The Producer Price Index will be better able to measure the average change over time in the sale prices of domestic goods and services, he said.
"In its present structure, the Wholesale Price Index does not capture the price movement of services. Also, it is a hybrid of consumer and producer price quotes," he said at the Sixth Annual Statistics Day Conference here.
Sellers' and purchasers' prices differ because of government subsidies, sales and excise taxes, and distribution costs, Subbarao said.
"For these reasons, it is, therefore, desirable that we move towards developing a Producer Price Index that measures the average change over time in the sale prices of domestic goods and services," he added.
The RBI Governor further said that core inflation gives a better picture of price trend as it is less volatile WPI-based inflation.
Core inflation is usually estimated by excluding food and energy prices from the basket of goods and services that represents a household's spending.
"The rationale for exclusion is that the prices of food and
from 8.5 per cent pre-crisis to 8.0 per cent post-crisis.
"Latest assessment following the standard filtering technique suggests that potential output growth may have further fallen to around 7.5 per cent," he said.
"Assessing India's potential growth rate, consistent with our objective of low and stable inflation, remains a challenge," he added.
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