Centre discloses key consumption expenditure survey findings after 11-year gap
- February 25, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Centre discloses key consumption expenditure survey findings after 11-year gap
Subject: Economy
Section: National Economy
The Household Consumption Expenditure Survey:
- The Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) is conducted by the National Statistical Office (NSO) every five years.
Recent release :
- For the first time in about 11 years, the government released the broad findings of the All India Household Consumption Expenditure Survey carried out between August 2022 and July 2023.
Why it took 11years and not 5 years:
- Findings of the last survey, conducted in 2017-18 soon after the demonetisation of high-value currency notes and the implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST), were never released after the government cited “data quality” issues.
Role of the data :
- In reviewing critical economic indicators-
- The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) .Poverty levels
- The Consumer Price Inflation (CPI).
Findings:
- The average monthly per capita consumption expenditure (MPCE) in Indian households rose by 33.5% since 2011-12 in urban households to ₹3,510, with rural India’s MPCE seeing a 40.42% increase over the same period to hit ₹2,008.
- The proportion of spending on food has dropped to 46.4% for rural households from 52.9% in 2011-12, while their urban peers spent just 39.2% of their overall monthly outgoes on food compared with 42.6% incurred 11 years earlier.
- This reduction could translate into a lower weightage for food prices in the country’s retail inflation calculations.
What MPCE includes and excludes:
- The MPCE numbers do not take into account the imputed values of items received free of cost by individuals through various social welfare programmes such as the PM Garib Kalyan Ann Yojana (PMGKAY) or State-run schemes, which were calculated separately.
- While including a few non-food items received through such schemes, including computers, mobile phones, bicycles, and clothes.
Findings:
- The average MPCE, at 2011-12 prices, was a tad higher when these items were included while excluding free education and healthcare sops — at ₹2,054 for rural households, and ₹3,544 for urban homes.
Food spending pattern across years :
Summary sheet:
- The Statistics and Programme Implementation Ministry released a factsheet on the summary of the Survey findings and said a detailed report on the survey will be brought out subsequently.
- The estimates of the MPCE are based on data collected from 2,61,746 households, of which 1,55,014 were in rural areas, spread over all States and Union Territories.
- “The bottom 5% of India’s rural population, ranked by MPCE, has an average MPCE of ₹1,373 while it is ₹2,001 for the same category of population in the urban areas.
- The top 5% of India’s rural and urban population, ranked by MPCE, has an average MPCE of ₹10,501 and ₹20,824, respectively.
- Among the States, the MPCE is the highest in Sikkim for both rural (₹7,731) and urban areas (₹12,105).