Rural India’s Twin Shock Tests Policy Resilience

A weak monsoon and rising input costs risk squeezing rural incomes, lifting inflation, and complicating policy trade-offs in 2026.

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By Dhananjay Sinha

Dhananjay Sinha, CEO and Co-Head of Institutional Equities at Systematix Group, has over 25 years of experience in macroeconomics, strategy, and equity research. A prolific writer, Dhananjay is known for his data-driven views on markets, sectors, and cycles.

April 13, 2026 at 3:04 AM IST

India’s rural economy is entering a phase of synchronised stress in 2026, where the risk of a below-normal monsoon is colliding with a sharp rise in agricultural input costs. The implications extend beyond farm output and incomes, touching rural demand, food inflation, and the broader macro balance.

Climate indicators are increasingly pointing to a shift toward El Nino conditions. According to the latest update from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, ENSO-neutral conditions are likely to persist through April–June, but El Niño is expected to emerge during May–July with a 61% probability and persist through the end of the year. There is also a meaningful probability of it turning into a "Super El Niño" in 2026.

Private forecaster Skymet Weather has projected the southwest monsoon at 94% of the long-period average, classifying it as below normal. The distribution is expected to be uneven, with higher risks of deficits in northern, western, and central India, and a weaker second half of the season. This marks a sharp swing from the above-normal monsoon seen in 2025.

The monsoon’s importance for India’s economy remains structural.

A strong kharif harvest supports rural incomes and drives demand across consumption categories, from fast-moving consumer goods to tractors and two-wheelers. A deficient or erratic monsoon, as seen in 2023, typically results in weaker sowing, lower reservoir levels, and elevated food inflation.

Cost Pressures
This year, the weather risk is being compounded by a second, less predictable factor. The ongoing tensions linked to the Strait of Hormuz have disrupted the supply chain for critical agricultural inputs, including ammonia, phosphoric acid, sulphur, and natural gas. The result has been a sharp increase in global fertiliser and fuel costs, alongside logistical uncertainties.

The timing of this shock is particularly adverse. Channel checks already indicate pressure on fertiliser volumes and margins toward the end of 2025–26, with the full impact expected to emerge during the upcoming kharif cycle. For farmers, this translates into higher input costs just as rainfall risks begin to weigh on output expectations.

The combined effect is likely to be visible across multiple layers of the economy. Rural demand could soften, particularly in discretionary consumption categories, even as certain segments, such as summer-related products, may hold up. More importantly, the pressure on food prices could intensify, complicating the inflation outlook.

Policy Trade-offs
The fiscal implications are already becoming visible. The government has raised the nutrient-based subsidy for the upcoming kharif season, and the total bill could increase further if global prices remain elevated. A weaker monsoon would amplify this burden through higher food subsidies and greater demand for rural employment support, even as fiscal space remains constrained.

The interaction between these shocks is what makes the current situation more complex. A deficient monsoon on its own would have been manageable within the existing policy framework. Elevated input costs alone could have been absorbed through subsidies or pricing adjustments. Together, they risk reinforcing each other, creating a more persistent macro challenge.

For policymakers, the issue is not merely one of managing a bad monsoon or cushioning a cost shock. It is about navigating a year where inflation, rural demand, and fiscal pressures could move in conflicting directions.

The outlook for rural India in 2026 will therefore depend not on a single variable, but on how these risks evolve simultaneously. The trajectory of El Niño, the distribution of rainfall, and the stability of global supply chains will all matter.

For now, the signals suggest that the rural economy may once again shift from being a stabilising force to a source of macro pressure, with implications that extend well beyond the farm sector.