade), which releases FDI data and tracks industrial policy but not IIP.

  2. WPI vs PPI confusion: The new IIP uses PPI, not WPI. The WPI revision and PPI introduction happened simultaneously (June 2026) — do not conflate the two; PPI is the deflator in IIP, WPI is a separate price index.

  3. Sector weight confusion: Manufacturing dominates IIP (~75% weight); Mining (~14%) and Electricity (~8%) are smaller. Aspirants sometimes over-weight Mining's role because of frequent news on it.

  4. Base year mix-up: Old base year = 2011-12; New base year = 2022-23. Do not confuse with GDP base year (also 2011-12, revision pending) or WPI base year (also revised to 2022-23 in June 2026) — three separate indices, all with recent or ongoing revisions.

  5. IIP ≠ Eight Core Industries: The Eight Core Industries (ECI) index is a separate, earlier-released indicator covering 8 sectors (coal, crude oil, natural gas, refinery products, fertilisers, steel, cement, electricity) — it is NOT the same as IIP, though sectors overlap. ECI has a weight of ~40% in IIP.


11. Sources