India is set to overhaul how it calculates real GDP growth under a revised national accounts series due to launch this week, the country’s top statistical official said, adopting more granular price deflation to address concerns raised by economists.

“We will now use about 500-600 items from the new CPI and the old WPI series, compared with about 180 earlier, to deflate the output and improve accuracy of the data,” Saurabh Garg, secretary in the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, said in an interview. The practice will continue until a revised WPI series is released, which is expected shortly, he said.
India measures real gross domestic product—which adjusts for inflation—by deflating nominal GDP growth using price indices. Economists have raised concerns that the method is outdated as it relies more on the wholesale price index and not the more closely tracked consumer price index.
Under previous methods, low nominal GDP growth alongside low wholesale inflation created discrepancies by translating into higher real growth rates.
Under the old series, India’s economy is estimated to expand by 7.4% in FY26 against a growth rate of 6.5% in FY25. The nominal GDP, which reflects output measured at current market prices, is estimated to grow 8.0% in FY26.
A new GDP series with a 2022/23 base year will be released on 27 February, along with back-series data for the previous four years.
Statistical Overhaul
The changes are part of a broader revamp of India’s statistics—following the release of a new retail inflation series earlier this month. Revisions to wholesale inflation and industrial output are underway.
In November, the International Monetary Fund raised concerns over weaknesses in India’s national accounts methodology. The IMF cited the outdated 2011-12 base year, reliance on wholesale prices and extensive use of single deflation. It assigned the framework a “C” rating.
At the core of the overhaul is the shift to double deflation, which separately adjusts output and input prices to measure real value added.
Garg said the reforms will improve accuracy, particularly in manufacturing, where diverging input and output prices had raised concerns about bias under the earlier single-deflation method.





