Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Reclassing India's new-age economy
Business Standard
|September 26, 2025
An overhaul of the National Industrial Classification framework seeks to include new activities that better capture India's changing economy. The data is expected to help economic policymaking
Earlier this month, the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (Mospi) put out a note inviting feedback from stakeholders on the draft National Industrial Classification (NIC) framework.
Being revised for the first time since 2008, it aims to capture structural and technological changes in the Indian economy, including new industries and services that need inclusion and representation in official statistics.
The last time there was such a long hiatus in revising the NIC was between 1970 and 1987. In recent years, the pace of socioeconomic change has quickened and enterprises across sectors have undergone broad shifts. As a result, the revision exercise now underway is of a far greater magnitude than previous ones.
The first such classification of economic activity in the country came in 1962, with updates and revisions in 1970, 1987, 1998, 2004, and 2008.
The importance of NIC
The NIC is basically a set of several fivedigit codes - a standardised numerical system developed by the Mospi - to classify and categorise various economic sectors, whose output is then added to arrive at the country's gross domestic product (GDP). It also serves as a foundational tool for organising data related to industries and businesses. For example, in agriculture, forestry and fishing, code 01116 pertains to growing groundnut seeds for producing groundnut oil, while 01117 is for sunflower seeds, also for making oil.
These codes are also instrumental in capturing economic activity through statistical surveys such as the Annual Survey of Industries, informal sector surveys, the Economic Census, and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) database. They further support economic research, registration processes, and policy formulation by both central and state government agencies, as well as private sector stakeholders.
What's the process?
Bu hikaye Business Standard dergisinin September 26, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Business Standard'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Business Standard
Tariff cuts in FTAs likely to cost India ₹1 trillion in FY27
India’s customs duty forgone on account of preferential tariff reductions under free-trade agreements (FTAs) signed so far may cross ₹1 trillion in 2026-27 (FY27), according to the Budget documents.
2 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
India will transit from global back office to strategic AI partner: Vaishnaw
Indian consumers are one of the largest users of AI.
2 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
Addressing nutrition along with hunger
Are modern high-yielding varieties of grains less nutri- tive than traditional desi crops? This is a common per- ception that seems largely, albeit not wholly, well founded.
3 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
BPCL unfazed by geopolitics, to buy crude on techno-commercial merit
State-run Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL) will source crude oil purely on ‘techno-commercial’ considerations amid evolving geopolitical dynamics, Chairman and Managing Director Sanjay Khanna told Shubhangi Mathur in an in-person interaction.
2 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
'Don't see major impact of proposed mis-selling norms'
Following Axis Max Life Insurance’s Q3FY26 earnings, Sumit Madan, managing director (MD) and chief executive officer (CEO) of the company, spoke to Aathira Varier and Subrata Panda in a video interview about the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI's) proposed guidelines on mis-selling and their likely impact on the company and the sector, the firm’s business plans going forward, and the status of its reverse merger with Max Financial Services, among other issues. Edited excerpts:
3 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
How Vietnam shaped the civil rights movement
‘The New York Times war correspondent David Halberstam caught the pulse of his era when he observed, in 1964, that there were parallels between America’s misbegotten adventure in Vietnam and the struggle for civil rights in the murderous, Klan-infested state of Mississippi.
3 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
OMCs, banks drove India Inc's steepest profit rise in 8 qtrs
Corporate earnings in October-December 2025 (Q3FY26) were better than expected owing to a surge in the profits of public-sector oil-marketing companies (OMCs), banks, non-bank lenders, and firms in the business of metals and mining.
3 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
SGB issue: Why tax certainty matters
Imagine a cricket Test match where the host prepares two pitches — a green top for fast bowlers and a dry track for spinners.
3 mins
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
MFs double down on private banks
Mutual funds (MFs) stepped up buying in private-sector bank stocks amid January's market turbulence, deploying significant capital into the segment.
1 min
February 16, 2026
Business Standard
SC remarks may help strengthen Rera, real estate industry
The Supreme Court’s (SC’s) recent remarks on the Real Estate Regulatory Authority (Rera) are expected to impact the real estate sector by shifting the focus from the strength of the law to the seriousness of its enforcement, experts say.
2 mins
February 16, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
