Syllabus: GS3/ Economy
In News
- The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has assigned India a ‘C’ grade for the quality of its national accounts statistics, marking one of the lowest ratings for a major economy.
Why the IMF Gave a ‘C’ Grade?
- Outdated Base Year (2011–12):
- India still uses the 2011–12 base year for GDP, CPI, and IIP.
- Consumption patterns, production structures, technology adoption, and relative prices have changed significantly since then.
- An old base year distorts real growth rates, inflation, and sectoral weights.
- Inaccurate Representation of Inflation:
- CPI received a lower grade (‘B’ instead of ‘A’) due to:
- Outdated base year
- Excessive weightage of food items
- This reduces the accuracy of inflation measurement, affecting RBI’s monetary policy.
- CPI received a lower grade (‘B’ instead of ‘A’) due to:
- Weak Capture of Informal Sector:
- India’s informal sector remains underestimated, as it is largely unregistered, cash-based and outside formal data systems.
- This leads to mismeasurement of GDP levels, employment trends, and welfare outcomes.
- Delays in Data Revisions:
- Global best practice recommends base year revision every 5 years.
- India has not implemented a revision for over a decade, reducing timely alignment with economic reality.
- Need for Better Use of Modern Data Sources:
- While corporate sector data is now collected via MCA-21, several gaps remain.
- Integration of GSTN data for estimating value added has yet to be fully operational.
How do IMF’s Data Grades Work?
- The IMF assesses national statistics under its Data Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF), which evaluates methodological soundness, accuracy and reliability, serviceability (timeliness, periodicity, consistency), accessibility, & assurance of integrity.
- Grading Categories are:
- Grade A – High compliance with international standards
- Grade B – Acceptable but with notable deficiencies
- Grade C – Significant weaknesses affecting surveillance
- Grade D – Poor-quality data seriously limiting analysis
Possible Implications of the ‘C’ Grade
- Weak Policymaking Precision: Faulty or outdated data affects fiscal planning, inflation targeting, monetary policy & sector specific interventions.
- Reduced Credibility of Economic Numbers: Global investors, rating agencies, and financial institutions may view India’s data with greater caution.
- Inaccurate Growth and Welfare Assessment: Misestimation of the informal sector may hide real growth performance, employment distress & household-level vulnerabilities.
- Impaired Monetary Policy: If inflation is mismeasured, the RBI’s policy rates may not reflect true price pressures, affecting liquidity, borrowing, and growth.
- Pressure for Statistical Reforms: The IMF rating increases pressure on India to update base years, modernize survey systems & strengthen autonomy of statistical bodies.
| Basic Terminologies – National Accounts: A statistical framework summarising a country’s economic activity, covering GDP, GVA, consumption, savings, and investment. – Base Year: The reference year used to compare changes in prices and output over time. It should ideally be updated every 5 years. – GDP (Gross Domestic Product): The total value of goods and services produced within a country in a given period. – GVA (Gross Value Added): Output minus intermediate consumption; measures sector-wise economic contribution. – CPI (Consumer Price Index): Measures retail inflation based on a representative basket of goods and services consumed by households. – IIP (Index of Industrial Production): Measures industrial output in mining, manufacturing, and electricity. – Informal Sector: Unregistered, unorganised economic activity without formal accounts or regulatory oversight. – MCA-21: A database of corporate financial filings under the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. |
Source: TH
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