In its annual Article IV consultation, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has graded India’s national accounts statistics (GDP and GVA) as ‘C’ (second-lowest rating), citing methodological weaknesses that hamper economic surveillance.
1. The Verdict: How did India Score?
- National Accounts (GDP/GVA): Rated ‘C’. This indicates that while data is frequent and timely, “methodological weaknesses” exist.
- Consumer Price Index (CPI): Rated ‘B’. Data is adequate but suffers from an outdated base year.
- Overall Data Category: Rated ‘B’ (spanning government finance, external sectors, and monetary statistics).
- Comparison: The rating remains unchanged from the previous year, though the IMF acknowledged that plans for upgrading statistics are “advancing”.
2. Critical Gaps: Why the ‘C’ Grade?
The IMF highlighted specific structural issues in how India calculates its economic data:
- Outdated Base Year: The data relies on the 2011-12 base year, failing to capture recent structural changes in the economy.
- The Deflator Problem: India uses Wholesale Price Indices (WPI) as a proxy for deflators because it lacks a dedicated Producer Price Index (PPI).
- Impact: This can lead to inaccuracies when adjusting nominal GDP to real GDP.
- Methodological Discrepancies: There are “sizeable discrepancies” between the Production Approach (GVA) and the Expenditure Approach (Consumption + Investment + Net Exports).
- Informal Sector Blindspot: The current framework struggles to accurately cover the informal sector’s contribution.
- Lack of Seasonally Adjusted Data: This makes quarter-on-quarter comparison difficult.
3. The Inflation (CPI) Conundrum
- While CPI data is timely (monthly release), it holds a ‘B’ rating because the item basket and weights are based on 2011-12 consumption patterns.
- Current spending habits (e.g., increased digital spend, changes in food consumption) are not accurately reflected.
4. Government Response & Way Forward
- Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) is currently updating the methodology and base years for both GDP and CPI.
- The New Series is expected to be released by early or mid-2026.
| Concept | Description |
| IMF Article IV | An annual “health check” of member countries’ economies. IMF economists visit the country to collect data and hold discussions with officials. |
| GDP Deflator | A ratio of Nominal GDP to Real GDP). Nominal GDP/Real GDP X 100 It measures the level of prices of all new, domestically produced, final goods and services. |
| PPI vs. WPI | PPI measures the average change in the price a producer receives (factory gate). WPI measures the price of goods in bulk transactions. India primarily uses WPI. |
| GDP Methods | Production Method: Sum of Value Added. Expenditure Method: C + I + G + (X-M) Theoretically, both should yield the same result. |