Hindustan Times (East UP)

‘Normal’ monsoon likely for 3rd year in row, say experts

- Zia Haq Zia.haq@htlive.com

New Delhi:

India has received normal monsoon for two straight years, aiding a farmdriven economic recovery in a pandemic year. Sufficient Juneto-September rains will be critical this year, but data show three consecutiv­e normal monsoons are rare, occurring only once in the past two decades.

Scientists say current conditions suggest they should favour a normal 2021 monsoon, the lifeblood of Asia’s third-largest economy. As the country tries to claw out of a recession, patchy rains may weigh on recovery, analysts say.

The monsoon is critical because two-thirds of Indians depend on farm-based income and over 40% of the country’s net-sown cropped area does not have any form of irrigation.

Millions of farmers wait for the rains to begin summer sowing of crops, such as rice, sugar, cotton, pulses, horticultu­re produce and coarse cereals.

Agricultur­e, which contribute­s 39% to the rural economy, was able to shake off the impacts of the coronaviru­s pandemic because of normal rains and ample supplies of subsidised inputs, such a fertiliser­s, during the pandemic. The sector also benefited from fiscal support from the rural job guarantee scheme MGNREGA and PM Kisan, a cash-transfer programme for farmers.

Throughout the peak pandemic months, the farm sector was the only bright spot in the Indian economy. It grew 3.4% in the June 2020 quarter, when rest of the economy fell deep into recession of -24.4% due to a widespread lockdown.

Growth returned to positive territory in the December 2020 quarter, the latest available data, expanding 0.4%. Agricultur­e grew at 3.9% in the same period, compared to 3% in the previous quarter.

To be sure, the Reserve Bank of India and the official Economic Survey have forecast the economy to grow 10.5% and 11% respective­ly in the next fiscal, after a nearly 8% negative growth this fiscal.

Much depends on how the monsoon pans out. “After two consecutiv­e years of normal monsoon, a third year of timely and well-distribute­d rains is not a given,” said DK Joshi, chief economist of Crisil Ltd, ratings firm.

The monsoon also replenishe­s 89 nationally important water reservoirs vital for drinking, power and irrigation. When rains lead to robust farm output, rural incomes rise and spending goes up on almost everything – television sets to gold.

For example, 48% of all motorcycle­s and 44% of TV sets are sold in rural India. Without this demand, industrial growth tends to slow down. Normal rains act as a strong check on inflation through plentiful food stocks.

The long-range forecast division of the India Meteorolog­ical Department is currently preparing to forecast the monsoon next month. “The indication­s (about the monsoon) are good. We have our fingers crossed,” an agricultur­e department official said.

The Indian monsoon usually ends up short when oceans temperatur­es in the Pacific are higher than normal, a weather pattern known as El Nino. The opposite happens, and rains are plentiful, when oceans are cooler, known meteorolog­ically as La Nina. Both 2019 and 2020 fell in the latter category.

The monsoon also depends on what Met scientists call the Indian Ocean Dipole, which refers to the difference in seasurface temperatur­es in two opposite parts of the Indian Ocean.

Scientists watching the monsoon say, till now, there aren’t signs of oceans warming. “The Southern Oscillatio­n Index (SOI) (was) solidly in La Nina range in February, but down from January and peak in December. Downward trend of SOI continued in early March as ENSO marches toward neutral,” said Jason Nicholls, internatio­nal forecastin­g manager at AccuWeathe­r, a weather forecastin­g firm. ENSO refers to a recurring weather pattern that influences ocean temperatur­es.

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