Rainfall, Drought and Agricultural Output

 
May 16th 2000

Media discussion of weather conditions over the past few weeks has focused on drought - not only the drought that has already occurred in certain parts of the country such as the western and central regions, but also the possibility of more widespread drought following upon the possibility of a poor monsoon in the coming crop season.
 
This has brought back into focus a relationship that had been increasingly ignored over the past few years : the role of weather conditions in general, and rainfall in particular, in affecting agricultural output. There was a time when the idea that Indian crop output was a (volatile) gift of the monsoon rains, was taken for granted, and three to four year "monsoon cycles" were used to explain cyclical fluctuations in total agricultural output as well. And, a complex system of contingency planning for drought had been developed, both to make the impact on production less through seed availability of drought resistant varieties and through protective irrigation, and to lessen the human suffering through food-for-work responses. These had last been at work in 1987 when the worst drought in post-independence years had been tackled so well as to lead not only to much less suffering than earlier, but to a production effort which led both to a less adverse effect than expected in 1987 and a much sharper increase in production than normal in 1988. But over the 1990s, these relationships between weather, production and welfare, and particularly the role of the state in all this, had become ever less prominent in public perception.
 
There are some who have argued that Indian agriculture - kharif output in particular - has finally freed itself from the earlier almost total dependence on the monsoon, due to increased spread of irrigation, changed cropping patterns and other technological changes. Others have been more sceptical, suggesting that this is more a result of the unusually prolonged munificence of the weather gods for more than a decade now, with average monsoon rainfall across the country falling within the "normal" range since 1988.
 
The answer to this question becomes especially significant now, as drought conditions are already evident in states like Rajasthan, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh, and when currently available predictions, although not yet of the Meteorological Department, suggest that this year's monsoon rain may be less than normal. This is why it is worth examining past trends in rainfall by state and crop, and considering what implications these may have for assessing the potential effect of the coming monsoon on the kharif output.

Of course, the prior question is naturally : to what extent should we place faith in the predictions of the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) ? Chart 1 plots the rainfall predictions of the IMD against the actual rainfall patterns from 1988. It is evident that IMD provided very accurate predictions until around 1993, and that subsequently both the extent and the direction of changes in actual rainfall have diverged from those predicted. However, both the predictions and the actuals have fallen within the "normal" range (that is, within 10 per cent of the estimated norm) and so the discrepancies in prediction have not really been noticed.
Chart 1 >>
 
The various charts of Chart 2 plot the behaviour of actual monsoon rainfall (that is, over the entire period of June-September in each year) by states, against the all-India average. This provides some idea of the variation across states, as well, as the degree of fluctuation in rainfall by states. Some interesting insights can be gained from these charts.
Chart 2a >> Chart 2b >> Chart 2c >> Chart 2d >>
Chart 2e >> Chart 2f >> Chart 2g >> Chart 2h >>
Chart 2i  >> Chart 2j >> Chart 2k >> Chart 2l >>
Chart 2m >> Chart 2n >> Chart 2o>> Chart 2p >>

 
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