Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: India’s food inflation story has entered a puzzling phase. Even as official projections point to a bumper rabi harvest and robust sowing across major crops, retail food prices remain stubbornly high.
For policymakers, this isn’t just a temporary mismatch between supply and demand; it signals a deeper structural shift in how India grows, moves, and consumes food — and how climate volatility is quietly reshaping the macroeconomic narrative.
On the surface, the numbers should have brought relief. Wheat acreage has expanded, oilseed output is projected to rise, and horticulture estimates suggest another year of record fruit and vegetable production.
Yet consumers are still paying more for onions, tomatoes, pulses and everyday greens. This disconnect — between what the fields promise and what the markets deliver — sits at the centre of the food inflation puzzle.
Part of the explanation lies in the collapsing predictability of India’s supply chain. The old pattern of seasonality, where prices cooled once new harvests arrived, is breaking down. Climate unpredictability — sudden rainstorms, flash floods, heatwaves and uneven monsoon distribution — means that the arrival of fresh produce no longer guarantees price moderation.
A single heavy downpour in onion-growing belts or a heatwave in a tomato district can destroy large segments of the crop, triggering sudden spikes even in years of otherwise strong production. Pulses remain especially vulnerable: acreage may rise, but erratic weather often reduces yields enough to create persistent demand-supply gaps.
This micro-level volatility reinforces macro-level inflation pressures. Food inflation repeatedly breaches the RBI’s comfort band because climate-linked supply disruptions now occur more frequently than monetary policy cycles can anticipate or neutralise.
Even when harvests are robust, India’s post-harvest ecosystem introduces its own inflationary pressures. Storage, transport and cold-chain infrastructure continue to lag demand. The country loses a significant share of its fruits and vegetables after harvest due to inadequate cold storage.
Trucks stuck in rains, highways flooded for days, or perishables damaged by extreme heat translate into lower market arrivals and higher retail prices. India may grow more food each year, but it still sells and distributes it inefficiently, making inflation stubborn even in times of abundance.
Demand forces are shifting too. Rising incomes and changing diets are increasing consumption of structurally inflation-prone items such as pulses, milk, eggs and protein-rich foods. Even a minor mismatch between demand and supply in these categories can create disproportionate price pressures.
Meanwhile, farmers facing repeated climate shocks often reduce market participation, choosing to hold back produce or delay sales when risks rise. That reluctance tightens supplies further, complicating price dynamics.
The broader economic lesson is that climate volatility has become a new macro variable. The old assumption — good monsoon equals low food inflation — is now unreliable. Weather patterns have turned erratic enough to decouple production estimates from retail price behaviour.
Inflation management becomes harder when food, a large component of India’s CPI basket, keeps receiving climate-induced jolts. Government interventions such as export bans, stocking limits and duty adjustments offer temporary relief but often distort markets, sometimes worsening long-term price stability.
Solving the food inflation puzzle requires more than record harvests; it demands climate-resilient farming, stronger cold chains, more responsive logistics systems, and market reforms that allow faster movement of produce.


