Context:
NABARD’s Rural Economic Conditions and Sentiments Survey (RECSS), conducted in May 2025 across 600 villages and 6,000 households, reveals a record-high rural income optimism, backed by positive employment sentiment, steady consumption patterns, and an above-normal monsoon forecast. This is the fifth round of the bi-monthly survey that began in September 2024.
Key Highlights:
Income Expectations at Historic High
- 73.6% of rural households expect their incomes to rise in the next 12 months — the highest ever recorded in RECSS.
- The proportion of respondents expecting income to fall dropped to 6.7% (lowest on record).
- Optimism is fueled by favorable monsoon predictions and improved farm income outlook.
One-Year Income Outlook Trends
| Survey Round | Income Increase | Income Decline | No Change | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 2024 | 70.2% | 7.3% | 22.5% | 
| Nov 2024 | 71.3% | 7.8% | 20.9% | 
| Jan 2025 | 71.2% | 7.4% | 21.4% | 
| Mar 2025 | 72.2% | 7.5% | 20.3% | 
| May 2025 | 73.6% | 6.7% | 19.7% | 
Household Income – Past 12-Month Comparison
- 37.4% reported income growth (vs. 34.8% in March).
- 21.4% saw income decline; 41.3% reported no change.
Employment Sentiment Improves Sharply
- 53.5% expect better job opportunities in July–September 2025.
- Only 8% foresee deterioration in employment.
- Net positive sentiment: +45.4%, strongest since survey inception.
Consumption Remains Strong
- 79.1% of rural households reported increased spending (down slightly from 79.9% in March).
- Net consumption sentiment: +74.6%, indicating sustained rural demand.
Savings Sentiment Still Weak
- Only 18.8% households increased savings in May.
- 28.7% reported a decline in savings.
- Net savings sentiment remains negative at -9.9%, though slightly better than -11.9% in March.
- Savings sentiment has been in the red for five consecutive rounds.
Real Wages Outlook – FY26 (India Ratings)
- Real wage growth projected at 6.5%, marginally down from 7% in FY25.
- Supported by steady agricultural output.
- Risks include monsoon disruption, weather shocks, and global trade/geopolitical tensions.
 
											 
															 
															 
															 
															 
															 
															 
								





 
											 
								