India’s New GDP Series Latest News
- The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) recently released a new GDP data series with 2022–23 as the base year, replacing the earlier 2011–12 base year.
- GDP statistics are central to economic policymaking, fiscal planning, investment decisions, and macroeconomic assessment in India.
- However, despite the technical improvements in the new series, concerns remain about large statistical discrepancies and the credibility of real GDP growth estimates.
Understanding GDP and Base Year Revision
- What is GDP?
- Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country’s geographical boundaries in a given year.
- It is the primary indicator of economic performance used by governments and policymakers.
- Two ways of measuring economic output:
- Production approach: Measured through Gross Value Added (GVA), capturing the value added by different sectors of the economy.
- Expenditure approach: Measured through GDP, it calculates total spending in the economy.
- Relationship between GDP and GVA: GDP = GVA + Net Indirect Taxes (Net Indirect Taxes = Indirect Taxes – Subsidies).
- In theory, both methods should produce identical estimates of economic output.
- Change in the base year:
- The base year provides a benchmark for price and production comparisons over time.
- Reasons for periodic revision are changes in production patterns and consumption basket, emergence of new sectors and technologies, updating price structures, and improving data sources and methodology.
- India periodically revises the base year. For example, earlier series (base year: 1999–2000), next revision (2004–05), previous series (2011–12), and new series (2022–23).
- This is the 8th revision of GDP base year in independent India.
Major Criticisms of the Previous GDP Series (2011-12 Base Year)
- Overestimation of GDP growth:
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- Critics argued that GDP growth appeared higher than what ground-level economic indicators suggested.
- For example, nominal GDP growth (FY26) was about 8%, while the real GDP growth was ~7.4%.
- This implied inflation of only about 0.6%, which many believed underestimated actual price rise.
- Credibility concerns raised by economists: Former Chief Economic Adviser, Arvind Subramanian argued that India’s GDP numbers might overstate growth due to measurement issues.
- Mismatch with economic reality: Several analysts noted that high GDP growth did not align with sluggish job creation, weak consumption demand, and declining private investment.
What are ‘Statistical Discrepancies’?
- Mismatch:
- Often, production-side and expenditure-side estimates do not match. The difference is called Statistical Discrepancy.
- Reasons for discrepancies:
- Incomplete expenditure data
- Delayed reporting of consumption or investment
- Difficulty in tracking household spending
- Estimation errors
- To reconcile the mismatch, MoSPI adds a balancing component called “discrepancies.”
- Problems with high discrepancies:
- Large discrepancies: Reduce credibility of GDP estimates, suggest data gaps, and raise doubts about real growth figures.
- Experts suggest that discrepancies should ideally remain below 2% of GDP.
Structure of India’s GDP (Expenditure Side)
- Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE): It includes household spending on goods and services, and is the largest contributor (~60% of GDP).
- Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF): Investment by firms and government in factories, machinery, infrastructure. It contributes ~30% of GDP.
- Government Final Consumption Expenditure (GFCE): Government spending on salaries, pensions, operational expenses. It contributes ~10% of GDP.
- Other components: Net Exports (Exports – Imports), Change in Stocks (Inventory changes), Valuables, Discrepancies.
Key Findings from the New GDP Series
- FY24 data:
- Overall real GDP growth: 7.2%
- Growth of main GDP components (PFCE, GFCF, GFCE): 5.7%
- The gap is explained by sharp increases in discrepancies (increased to ₹1 lakh crore) and inventory changes (change in stocks increased by 116%).
- FY25 data:
- Overall real GDP growth: 7.1%
- Growth of main components: 6.1%
- But, discrepancies increased by 230% (to ~₹3.5 lakh crore).
- FY26 estimate: Discrepancies projected at ₹4.9 lakh crore, indicating rising mismatch between production and expenditure estimates.
Reasons for Rising Discrepancies
- Lack of complete consumption data: Reliable expenditure data exists mainly for government spending, imports and exports, and corporate investment. However, household consumption and investment data are limited.
- Dependence on sample surveys: Data such as the Household Consumption Expenditure Survey uses sample surveys, not full census-level data. Thus, it provides ratios rather than precise levels of spending.
- Quality of price deflators:
- When calculating real GDP, nominal values are adjusted using price deflators.
- As time passes from the base year (2022–23), price measurement becomes less accurate, deflator errors increase.
- To improve accuracy, MoSPI has increased the number of deflators from 180 to about 600.
Challenges in Estimating India’s GDP and Way Forward
- Data gaps in consumption expenditure: Strengthen data collection systems. Improve household consumption and investment surveys.
- Large informal sector: Reduce informal sector data gaps – Strengthen labour, enterprise and MSME data systems.
- Limited real-time data: Develop real-time digital data sources. Use GST data, digital payments data, and satellite data to track economic activity.
- Weak price deflators: Improve deflator quality. Regular updates in price indices and sectoral deflators.
- Rising statistical discrepancies: Improve Supply and Use Tables (SUT). Better matching of production and expenditure data.
Conclusion
- The revision of the GDP base year to 2022–23 marks an important step in updating India’s national income accounting framework.
- However, the persistence of large statistical discrepancies raises concerns about the accuracy of real GDP estimates.
- Thus, enhancing the credibility of India’s GDP statistics is crucial for sound economic policymaking and global investor confidence.
Source: IE
Last updated on March, 2026
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India’s New GDP Series FAQs
Q1. What is the significance of revising the base year in GDP calculations? +
Q2. What is the difference between GVA and GDP? +
Q3. What are ‘statistical discrepancies’ in GDP estimation? +
Q4. What are the major components of GDP from the expenditure approach in India? +
Q5. Why do rising statistical discrepancies raise concerns about the credibility of GDP data? +
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