India IIP growth hits 5.1% in May, manufacturing leads the charge
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
India's Index of Industrial Production (IIP) expanded by 5.1 per cent in May compared to the same month a year earlier, driven by robust momentum in the manufacturing sector and a sharp surge in electricity and gas supply, according to data released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) on Monday, 28 June. The reading marks an acceleration from the 4.9 per cent growth recorded in April.
Manufacturing Leads Growth
The manufacturing sector — which accounts for more than three-fourths of the IIP basket — posted 5.5 per cent growth in May over the year-ago period. Within the sector, 16 out of 23 industry groups recorded positive growth. The top contributors were manufacture of electrical equipment (20.8 per cent), manufacture of motor vehicles (14.5 per cent), and manufacture of basic metals (4.6 per cent).
The electricity and gas supply sector surged 9.9 per cent during the month, while water supply, sewerage and waste management posted 5.5 per cent growth. The mining sector, however, remained a laggard, contracting by 1.6 per cent during May.
Capital Goods Signal Stronger Investment
Capital goods production — comprising machinery used in factories and a key proxy for real investment activity in the economy — jumped 12.9 per cent in May. Economists note that sustained capital goods growth typically signals a multiplier effect on jobs and income creation in subsequent quarters.
Consumer durables such as electronic goods, refrigerators, and televisions recorded a 7.2 per cent rise during the month, reflecting firmer household demand amid rising incomes. Consumer non-durables — including soaps and cosmetics — posted a more modest 3.6 per cent growth. The infrastructure and construction goods segment grew 5.9 per cent, underpinned by the government's ongoing investments in highways, ports, and railway projects.
A New Deflator for IIP: Output PPI Replaces WPI
Alongside the May data, MoSPI announced a significant methodological change: the Output Producer Price Index (Output PPI) will now replace the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) as the deflator for item groups where industrial output is reported in value terms. This affects 234 out of 463 item groups in the IIP basket, representing 36.02 per cent of the total index weight.
The ministry has revised and released the entire IIP 2022-23 series using the Output PPI, superseding the earlier WPI-based series released on 1 June. The Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) had published the Output PPI series with base year 2022-23 on 15 June.
Why the Methodological Shift Matters
According to MoSPI, the Output PPI provides a more granular price structure than the WPI and is better suited to estimating real output for value-based items. The shift is also aligned with international best practices and the recommendations of the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) on IIP base revision. Critically, since IIP feeds into the estimation of quarterly Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the transition to Output PPI is expected to facilitate more accurate, PPI-based volume estimation in the National Accounts going forward.
With manufacturing momentum building and capital goods output accelerating, the May IIP data broadly reinforces the view that India's industrial recovery is on a firmer footing — though the persistent weakness in mining remains a sector to watch in the months ahead.