India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry introduced a major overhaul to its inflation measurement architecture. The government officially rolled out a revamped Wholesale Price Index (WPI) series, shifting the base year forward by over a decade. Alongside this update, India debuted its first-ever Producer Price Indices (PPI), marking the beginning of a multi-year transition toward international economic reporting standards.
The New WPI Series: What Changed?
The updated index modernizes how wholesale price pressures are measured across the Indian economy through a few critical updates:
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Base Year Shift: The base year has been updated from 2011–12 to 2022–23, ensuring that the data reflects modern production patterns, corporate consumption, and technology use.
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Expanded Basket: The total number of tracked items has expanded significantly to 957 items, up from 697 items in the legacy series.
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Category Realignment: To map energy trends more accurately, commodities like crude petroleum and natural gas have been moved from “Primary Articles” into the “Fuel and Power” category.
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Green Energy Inclusion: For the first time, the index tracks renewable energy infrastructure, introducing wind and solar power alongside traditional nuclear electricity into the power basket.
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Weightage Rebalancing: While manufactured products remain the index’s largest driver, category weight distributions have subtly shifted:
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Manufactured Products: 63.1% (Down from 64.2%)
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Primary Articles: 22.8% (Up from 22.6%)
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Fuel & Power: 14.1% (Up from 13.2%)
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May 2026 Data: Fuel Costs Drive Inflation to Record Highs
The maiden data print for the new series paints a stark picture of global supply chain disruptions. Driven by ongoing geopolitical conflicts in West Asia, headline WPI inflation surged to a series high of 9.68% year-on-year in May 2026, up from 8.26% in April.
The Energy Shock: While primary products rose 4.99% and manufactured goods grew 7.48%, the Fuel and Power category skyrocketed by 30.33%. Within this segment, crude petroleum and natural gas inflation hit 61.51%, while mineral oils surged by 49.82%.
The Debut of the Producer Price Index (PPI)
In alignment with International Monetary Fund (IMF) recommendations, the government simultaneously rolled out three distinct trial indices to map factory-gate transaction prices before trade margins and taxes are applied:
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Output PPI (Goods): Tracks prices received by domestic producers. For May 2026, Output PPI stood at 109.6 (registering a 9.4% year-on-year increase).
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Trial Input PPI (Goods): Currently restricted to the manufacturing sector, it measures what factories pay for raw resources. It held flat at 104.9 between April and May.
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Services PPI: Set for a quarterly release cycle, this index monitors price metrics across seven key service sectors: banking, securities transactions, insurance, pension fund management, railways, telecom, and air passenger transport.
Summary Checklist: Old Index vs. New Framework
| Feature | Legacy WPI Series | Revamped Framework (Effective June 2026) |
| Base Year | 2011–12 | 2022–23 |
| Total Tracked Items | 697 items | 957 items |
| Crude Oil & Gas Category | Primary Articles | Fuel and Power |
| Energy Sources Included | Traditional/Fossil | Added Solar, Wind, and Nuclear Power |
| Future Outlook | Primary benchmark | To be completely phased out by 2031 |
The Long-Term Transition Plan
Because WPI is deeply integrated into commercial contracts across India for price-escalation clauses, the government will continue to publish the WPI concurrently with the new PPI metrics for a five-year transition period. Following this window, the WPI will be permanently retired, leaving the Producer Price Index as the definitive standard for industrial inflation.

