Index of Service Production: Why Index of Service Production Matters for India’s Economy

Index of Service Production will track India’s services sector monthly. Index of Service Production fills a key data gap using GST and other official sources.

Index of Service Production
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Index of Service Production Latest News

  • The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) has released an ‘Approach Paper’ outlining its plan to measure the output of India’s formal services sector every month through a new Index of Service Production (ISP). 
  • The index will use 2024-25 as the base year and will rely heavily on GST Network data as a key input. Public comments on this proposal have been invited. 
  • A Technical Advisory Committee on ISP (TAC-ISP) was formed in May 2025. It consisted of 24 experts. It has prepared the current approach paper after extensive discussions.

What is the ISP and Why is it Needed

  • Currently, India publishes two key high-frequency (monthly) economic indicators:
    • Index of Industrial Production (IIP) — measures monthly output of the industrial sector (manufacturing, mining, electricity).
    • Consumer Price Index (CPI) — measures retail inflation and forms the basis of India’s headline inflation number.
  • Both are closely watched by policymakers, the RBI, and economists to understand the economy’s trajectory. 
  • However, there is no equivalent monthly index for the services sector — a glaring gap given that services contribute more than half of India’s GDP and generate millions of jobs.

What Do Policymakers Use Currently

  • To understand services sector performance, policymakers and economists currently rely on the S&P Global’s HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). 
  • However, the PMI is a survey-based sentiment index — it captures how businesses feel about activity, not what is actually being produced. 
  • It does not measure actual output. The ISP is designed to fill this gap with hard, output-based data.

Index of Service Production (ISP)

  • ISP aims to track short-term movements in the services sector. It will be similar in concept to IIP but for services.
  • It will be developed by the National Statistical Office (NSO).

What Will the ISP Cover

  • The approach paper studies 40+ service sub-sectors, including:
    • Trade (wholesale & retail) 
    • Transport 
    • Banking and insurance 
    • Communication 
    • Hotels and restaurants 
    • Real estate 
    • Professional and technical services 
    • Entertainment and recreation 
  • Focus is on availability of output data and price deflators.

Methodology and Global Alignment

  • Based on international best practices.
  • Includes methods for: 
    • Data standardisation 
    • Use of price deflators (to adjust for inflation)

What Data Sources Will the ISP Use

  • MoSPI plans to draw from three key data sources:
    • GST Network (GSTN) Data — Provides information on production and outward supplies across different sectors and will serve as the primary data source for monitoring services sector output. However, sectors exempt from GST — such as health and education — cannot be captured through this route.
    • Administrative Data from Ministries and Organisations — Sector-specific data from relevant government bodies will supplement GSTN data for sectors not covered by GST.
    • Annual Survey of Incorporated Services Sector Enterprises (ASISSE) — MoSPI’s own enterprise survey, currently being conducted, will provide additional granularity.
  • It should be note that all three data sources exclude the informal services sector. 
  • The excluded segments — due to data unavailability — account for nearly 33% of total GVA of the services sector
  • Specifically, health and education (which will be excluded until ASISSE results are available) alone account for nearly 10% of services sector GVA.

How Will Output be Adjusted for Prices

  • To convert nominal output into real output (adjusted for price changes), a Producer Price Index (PPI) would ideally be used — as it measures the prices received by producers. 
  • However, since India does not yet have a comprehensive PPI, MoSPI plans to use non-food CPI and sub-sector specific CPI as proxies in the interim.
    • DPIIT is currently working on revising the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) and developing a full Producer Price Index (PPI). 
    • A Working Group has recommended methodologies for compiling PPIs for services sub-sectors like Banking, Insurance, Securities, Pensions, Air Transport, Railways, and Telecom. 

Conclusion

  • The ISP, once operationalised, will be a transformative addition to India’s statistical architecture. 
  • It will give policymakers — including the RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee — a far more accurate and timely picture of the services sector, which is the backbone of India’s economy. 
  • It will also reduce India’s dependence on private sector survey-based indices like the PMI for understanding services output. 
  • The initiative reflects MoSPI’s broader push toward evidence-based policymaking through better data.

Source: IE | PIB

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Index of Service Production FAQs

Q1. What is the Index of Service Production?+

Q2. Why is the Index of Service Production needed?+

Q3. What data sources will the Index of Service Production use?+

Q4. What are the limitations of the Index of Service Production?+

Q5. How will prices be adjusted in the Index of Service Production?+

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