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What do you guys think of the arguments made here?India calculates inflation based on WPI
IFIs keep mum on flawed methodology
Thursday, May 08, 2008
By Mehtab Haider
ISLAMABAD: The International Financial Institutions (IFIs) such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank (WB) are silent spectators over the flawed methodology being used by India to show low inflation, a research paper available with The News reveals.
India calculated its official inflation based on Wholesale Price Index (WPI) rather than CPI based inflation. In Pakistan, 40.3 per cent weightage of the CPI is given to food, whereas, this number drops to 26.9 per cent for Indias WPI.
India calculated its inflation based on WPI and its base year is also 15 years old (1993-94), which therefore does not reflect the current consumption pattern of the Indian society.
The usage of WPI for calculating Indias inflation resulted in showing a lower figure.
In FY 2004, the CPI-based food inflation in Pakistan was 6pc while Indias WPI inflation was 5.5pc. In FY 2005, CPI-based food inflation in Pakistan stood at 12.5pc whereas it was 6.5pc in Indias WPI based inflation.
The CPI-based food inflation was 6.9pc in Pakistan, whereas, it was hovering around a mere 4.4pc in Indias WPI.
The CPI based food inflation stood at 10.3pc in FY 2007 in Pakistan while it was 5pc in India.
During July-Jan period of the current fiscal, the CPI based food inflation was 12.5pc whereas it stood at only 4.9pc in India.
Contrary to the normal practice for calculating CPI based inflation as being done in USA, Canada, UK, Japan, Singapore, China and Pakistan, Indian authorities are using WPI based inflation on the pretext of various reasons.
In Pakistan, inflation is measured using the conventional Consumer Price Index (CPI), though other indices such as Wholesale Price Index (WPI) and Sensitive Price Index (SPI) are also released on a regular basis. CPI measures the cost of the given basket of goods and services which the consumers have to pay. Globally also, CPI remains the official barometer of inflation in many countries such as USA, UK, Japan, France, Canada, Singapore and China.
Of course, the constituents of the commodity basket for CPI measurement vary from country to country, as is their consumption pattern.
In most of the countries mentioned above, their economic authorities review the commodity basket of CPI at least every 5 to 6 years or whenever it deserves a review.
Interestingly, India uses the WPI as its main measure of inflation.
The WPI, as its name indicates, is designed to measure the changes in price at the wholesale level of all the commodities.
It is not the price that consumers face in the market. Furthermore, the base year for the WPI in India is 15 years old and does not reflect the current consumption pattern of the Indian society.
The author of the research paper further states that India does have a measure in terms of CPI, but it is not used as the official index at the national level. Their CPI has been divided into four major categories: Consumer Price Index (CPI) for industrial worker (CPI-IW), for agriculture labour (CPI-AL), for rural labour (CPI-RL), and for urban non-manual employees (CPI-NUME) and their base years are as old as 1982, 1986-7, and 1984-05 respectively.
Indias use of the WPI as their official inflation index, with the base year of 1993-4 is very suspicious. Firstly, the price changes in the service sector of India are not duly captured in the WPI, despite this sector forming an essential part of the consumption of everyone in the country. For example, services like health, transportation, telecommunication, education etc are not included in the WPI. Hence, the changes in the costs of acquiring these services are not reflected in the WPI movement, thus, an accurate picture of the state is again not given.
The Indian authorities reasons for using the WPI as their primary measure are that it is more frequently released, thus minimising the time lag issues for policy making, and that the use of four different CPI measures is a complicated and timely measure, which cannot be used on a national level.
However, this does not justify them using the WPI, a measure from the production aspect, as their official use to measure price changes that affect the consumers and their spending behaviour.
The IMF is consulting India under its Article-IV consultation but the Breton Wood Institutions (BWI) never bothered to remind India of its responsibility to provide correct estimates of Inflation.
India calculates inflation based on WPI
Especially interested in Indian input, since this is sourced from a Pakistani publication. Is the criticism valid?