New CPI Series Latest News
- On February 12, 2026, the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) released India’s first retail inflation data under the new Consumer Price Index (CPI) series (Base Year: 2024=100).
- Retail inflation for January 2026 stood at 2.75% (provisional) — the first official reading under the revised framework.
- This revision replaces the earlier 2012 base year, reflecting changes in consumption behaviour, market structures, and household expenditure patterns, as captured by the Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2023–24.
Why a New CPI Series?
- India’s economy has undergone structural transformation over the past decade.
- For example,
- Rising share of services
- Growth of digital consumption
- Shift toward cleaner fuels
- Changing food patterns
- Expansion of online marketplaces
- The new CPI aligns inflation measurement with current consumption realities, thereby improving its relevance for monetary policy (RBI), fiscal policy calibration, wage indexation, welfare schemes, GDP deflation and national accounts.
- Significance for monetary and fiscal policy:
- The CPI is the primary inflation measure for RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), linked to the inflation targeting framework (4% ± 2%), and is used for DA revisions, poverty estimation, real income calculation, welfare transfers.
- Lower weight of volatile food items may reduce short-term fluctuations, and provide clearer inflation signals.
Key Structural Changes in the New CPI
- Updated base year: Changed from 2012 to 2024, ensuring contemporary relevance.
- Adoption of international classification:
- The new series adopts 12 consumption divisions in line with the COICOP 2018 (Classification of Individual Consumption According to Purpose) framework.
- 12 divisions (more granular) from earlier structure (6 groups) enhances comparability with global inflation standards.
- Expanded coverage of items: Total items increased from 299 to 358 (goods increased to 308 from 259, and services from 40 to 50). This reflects growth of the services economy, and modern consumption patterns.
- New items added:
- Rural house rent (introduced for the first time)
- Online media and streaming services
- Value-added dairy products
- Barley and related products
- Pen drives, external hard disks
- Attendant and babysitter services
- Exercise equipment
- Cleaner fuels (CNG/PNG)
- Removed items: VCR/VCD/DVD players, tape recorders, radios, CD/DVD cassettes, second-hand clothing, coir/rope, reflecting technological obsolescence and lifestyle shift.
- Wider data collection:
- The new series collects data from more sources across the country. For example, data is collected from 1,465 rural markets (up from 1,181) and 1,395 urban markets (up from 1,114).
- The new series also collects data from 12 online marketplaces. Inclusion of online platforms is a major methodological advancement.
Revised Weight Structure – Changing Consumption Patterns
- Food and beverages:
- Weight reduced to 36.75% (from 45.86%).
- Implication: Headline inflation may become less volatile, as food prices are typically unstable. Food still remains the largest component.
- Housing (expanded category):
- Weight increased from 10.07% to 17.67%.
- Now expanded to include water, electricity, gas, and other fuels. Also introduces rural house rent, improving representativeness.
Inflation Numbers (January 2026)
- Headline CPI Inflation (2.75%): Rural: 2.73%, Urban: 2.77%
- Food Inflation (CFPI): 2.13%
- Rural: 1.96%
- Urban: 2.44%
- Housing Inflation: 2.05%
- Rural: 2.39%
- Urban: 1.92%
- Historical comparison is limited since this is the first release under the new base. A linking factor has been provided to compute backward-compatible index values up to 2013.
Challenges and Way Forward
- Comparability issues: Break in time series complicates long-term analysis. Integrate CPI data with big data analytics.
- Data consistency: Linking factor may not perfectly replicate old series trends. Enhance transparency in linking methodology.
- Food weight reduction debate: India remains a lower-middle-income economy where food inflation impacts welfare significantly. Ensure regular revision cycles (every 5–10 years).
- Rural representation concerns: Despite expansion, informal consumption may still be underreported. Strengthen rural data infrastructure. Increase public statistical literacy.
- Online price volatility: Digital marketplace pricing can fluctuate dynamically. Improve real-time digital price collection systems.
Conclusion
- The launch of the CPI Base 2024 series marks a crucial reform in India’s statistical architecture.
- By aligning inflation measurement with contemporary consumption patterns and international standards, the new series enhances the reliability of inflation signals for policymakers.
- However, maintaining continuity, credibility, and transparency will be essential to ensure that the CPI remains a trusted macroeconomic anchor in India’s inflation-targeting regime.
- In essence, this is not just a statistical update—it is a recalibration of how India measures the cost of living in a transforming economy.
Source: TH
Last updated on February, 2026
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New CPI Series FAQs
Q1. What is the base year of the newly launched CPI series released in February 2026?+
Q2. Which survey forms the basis for revising the weights in the new CPI series?+
Q3. Under the new CPI series, how many consumption divisions are adopted and which international framework guides them?+
Q4. How has the weight of the food and beverages category changed in the new CPI series?+
Q5. What was the headline retail inflation rate (CPI) for January 2026 under the new series?+
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