DBS Group Analysis economist Radhika Rao assesses how a projected beneath regular monsoon in India, linked to a powerful El Niño, may have an effect on development and inflation. She notes that solely a big rainfall shortfall tends to materially hit output, whereas greater irrigated space and ample foodgrain shares supply mitigation. Rao expects the RBI to maintain charges unchanged in 2026 regardless of supply-side pressures.
El Niño, inflation and RBI coverage
“The Indian Meteorological company IMD has projected a beneath regular monsoon for 2026, in midst of expectations of a powerful El Niño prevalence. Seasonal rainfall over the nation is seen at 8% beneath the Lengthy Interval Common (LPA), with a 66% chance of monsoon being beneath regular or poor. Danger of heatwaves was additionally highlighted as a threat for the Apr-Jun quarter.”
“The share of agriculture in India’s development combine is modest at 16-17% of GDP however has accounted for rather less than half of total employment in recent times. The correlation of the crops sub-component below GVA (gross worth added), which makes up half of total agriculture forestry and fishing (AFF), and foodgrain output is excessive.”
“The extent of the financial impression will depend upon the severity, depth, and size of the El Niño prevalence. On the similar time, not solely the energy of combination rainfall, but in addition its distribution can impression output.”
“Encouragingly, value pressures will be partly mitigated by present foodgrain inventories and potential provide countermeasures. The nation has ample official foodgrain shares.”
“The RBI financial coverage committee (MPC) is unlikely to exhibit urgency in tightening coverage in response to supply-side – power and meals – pressures. The chance of additional charge hikes will improve if there are indicators of a pointy rise in inflation expectations and a sustained spillover of elevated headline inflation into core inflation readings. Our baseline view is for the MPC to maintain the benchmark charge to maintain charges unchanged throughout 2026.”
(This text was created with the assistance of an Synthetic Intelligence instrument and reviewed by an editor.)
