RBI Governor Backs Economic Data Revamp for Better Policy & Growth

RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra has welcomed the National Statistical Office's revision of the base year for key indicators like CPI, GDP, and IIP. He stated the update will accurately reflect changing consumption patterns and India's evolving economic structure, including the rise of services and the digital economy. The move is seen as crucial for better-calibrated monetary policy aimed at sustaining price stability and growth. The new data series will be released between February and May 2026.

Key Points: RBI Governor Supports Base Year Revision for Key Economic Indicators

  • Base year update for CPI, GDP & IIP
  • Reflects new consumption patterns & economic structure
  • Aids calibrated monetary policy
  • Supports price stability & growth
3 min read

Base year revision of key indicators to support better-calibrated monetary policy, economic growth: RBI Governor

RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra welcomes NSO's base year revision for CPI, GDP & IIP to reflect economic changes and improve policy calibration.

"This exercise is not merely a revision in the base year, but it also covers revisions in methods, weights, item baskets... - Sanjay Malhotra"

Mumbai, January 16

Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra, has welcomed National Statistical Office under Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation's base year revision of key economic indicators -- Consumer Price Index, Gross Domestic Product, and Index of Industrial Production, noting it will reflect changing consumption patterns, economic structures, and support better-calibrated monetary policy and growth.

The Ministry of Statistics and Program Implementation is revising the base year of key macroeconomic indicators.

Indicators such as CPI, GDP, and IIP play a vital role in policymaking in RBI, the central bank governor said in a video message posted on X by the MoSPI.

"This exercise is not merely a revision in the base year, but it also covers revisions in methods, weights, item baskets, data sources and computation techniques," the RBI Governor said.

For RBI, he said CPI is especially important for monetary policy purposes because it anchors the flexible inflation-targeting framework.

"Updating the base year of CPI will ensure that the index reflects the consumption patterns and household spending more accurately as they have obviously changed over a period of time," Malhotra said.

Similarly, GDP figures are very important to the RBI.

"The GDP needs to capture the evolving structure of the Indian economy, which has again transformed and changed, with the rising role of services, digital activities, and various new business models," he said.

The IIP base revision, he said, will also help RBI improve assessments of underlying momentum in the real economy.

"Overall, I would like to congratulate the MOSPI. It is a very timely and a very welcome step. Strengthening our statistical systems, it will facilitate more calibrated policies. It will help us sustain both price stability and economic growth. I wish all the very best to the MOSPI and all the stakeholders in this endeavour," his video message concluded.

According to MoSPI, the new GDP series with base year 2022-23 will be released on February 27, 2026. The new CPI series with base year 2024 will be released on February 12, 2026.

The new IIP series with Base Year 2022-23 will be released on May 28, 2026.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) had, in late 2025, graded India at 'C' on national accounts, essentially citing outdated data. The base year was perceived to be outdated by the IMF.

The government is undertaking a revision of the base year for national accounts to better reflect structural changes in the economy, evolving consumption patterns, and the rapid expansion of the digital economy over the past decade, Saurabh Garg, Secretary, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI), had said earlier.

"Over the past 10 years, the structure of the economy has changed. The type of products that are consumed by people has changed, and the digital economy has grown much bigger," Garg had said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally! The CPI basket desperately needs to reflect what we actually buy today. How much weight does Ola/Uber, Swiggy, or Netflix have in the current index? Our spending habits are completely different. This should lead to more accurate inflation readings and hopefully better interest rate decisions.
M
Michael C
While the intent is good, the timelines are concerning. Releasing the new GDP series in Feb 2026? That's over a year away. In today's fast-paced economy, data needs to be more current. Hope the process is expedited without compromising quality.
R
Rohit P
The IMF's 'C' grade was an embarrassment, but it highlighted a real issue. Our statistical backbone must be world-class for a $5 trillion economy. This revision is not just about numbers; it's about credibility on the global stage. Jai Hind!
S
Sarah B
As someone who follows economic data closely, this is critical. The weight of manufacturing in IIP and services in GDP has shifted dramatically. Better data means the RBI can fine-tune monetary policy better, which directly affects loans, investments, and job creation. A solid move.
K
Kavya N
I just hope the new consumption basket for CPI accurately captures the rise in essential services costs like education, healthcare, and transport, not just discretionary spending. For the common family, that's where the real pinch is. 🤞

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