Patchy Monsoon Rain Raises Growth and Inflation Worries in India
- Sub-normal showers cause sowing to fall about 12% this year
- Food prices may climb if rainfall distribution doesn’t improve
Photographer: Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images
This article is for subscribers only.
Poor monsoon showers are threatening India’s nascent economic recovery and could make food even more expensive in a country where more than half of the population depends on rain for farming.
The weather pattern, which usually begins its four-month journey from the southern state of Kerala on June 1, stalled for three weeks after bringing higher-than-average rains in the first half of last month. The monsoon has now revived, but the delay and poor precipitation will hurt the sowing of crops such as rice, cotton and soybeans.