The Sky That Governs India


Every year, sometime between the last days of May and the first breath of June, fishermen on the Kerala coast look up and see the sky change colour. The clouds that gather off the Malabar shoreline are not the thin, translucent wisps of summer — they are dark, muscular, carrying the weight of the Indian Ocean in their bellies. When those clouds finally break over Thiruvananthapuram, the whole country holds its breath as that means the arrival of the monsoon and the beginning of India’s great annual reckoning.

This year, the Southwest Monsoon made landfall over Kerala on 4 June 2026 — three days later than its normal date of 1 June, and nine days behind the India Meteorological Department’s own forecast of 26 May. But the delay is almost beside the point.

What matters far more was the shadow already falling over the season: the IMD has forecast below-normal rainfall at just 90 per cent of the Long Period Average (LPA), with a 60 per cent probability of a deficient or drought monsoon. The culprit, as so often before, is El Niño — a warming of the equatorial Pacific Ocean that has, for centuries, starved the subcontinent of rain. And it has already started forming!

The Reckoning of Centuries

India’s relationship with its sky is ancient, and its ledger runs red. Research published in Geophysical Research Letters by Mishra et al. (2019) found that five of the six major famines recorded between 1870 and 2016 were caused primarily by soil moisture droughts driven by monsoon failures — many of them coinciding with strong El Niño events, precisely the pattern scientists warn of today.

The 1876–78 Great Famine, triggered when the monsoon collapsed across both south and north India, affected a population of 58.5 million people and killed between 6.1 and 10.3 million — one of the deadliest climate disasters in recorded human history. Colonial grain exports to England continued even as people starved, compounding the catastrophe.

Even before systematic records, drought shaped Indian civilisation. Researchers studying cave formations in the Garhwal Himalaya have traced extreme monsoon failures back centuries — including a severe event around 1400 CE that overlaps with the Durga Devi Famine, which devastated western India for more than a decade. The 1640 CE drought record in the same data aligned with the so-called ‘Ming Dynasty Drought’ that struck both China and northern India simultaneously. The monsoon, it turns out, is not merely a regional weather system. It is a planetary force.

The Western Ghats

From Kerala, the monsoon divides. One arm drives northeast, up the flanks of the Western Ghats — that ancient spine of mountains running 1,600 kilometres along India’s west coast. In Cherrapunji, the rain does not merely fall — it drowns. It has recorded over 11,000 millimetres of rainfall in a year, earning its reputation as one of the wettest places on earth. Yet even Cherrapunji has known drought; the monsoon’s cruelty lies not just in its absence but in the capriciousness of its distribution.

The Ghats act as both shield and sieve. Villages on the windward western slopes receive torrential rain — mango groves, paddy terraces, and spice plantations drink deep. Farmers in these zones often call the first week of the monsoon a kind of liberation — from debt, from anxiety, from the white-hot tedium of a pre-monsoon May. But the rain shadow on the Deccan side tells a different story: villages that wait while the Ghats catch the moisture, leaving the plateau drier and more anxious than the coast below.

The Economy in the Clouds

Agriculture accounts for approximately 18 per cent of India’s GDP at current prices, and employs around 42 per cent of the population. Around 55 per cent of India’s arable land remains rain-fed — directly dependent on what the sky provides. Even the irrigated 45 per cent is not immune: when reservoirs drop and groundwater falls in drought years, infrastructure becomes unreliable. The 2023 monsoon offered the most recent and painful proof.

That season ended with a 6 per cent overall deficit (5.6% per NABARD annual report), but the damage was brutally uneven — 221 out of 718 districts received below-normal rainfall. Pulse cultivation fell, oilseed planting dropped. India’s agricultural growth rate slumped to 1.4 per cent in FY24, the lowest figure in eight years, Foodgrain production declined to 328.8 million tonnes, down from the record 329.7 million in 2022–23. The inflation impact was immediate and felt hardest by those who could least afford it.

The Northern Plains and the Delta

By late June, if the monsoon is behaving, it crosses the Vindhyas into the great Indo-Gangetic Plain — the flatlands of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and West Bengal that feed hundreds of millions. Kharif crops — rice, maize, cotton, sorghum — are sown in July. More than half of all Kharif sowing takes place in this single month, making July the most economically consequential four weeks in the Indian agricultural calendar. The IMD’s guidance and crop sowing bulletins, issued through this period, are tracked by commodity traders, state governments, and the federal Cabinet alike.

The monsoon’s final act plays out in the northeast. By early June, it reaches the Brahmaputra valley in Assam, where the river swells to a brown, muscular enormity, flooding tea gardens and rice fields alike. The Brahmaputra carries more water than almost any river on earth during peak monsoon — and its floods, though destructive, also deposit the rich silt that makes Assam’s plains among the most fertile in the country. It is a violent generosity that the people of this valley have learned to live with across generations.

Watch the Sky

Through all of this — from Kerala’s first shower to Assam’s last flood — the government of India shifts into a particular mode of attention. The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs monitors crop sowing data weekly. The Ministry of Jal Shakti tracks reservoir levels across 150 major dams. The IMD issues ensemble forecasts every week through the season, and ministers speak of ‘normal monsoon’ or ‘deficit monsoon’ with the gravity of generals reporting from a front. Minimum support prices for crops are adjusted, buffer stocks managed, import duties on pulses and edible oils recalibrated. The monsoon does not just water fields — it rewrites fiscal policy in real time.

India has come far from 1877. Irrigation coverage has grown from 17 per cent in 1951 to over 47 per cent by 2011. Buffer food stocks give governments tools that colonial administrators never had. Weather forecasting has improved beyond recognition — the IMD’s 2025 forecast of Kerala onset on 27 May was accurate to within three days. And yet, as the 2026 season begins under the shadow of a potentially super El Niño, with 90 per cent of LPA forecast and 60 per cent odds of deficiency, the fundamental truth remains unchanged: India lives, breathes, and eats by the grace of its sky. The monsoon and India are still twins — and this year, as always, they are testing each other.

Bullshit Jobs


Work, work, work, work, work, sings Rihanna through the grocery store sound system. Why do we have to do it? What else do we have to do? The questions are staging a comeback. Old dreams of new deals and new dreams of old jobs wake and walk. David Graeber’s latest book, Bullshit Jobs, is one of many contributions to this rethinking.

Read Here – The Point

Technology And The Future Of Work


Many feel anxious about the impact of new technology on their jobs. This is not new. In fact, it dates back at least to the Luddites movement at the outset of the Industrial Revolution. And it resurfaced during the Great Depression and again in the 1960s, following a period of high productivity growth, and in the 1980s at the outset of the IT revolution. How can governments help?

Read Here – IMF Blog

When Working From Home Doesn’t Work


If it’s personal productivity—how many sales you close or customer complaints you handle—then the research, on balance, suggests that it’s probably better to let people work where and when they want. For jobs that mainly require interactions with clients (consultant, insurance salesman) or don’t require much interaction at all (columnist), the office has little to offer besides interruption.

Read Here – The Atlantic

This One Is Scary


The last paragraph of a fascinating book on what is the world’s biggest problem — population.

“Over the next 15 years some 2 billion new babies will be born, 2 billion children will need to commence school, and 1.2 billion young adults will need to find work. In addition, the fastest-growing age group globally will be over 60s. Acknowledging the importance of age-structural change, and ensuring that it is integrated into national and international policymaking, will be essential as the globe transitions from a predominantly younger to a predominantly older world.”

We all need to think about this one.

(Excerpt from: How Population Change will transform Our World by Sarah Harper)

It’s The Jobs, Stupid


By Rahul Sharma

Caravan Daily

There is a very good reason why Narendra Modi speaks to India’s young and exhorts them to vote the current Congress-led government out. He understands the simmering discontent among the country’s massive young population that is out looking for jobs and not finding any unlike other politicians who still believe only in politics of dole, caste and religion.

The state of the young in India is dismal and the mood gray. A slowing economy and high cost of living have only added to their woes. Add to that the fact that business sentiment will continue to be poor for the next several months in the run up to the elections – and even after that if a sustainable government doesn’t come to power – and you see a horribly potent recipe for social unrest.

Modi knows that if the young – a brand new, vibrant constituency — start believing that he will get those jobs and the financial sustainability that would let them buy all the gadgets, goods, automobiles and apartments, they would come out in throngs and help him win next year’s general elections.

Given the state of India’s shrinking job market into which 12 million youth trundle in every year, Modi’s call resonates well not only in large urban centres, but also the smaller towns where aspirations and opportunities have made traditional roles redundant.

So how badly off is the situation?

If you believe a new Confederation of Indian Industries-Economic Times (CII-ET) survey of India’s young, it’s pretty nasty out there. Of its 1.2 billion people, 800 million are less than 35 years old – and they seem to be really upset with the way things are.

According to the survey, findings of which were published in The Economic Times, three out of four of them believe that the economy today is worse off than it was in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crises. More than half say it is the worst time to look for jobs and nearly 60 percent have postponed buying a house, a car or having children. Worse, nearly 40 percent of the people polled in 28 cities said they won’t mind taking a pay cut if that improves their chances of holding on to a job.

It can’t get worse for the Congress; and it can’t be better for Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which is still looking for that one issue that could change its fate and bring it out of its decade-long political wilderness.

“This is the most disturbing micro impact of the macro slowdown,” the newspaper quoted Rajya Sabha MP and entrepreneur Rajeev Chandrashekkhar as saying. According to him, educated Indians looking for their first or second jobs are hurting the most.

Thousands of engineering, medicine and businesses schools in India produce millions of graduates each year. But they hit a hard wall when they get into the job market. The impact is two pronged. Fewer jobs also mean there aren’t many takers for the seats in the graduate and post-graduate schools, many of which are beginning to shut down.

“The following set of numbers shows the young have read the grim job market right. Andhra Pradesh has over 700 engineering colleges and 350,000 seats – the highest in any Indian state. But just 200,000 seats were filled up this year. Why? Because just 20% of the class of 2013 have got jobs. When young Indians give up the chance of getting an engineering degree, you know there’s something very wrong,” the Economic Times wrote.

The other, bigger, impact is on the consumer, automobile and real estate markets, which are now losing their sheen as poor demand pulls the economy down. No wonder, the government is being forced to ask state-owned banks to offer cheaper loans for consumer goods and two-wheelers to boost demand in an otherwise depressing economy.
These are problems only politicians can address. There is a need for a fresh thinking and new policies that could create more jobs, both in the manufacturing and services sector. There is a need to lift business sentiment so that investments on hold can be channeled into infrastructure and other industries that would create jobs. These are issues that can’t be solved overnight, but if you have a large chunk of your population that is either unemployed or underemployed, you have a huge problem on hand.

If you believe Modi, then he probably understands the issues better than other politicians. The Congress doesn’t seem to have a solution, nor can it explain its lethargy in fixing the situation in the 10 years that it has ruled India. The grand old party is not even talking about jobs – at least not yet. A disgruntled youth is not good for politicians and the country. The leader who can show a way to the youth stuck in between a rock and hard place is likely to win the next election.

It is up to politicians and the next government to take the right steps.