Inflation: Base Effect vs Momentum Effect — Why Govt's Data Doesn't Match Your Market Experience?
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TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 Intro — Inflation Paradox
00:19 Base Effect vs Momentum
00:55 Quick Recap of Both Concepts
01:27 Base Effect with Example
02:43 Real Economic Survey Data
04:20 Why Newspapers Show Lower
04:44 UPSC CDS ExamMCQ
05:30 CPI Base Year Revision
DESCRIPTION:
Dr. Mrunal Patel, UPSC Educator and Economy Subject Expert, explains one of the most misunderstood concepts in inflation measurement — the Base Effect and Momentum Effect — using real data from the latest Economic Survey.
Have you ever noticed that government data claims inflation is falling, but when you visit the market, prices feel just as high or higher? This video explains exactly why that gap exists.
Momentum Effect measures how much prices rose compared to the previous month. For example, how much more expensive onions are in April 2026 versus March 2026.
Base Effect measures price change compared to the same month last year. For example, how much more expensive onions are in April 2026 versus April 2025. This is the figure reported in newspapers and official CPI headlines.
When the base year had unusually high prices, even a genuine price rise in the current year produces a low or negative percentage — making inflation appear controlled on paper while consumers experience real price pressure.
Using a simple numerical example: if prices rise by Rs 10 each year (Rs 100 to Rs 110 to Rs 120), the Year 2 inflation is 10%. But Year 3 inflation, calculated on the higher base of Rs 110, works out to only 9.09% — even though the absolute price jump was identical. This is the Base Effect at work.
The Economic Survey 2025 graph confirms this: the orange bars (Momentum Effect) were rising through mid-2025, showing real price pressure month-on-month. But the blue bars (Base Effect, the headline CPI figure) were falling — because the prior year's base was already elevated.
This concept was directly tested in the UPSC CDS exam. A question asked candidates to evaluate whether the statement "inflation in Year 3 was 21%" was correct when prices moved from Rs 100 to Rs 110 to Rs 121. The correct answer: Year 2 and Year 3 both saw 10% inflation (base effect method), making only Statement 1 correct.
The video also notes that the CPI basket itself has been revised — base year updated, weights of different commodities changed. A detailed 30-minute lecture on CPI composition is available on this channel.
Economic Survey Analysis for UPSC
2. Why Newspaper Inflation Data Doesn't Match Your Market Experience — UPSC Economy
3. Base Effect in CPI Explained with Real Data — Economic Survey Special
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