
GDP revamp: Five questions on India's smaller economy, explained in 5 charts
₹345.47 trillion ($3.93 trillion)—3.26% lower than the ₹357.14 trillion estimate published in January under the 2011-12 series.The downward revision stems from those earlier overestimations. In an interaction with Mint, the statistics ministry confirmed that proxy indicators used in the older series had led to overestimations, validating concerns raised by economists, policymakers and researchers for nearly a decade.But the shrinkage is only part of the story.
The methodological overhaul also strengthens the integrity of the data, even as questions remain over discrepancies and deflators. Mint examines five key questions around the GDP restructuring.The revision of India’s GDP methodology, more than a decade in the making, was long overdue.Over these eleven years, doubts persisted about the economy’s true size.
The delay, beyond the ideal five-year revision cycle, even prompted the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to assign a ‘C’ rating to India’s GDP data, flagging shortcomings despite an overall ‘B’ rating. Under intense scrutiny from economists and international organizations, the latest update offers more reliable estimates.A Mint analysis shows nominal GDP levels were revised lower by 2.9–3.8% for 2022-23 to 2025-26.
Read on livemint.com