INDEX OF EIGHT CORE INDUSTRIES (BASE YEAR: 2011-12=100) FOR MAY 2026
I have sufficient facts from Tier 1 sources to write the study note.
Index of Eight Core Industries (ICI) — May 2026
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | Base Year: 2011-12 = 100
1. At a Glance
- ICI (Index of Eight Core Industries) is a composite index tracking monthly output of eight infrastructure-intensive industries that serve as upstream inputs to most of India's manufacturing and services sectors. [S1]
- It is the single most important lead indicator for the Index of Industrial Production (IIP), covering 40.27% of the weight of items in IIP — making ICI movements a near-certain predictor of IIP direction. [S1][S2]
- Released monthly by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry (DPIIT) via the Press Information Bureau, roughly 4–5 weeks after the reference month. [S1]
- UPSC relevance: tested in Prelims (weights, constituents, ministry), Mains GS-III (industrial policy, infrastructure), and Essay (India's growth quality). [S1]
2. Why in the News
- On 22 June 2026, PIB released the provisional ICI data for May 2026: the combined index grew +0.5% (provisional) year-on-year — a sharp deceleration from April 2026's +1.8% (final). [S1]
- Only three of eight sectors — Steel, Cement, and Electricity — recorded positive growth in May 2026; the remaining five dragged the composite into near-stagnation. [S1]
- The release simultaneously revised April 2026 final growth upward to 1.8% from the provisional estimate of ~1.7%, consistent with the standard one-month revision cycle. [S1][S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- Pre-ICI era: India tracked industrial output only via IIP, which had a significant reporting lag and poor coverage of upstream sectors.
- ICI introduced to provide a timely, high-frequency snapshot of eight "core" or "infrastructure" industries whose performance cascades through the whole economy.
- Base year revisions:
- Earlier series used 1993-94 as base year.
- Rebased to 2004-05 subsequently.
- Current series uses 2011-12 = 100 (aligned with IIP and GDP base year revisions). [S1][S2]
- Nodal agency: Office of the Economic Adviser (OEA), DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce & Industry. [S1]
- Published roughly on the last working day of the following month (e.g., May 2026 data released 22 June 2026).
- Data is first released as provisional, then finalised in the subsequent month's release.
4. Core Static Facts
The Eight Sectors & Their Weights (ICI = 100)
| # | Sector | Weight in ICI (%) | IIP Weight Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Petroleum Refinery Products | 28.04 | Largest single component |
| 2 | Steel | 17.92 | — |
| 3 | Electricity | ~19.85 (residual) | — |
| 4 | Coal | 10.33 | — |
| 5 | Crude Oil | 8.98 | — |
| 6 | Natural Gas | 6.88 | — |
| 7 | Cement | 5.37 | — |
| 8 | Fertilizers | 2.63 | Smallest component |
Note: Individual weights are derived from IIP and scaled pro-rata so that the sum of ICI weights = 100. [S2]
Key Definitional Facts
- Combined ICI weight in IIP: 40.27% [S1]
- Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Commerce & Industry (through DPIIT / OEA) [S1]
- Base year: 2011-12 = 100 (current series) [S1]
- Frequency: Monthly (provisional + one-month revision cycle)
- Coverage: Production-side data; does not capture prices or value-added
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- ICI's 40.27% weight in IIP means a 1% swing in ICI translates to roughly a 0.4% swing in IIP — making it the single most watched upstream indicator for industrial GDP. [S1]
- May 2026's +0.5% growth signals stress in upstream industries (crude oil, coal, fertilizers, refinery likely contracted), which can squeeze input costs and supply chains for manufacturing. [S1]
- The contrast between April 2026 (+1.8%) and May 2026 (+0.5%) may reflect seasonal demand softening, monsoon-related logistics disruptions, or subdued global commodity demand. [S1][S3]
- Refinery Products at 28.04% weight means any crude processing disruption has an outsized downward effect on the composite index. [S2]
Environmental / Energy
- Electricity recording positive growth in May 2026 reflects continued power demand growth, likely driven by summer cooling loads — relevant to India's coal-dependence and renewable energy transition debates. [S1]
- Coal and Natural Gas sectors' performance directly links to India's energy mix debate (coal dominance vs. gas-bridge vs. renewables); if coal output falls, it signals either demand softening or supply-side mining constraints.
Administrative / Governance
- The provisional → final revision mechanism (April 2026 revised from ~1.7% to 1.8%) reflects data quality improvement as departmental returns from PSUs and private firms arrive. [S1][S3]
- Fertilizer sector's small weight (2.63%) belies its policy significance — urea pricing, subsidy rationalisation, and Neem-coated urea mandates all affect output volumes tracked here.
Historical / Comparative
- May 2024 ICI growth was +6.3% (with Electricity, Coal, Steel, Natural Gas all positive) — making May 2026's +0.5% a dramatic year-on-year deceleration in the same calendar month. [S4]
- FY 2025-26 sectoral cumulative performance (Apr–Mar 2025-26): Steel +9.5%, Cement +8.7%, Electricity +1.0% — showing Steel and Cement as the sustained growth engines of the current industrial cycle. [S3]
Strategic / Policy
- Steel and Cement's consistent positive growth in 2025-26 aligns with the National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) and PM Gati Shakti investments driving construction and metal demand.
- Weak Crude Oil and Natural Gas output underscores India's import dependence in hydrocarbons; any ICI dip in these sectors worsens the current account.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- May 2026 (released 22 Jun 2026): Combined ICI +0.5% (provisional); Steel, Cement, Electricity positive; five other sectors (Coal, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Refinery Products, Fertilizers) likely contracted or flat. [S1]
- April 2026 (final): ICI revised to +1.8%; Steel +6.2%, Cement +9.4%, Electricity +4.1% (provisional had cited +1.7%). [S1][S3]
- December 2025: Data released showing continued moderation trend in overall ICI growth. [S5]
- November 2025: ICI data released; Cement and Steel remained primary growth drivers across the second half of FY 2025-26. [S5]
- May 2024: ICI recorded +6.3% — a high base that makes May 2026's +0.5% appear especially weak in comparison. [S4]
- FY 2025-26 cumulative (Apr–Mar): Steel cumulative +9.5%, Cement +8.7% — infrastructure-driven demand sustained. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The ICI covers exactly eight industries: Coal, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Refinery Products, Fertilizers, Steel, Cement, Electricity. [S1]
- Eight Core Industries constitute 40.27% of the weight of items in the IIP. [S1]
- Base year of the current ICI series is 2011-12 = 100. [S1]
- The largest single component by weight in ICI is Petroleum Refinery Products at 28.04%. [S2]
- The smallest component by weight is Fertilizers at 2.63%. [S2]
- Nodal agency for ICI: Office of the Economic Adviser (OEA), DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce & Industry — NOT MoSPI. [S1]
- ICI data is released monthly on a provisional basis, revised the following month. [S1]
- Combined ICI growth in May 2026 was +0.5% (provisional) year-on-year. [S1]
- Only Steel, Cement, and Electricity recorded positive growth in May 2026. [S1]
- April 2026 final growth rate was revised to 1.8% (higher than provisional). [S1]
- May 2024 ICI growth was +6.3% — highest in recent months, with Electricity, Coal, Steel, Natural Gas all positive. [S4]
- Steel's weight in ICI is 17.92%; Coal's weight is 10.33%. [S2]
- The individual ICI weights are scaled pro-rata from IIP weights so ICI weights sum to 100. [S2]
- FY 2025-26 cumulative growth: Steel +9.5%, Cement +8.7% (April to March 2025-26). [S3]
- ICI release for May 2026 was dated 22 June 2026 — typically released ~4–5 weeks after reference month end. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping: - GS-III: Indian Economy — Industrial sector, infrastructure, economic growth indicators
Specific Syllabus Headings: - "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways" - "Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilisation of Resources, Growth, Development" - "Effects of Liberalisation on the Economy, Changes in Industrial Policy"
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"The Index of Eight Core Industries (ICI) is often described as a bellwether for India's industrial health. Critically examine the structural limitations of ICI as a policy tool and suggest reforms to improve its coverage and timeliness." (GS-III)
-
"Despite consistent positive growth in Steel and Cement sectors in FY 2025-26, overall ICI growth has remained subdued. What does this suggest about the quality and breadth of India's industrial recovery?" (GS-III)
-
"Examine the relationship between the Index of Eight Core Industries (ICI) and the Index of Industrial Production (IIP). How can policymakers use ICI data for early-warning economic monitoring?" (GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Index of Industrial Production (IIP) | ICI feeds 40.27% of IIP; understanding ICI is prerequisite to interpreting IIP |
| National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) | Drives Steel and Cement demand that is reflected in ICI |
| PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan | Infrastructure push behind sustained core sector growth |
| Core Sector vs. Manufacturing Sector | Distinction between infrastructure (ICI) and downstream manufacturing (IIP) |
| India's Energy Mix & Coal Dependency | Coal, Crude Oil, Electricity sectors in ICI directly reflect energy policy trade-offs |
| Wholesale Price Index (WPI) | WPI tracks commodity prices of many same sectors; ICI tracks volumes — compare both |
| Economic Survey — Industrial Chapter | Contextualises ICI trends within annual macroeconomic narrative |
| National Steel Policy 2017 | Background for Steel sector's 17.92% weight and policy targets |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Wrong ministry: Students often attribute ICI to MoSPI (which handles CPI, WPI, IIP). Correct: ICI is released by DPIIT / OEA under Ministry of Commerce & Industry. MoSPI releases IIP using ICI as an input.
-
Confusing ICI weight with IIP weight: The statement "40.27% of IIP" means 40.27% of IIP's total weight is accounted for by the eight core industries — not that these eight industries produce 40.27% of India's industrial output by value.
-
Electricity weight confusion: Electricity's weight is not directly stated in many press releases — it is the residual after the other seven sectors' weights are summed. Students sometimes list only seven sectors or misquote Electricity's weight.
-
Provisional vs. Final data: April 2026 provisional growth was ~1.7%; the final was 1.8%. Using provisional figures in answers about "final" performance is a common slip; always note "provisional" or "final" in exam answers.
-
Base year anachronism: Some sources and older notes cite base year 2004-05. The current series uses 2011-12 = 100 — matching the rebased IIP and GDP series. Quoting the old base year is a standard trap in MCQs.
-
Fertilizers as "largest" sector: Fertilizers receive heavy policy attention (subsidies, urea pricing) but have the smallest weight (2.63%) in ICI. Students conflate policy importance with index weight.
11. Sources
- [S1] INDEX OF EIGHT CORE INDUSTRIES (BASE YEAR: 2011-12=100) FOR MAY 2026 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2276691 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S2] Index of Eight Core Industries — Methodology and Weights (pib.gov.in search results compiling individual press release data) — https://pib.gov.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=179661 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S3] INDEX OF EIGHT CORE INDUSTRIES (BASE YEAR: 2011-12=100) FOR APRIL, 2026 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2263287 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S4] Combined Index of Eight Core Industries increases by 6.3% in May 2024 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2029320 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S5] INDEX OF EIGHT CORE INDUSTRIES (BASE YEAR: 2011-12=100) FOR DECEMBER, 2025 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2216458 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)