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India needs major rainfalls to reverse economic slowdown

July 11, 2019 00:00:00


A group of schoolchildren wade through a waterlogged street during monsoon rains in Mumbai, India, on Monday. — AP Photo

India needs this year's monsoon season to deliver heavier rainfall that will boost farm output and economic growth - but the country has been disappointed so far, reports CNBC.

Asia's third-largest economy ended June - the first month of the monsoon season - with total rainfall 33 per cent below its 50-year average, according to Citi, which cited data from the India Meteorological Department.

Rain has picked up in July and the total rainfall this month will affect India's agricultural output and overall economic momentum, analysts said.

"Major crop-sowing takes place in July. This is the critical monsoon month for the agriculture sector when more than 50.0 per cent of the Kharif crop sowing takes place," analysts from Citi wrote in a report last week. Kharif crops include rice, maize, sorghum and cotton, and are planted during the monsoon season.

The agriculture sector in India is both economically and politically important. The industry accounts for around 14 per cent of the country's $2.7 trillion economy and 42 per cent of total employment, according to Rajiv Biswas, chief economist in Asia Pacific for consultancy IHS Markit.

About one-third of India's manufacturing output - which makes up around 18 per cent of the country's gross domestic product - is linked to turning agricultural products into food, Biswas noted. And with around 55 per cent of India's arable land dependent on rain, the monsoon season could sway economic activity in the agriculture sector and industries linked to it.

India's economic growth slumped to 5.8 per cent in the January-to-March period compared to 6.6 per cent in the previous three months due in large part to poor performance in the agriculture and manufacturing industries.

"The overall Indian economy remains very vulnerable to the monsoon, since poor rainfall can significantly reduce agricultural production," Biswas told CNBC in an email.

"If farm incomes are reduced by a poor monsoon season, it also impacts negatively on agricultural processing output (as well as) retail trade and other services in rural regions," he added.

In recent years, rain has become even more important for India as dryer monsoons have caused a water supply crisis in the country to worsen. A government think tank, the National Institution for Transforming India, said in a report last year that 21 Indian cities - including New Delhi, Hyderabad and Chennai - could run out of groundwater by 2020.

In addition to reduced rainfall in recent years, factors including increased demand and inefficient usage have contributed to India's water shortage, said Radhika Rao, an economist at Singaporean bank DBS.

The late arrival of the annual monsoon is "feeding worries over scarce water supply," she wrote in a note last week.


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