The National Household Income Survey (NHIS) 2026 is a landmark initiative by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) to fill a critical, long-standing data gap in India’s socio-economic statistics.
1. 🎯 Overview and Purpose
| Feature | Detail |
| Official Name | National Household Income Survey (NHIS), 2026 |
| Conducting Body | National Statistical Office (NSO) under MoSPI |
| Scheduled Start | February 2026 (Expected) |
| Nature | First-ever comprehensive, nationwide survey focused on measuring household income directly. |
| Primary Objective | To provide a reliable, granular dataset on income levels, distribution, and sources across all of rural and urban India. |
| Historical Context | India has never conducted a full-scale, nationally representative income survey since 1950 due to operational and data reliability challenges. Previous surveys focused primarily on consumption. |
2. 📝 Significance and Policy Impact
The NHIS data will be vital for evidence-based policymaking and economic planning:
- Poverty & Inequality Mapping: Accurately map income inequality across regions, social groups, and occupations (e.g., estimating the Gini coefficient for income).
- Welfare Targeting: Enable data-driven reforms for Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) schemes, poverty alleviation, and social security programs by assessing who needs support.
- Macroeconomic Indicators: Provide crucial data for:
- Rebasing the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
- Preparation of National Accounts.
- More accurate poverty and hardship analysis.
- Tax and Fiscal Policy: Inform the design of future tax slabs and progressive fiscal redistribution policies.
- Economic Analysis: Assess the impact of technology adoption and structural shifts (e.g., rise of the informal/gig economy) on wages and household income.
3. 🔍 Scope and Key Components
The survey will collect comprehensive data covering all sources of household earnings:
- Wages and Salaries: Regular salaried employment (private and public sector).
- Self-Employment Earnings: Income from business, manufacturing, agriculture, and non-farm enterprises.
- Property Income: Rent, interest, dividends, and asset returns.
- Government Transfers: Pensions, subsidies, and welfare receipts (e.g., PMMVY, state-specific schemes).
- Other Income: Remittances and alimony.
- Complementary Data: Will be collected alongside expenses, debt, assets, and detailed household characteristics (social group, occupation, etc.).
4. ⚙️ Methodology and Expert Oversight
- Expert Guidance: A Technical Expert Group (TEG), chaired by Dr. Surjit S. Bhalla, has been constituted to guide the NSO on:
- Finalization of concepts and definitions.
- Sampling design and estimation methods.
- Incorporating global best practices (from US, Canada, Australia).
- Pre-Testing: A pre-testing exercise was conducted in August 2025 to evaluate the clarity and sensitivity of the draft questionnaire.
- Digital Tools: The survey plans to use digital tools for data collection to enhance speed and accuracy.
- Challenge: Pre-testing indicated that respondents found income-related questions sensitive and often reluctant to disclose tax details, requiring strong confidentiality assurances and public awareness campaigns.