India to revamp IIP with new base year, wider coverage from June 1
India will launch an updated Index of Industrial Production on June 1. The new IIP will feature a 2022-23 base year and include sectors like minor minerals and waste management. It will offer more detailed tracking of industrial activity. This revamp aims to provide a clearer picture of India's industrial growth.
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Context
The (MoSPI) will revamp the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) starting June 1, adopting a new base year of 2022-23 (shifting from 2011-12). Based on a Technical Advisory Committee report, the updated index will expand its coverage, introduce granular sub-indices for sectors like renewable energy and mining, and align with the (NIC-2025) framework.
UPSC Perspectives
Economic
The Index of Industrial Production is a critical macroeconomic indicator measuring short-term changes in industrial output. Shifting the base year (a reference year used to compare economic data) from 2011-12 to 2022-23 is crucial for maintaining the relevance of the . A dated base year often fails to capture structural shifts in the economy, leading to a misrepresentation of industrial health. The restructuring of the manufacturing basket—adding 120 new item groups and removing 64—reflects changing consumption patterns and the evolution of the manufacturing sector. Furthermore, the introduction of a chain-linked IIP (where weights are updated periodically rather than remaining fixed for a decade) is a significant methodological upgrade. This allows the index to adapt more fluidly to emerging industries and fading sectors, providing policymakers with a more accurate, real-time picture of economic activity for formulating monetary and fiscal policies.
Governance
Accurate and timely data is the bedrock of effective governance and policy formulation. The revamp of the addresses long-standing concerns regarding the quality and comprehensiveness of India's statistical architecture. The decision by to utilize administrative data, such as tracking tap connections and waste management in cities (Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation), demonstrates a shift towards integrating existing government datasets into national statistics. This approach not only broadens the scope of the index but also reduces reliance on traditional, sometimes cumbersome, survey methods. The proposal to develop a separate industrial index for the unincorporated sector (informal businesses not registered as companies) is particularly vital for India, where a massive portion of employment and economic activity occurs outside the formal sector. For UPSC, this highlights the ongoing efforts to strengthen state capacity through better data governance.
Environmental
The transition towards sustainable practices is increasingly being reflected in economic metrics. The new series introduces crucial granularity by creating separate indices for renewable and non-renewable electricity generation. Previously, these were aggregated, masking the pace of India's energy transition (the shift from fossil fuels to clean energy). By disaggregating this data, the government and investors can track the specific growth trajectory of the renewable energy sector, which is essential for monitoring progress toward India's climate commitments, such as those made under the (e.g., achieving 50% cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel-based energy resources by 2030). Similarly, dividing the mining sector into sub-indices, including one specifically for rare earth minerals (critical elements for modern technology like EVs and wind turbines), acknowledges their growing strategic and economic importance in the global green economy.