Wholesale Price Index (WPI) Inflation
Other HFIs: Index Value - 109.9
Last updated: 01 May, 2026
Source:CMIE Economic Outlook, 1 Finance Research
Table of Content
What does the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) data represent?
The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) data represents the change in prices of goods traded in bulk across the economy, measured at the wholesale or producer level rather than the retail counter. It captures the price a producer or trader receives before the good reaches the final consumer.
The index is built from a basket of 957 items grouped into three major categories: Primary Articles, Fuel and Power, and Manufactured Products. Primary Articles carry a weight of 22.75%, Fuel and Power carry 14.11%, and Manufactured Products carry 63.12%. The current base year is 2022-23, and the WPI tracks only goods. Services are not included.
What is the significance of the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) data?
WPI is the headline gauge of supply-side or producer-level inflation in India, capturing cost pressure as it builds in the production chain before it reaches households.
Because Manufactured Products and Fuel and Power dominate the basket, the WPI is highly sensitive to global commodity prices, crude oil, and the exchange rate. It often signals imported inflation earlier than retail measures do. The 2022-23 series sharpens this further by moving crude petroleum and natural gas into the Fuel and Power group, so all primary energy inputs now sit together.
WPI movements feed into retail prices over time through the wholesale-to-retail transmission, which makes it a useful leading indicator for the direction of consumer inflation.
The index is widely used as a deflator for nominal macroeconomic aggregates such as GDP and the Index of Industrial Production, which gives it a structural role well beyond inflation tracking.
For businesses, the WPI is a direct read on input cost pressure and pricing power, and it often informs contract pricing and escalation clauses.
The 2022-23 series excludes indirect taxes and derives weights from Gross Value of Output rather than net traded value, which brings the WPI conceptually closer to a Producer Price Index and isolates underlying price movement from fiscal policy changes. It now also captures renewable energy, with solar, wind, and nuclear power added to the Electricity group.
How to interpret the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) data?
Inflation is measured by the Year-on-Year (YoY) percentage change in the level of the index. A rise in the index indicates inflation compared with the previous year, while a fall indicates deflation. A slowdown in the rate of increase over the month suggests disinflation.
Unlike retail inflation, WPI can and does turn negative for stretches, usually when global commodity and fuel prices fall sharply. A negative print signals wholesale deflation rather than economic weakness on its own, so it should be read alongside output and demand indicators.
WPI and CPI can diverge meaningfully because of their different baskets. WPI gives far more weight to manufactured goods and fuel and excludes services entirely, so it tends to move first and more sharply when commodity cycles turn, while retail inflation reacts with a lag and stays stickier.
Watch the contribution of each major group. A spike led by Fuel and Power or by metals and chemicals within Manufactured Products points to global cost pressure, whereas a move led by Primary Articles points to domestic food and agricultural supply conditions.
Base effects matter when reading the YoY number. A low index level in the same month a year ago can lift the current inflation reading even when month-on-month prices are flat, so the sequential trend is worth checking alongside the annual rate. Note that the 2022-23 series carries a back history only from April 2023, so very long-run comparisons need to be bridged through the older series.
Table of Content
Related HFIs
