Hindustan Times (East UP)

Centre revises CPI index for industrial workers

In the new series, the govt has revised the base year for calculatin­g CPI-IW to 2016 from 2001

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

The government on Thursday unveiled a new series for the consumer price index for industrial workers (CPI-IW), a measure of inflation used to calculate dearness allowance for government employees, wages for industrial workers and dearness relief for pensioners. The new series will account for changing spending habits of the working class in the organised sector.

In the new series, the base year for calculatin­g the CPI-IW has been revised to 2016 from 2001. The new series has been necessitat­ed by changing consumptio­n habits, relative prices of various commoditie­s as well as spending patterns of the country’s workforce in regular jobs. The CPI-IW is the basis for calculatin­g wages and pay perks of virtually the entire organiseds­ector workforce, including bank employees and insurance-sector employees.

The new index assigns more weight to spending on services such as education, healthcare, housing, travel and transporta­tion, as spending on these items have gone up relative to spending on primary articles such as food. This will help economists who calculate inflation to reflect a more accurate picture of a working-class household’s costs.

For instance, in the old index, the percentage weight assigned to food was 46.2%. In the new index, this has been brought

to 39%. This is in keeping with an economic theory known as Engle’s law, which states that as a household’s incomes rises, the percentage of income spent on food declines relative to other expenditur­e.

Due to an increase in housing costs, the new index has increased the percentage weight assigned to housing from 15.2% to 16.8%. Similarly, percentage weight assigned to the miscellane­ous category, which includes important heads such as education and healthcare, has been increased to 30% from 16% in the old series. In any inflation index, the base year is the first year of an inflation index, with an index value of 100.

Inflation indices of all other years is then compared to the base year to see how prices increase or decrease. The percentage

change in this index is what an inflation measure represents.

Releasing the new index, Union employment and labour minister Santosh Gangwar said: “The CPI-IW is one of the most important economic indicator of the country because it captures inflation faced by lakhs of workers. This index is used for many economic policies. It is a historic index, which is being released continuous­ly every month since 1946.”

The CPI-IW rose 5.6% in August compared to a 5.3% increase in July, according to latest available data. Inflation for the month of September 2020, which is due, will be calculated based on the new series.

The government has said that the index would be revised every five years and salaries or dearness

allowance would not rise immediatel­y. “That will depend on inflation dynamics in the long run and once the detailed methodolog­y is released, it will be possible to comment on the changes,” said Ashok Grewal, a labour economist who advised the erstwhile Planning Commission.

India currently has five consumer price indices (CPIs), three of which are working-class specific. These are CPI-IW for industrial workers, CPI-AL (base 1986-87) for agricultur­al labour and CPI-RL (base 1986-87) for rural labour. There is also CPIUrban and CPI Rural.

The combined rise in retail prices is captured by CPI Combined. CPIs AL and RL are used to fix minimum wages of agricultur­al labourers and rural unskilled employees.

 ?? ANI ?? Union employment and labour minister Santosh Gangwar called the CPI-IW one of the most important economic indicators of the country as it captures inflation faced by lakhs of workers.
ANI Union employment and labour minister Santosh Gangwar called the CPI-IW one of the most important economic indicators of the country as it captures inflation faced by lakhs of workers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India