Aim: This study examines consumption inequality and household welfare in India using the latest evidence from the Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2023-24. The objective is to analyse trends in Monthly Per Capita Consumption Expenditure (MPCE), evaluate rural-urban welfare dynamics, assess inequality using the Gini coefficient, and interpret structural changes in household consumption patterns. Backgound: The Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) plays a particularly important role in understanding how economic growth translates into improvements in household living conditions.The release of the HCES 2023-24 assumes special significance as it provides post-pandemic evidence on consumption patterns and inequality. Preliminary findings from official sources indicate rising consumption levels, a narrowing ruralurban gap, and declining inequality. However, these aggregate improvements raise important analytical questions regarding the nature of welfare change and the persistence of structural disparities. It becomes necessary to examine whether increased consumption reflects broad-based welfare gains or whether significant inequalities continue to exist across regions, asset ownership, and access to non-food capabilities such as education, housing, and transport. Research Design: The study is based entirely on secondary data obtained from official sources including the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) HCES 2023-24 press note, fact sheets, and Press Information Bureau releases. The analysis relies on descriptive statistics, trend comparison, rural-urban gap estimation, expenditure composition analysis, and inequality measurement using the Gini coefficient. The study also interprets welfare dynamics within a consumption-based welfare economics framework. Analytical Findings: The results indicate a significant improvement in household welfare in India. Mean MPCE increased to 4,122 in rural areas and 6,996 in urban areas in 2023-24. The rural-urban consumption gap declined from 84 percent in 2011-12 to 70 percent in 2023-24, suggesting convergence in living standards. Consumption inequality declined, with the Gini coefficient falling to 0.237 in rural India and 0.284 in urban India. The expenditure composition shows a rising share of non-food expenditure, reflecting structural welfare improvements. However, substantial disparities remain between the top and bottom consumption groups and across regions. Implications: The findings highlight the need to consolidate rural welfare gains, strengthen social protection for lower consumption groups, and shift policy focus toward non-food capabilities such as education, transport, housing, and services to improve overall household welfare.Declining inequality and rising consumption indicate inclusive growth; however, persistent disparities underline the importance of targeted welfare policies to ensure balanced regional and social development.. Conclusion: The analysis of the Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2023-24 indicates a clear improvement in household welfare in India, reflected in rising Monthly Per Capita Consumption Expenditure (MPCE) across both rural and urban areas. The narrowing rural-urban consumption gap suggests that rural households have experienced relatively faster growth in consumption, contributing to gradual convergence in living standards.
Prof Dr Jaimol James (Thu,) studied this question.