10th Social
10th Social
a) Guiseppe Mazzini
Answer:
During the 1830s, Giuseppe Mazzini had sought to put together a coherent programme for the unitary
Italian Republic. He had also formed a secret society called Young Italy for the dissemination of his
goals.
Answer:
Answer:
1. Greece had been part of the Ottoman Empire since the fifteenth century. The growth of
revolutionary nationalism in Europe sparked off a struggle for independence amongst the
Greeks which began in 1821.
2. Poets and artists lauded Greece as the cradle of European civilisation and mobilised public
opinion to support its struggle against a Muslim empire
3. Nationalists in Greece got support from other Greeks living in exile and also from many West
Europeans who had sympathies for ancient Greek culture
4. Finally, the Treaty of Constantinople of 1832 recognised Greece as an independent nation
d) Frankfurt parliament
Answer:
Answer:
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1. Women of the liberal middle classes combined their demands for constitutionalism with national
unification. They took advantage of the growing popular unrest to push their demands for the
creation of a nation-state on parliamentary principles – a constitution, freedom of the press and
freedom of association.
2. Women had formed their own political associations, founded newspapers and taken part in
political meetings and demonstrations.
2. What steps did the French revolutionaries take to create a sense of collective identity among
the French people?
Answer:
1. The ideas of la patrie (the fatherland) and le citoyen (the citizen) emphasised the notion of a
united community enjoying equal rights under a constitution
2. A new French flag, the tricolour, was chosen to replace the former royal standard
3. New hymns were composed, oaths taken and martyrs commemorated, all in the name of the
nation.
4. A centralised administrative system was put in place and it formulated uniform laws for all
citizens within its territory.
5. Internal customs duties and dues were abolished and a uniform system of weights and
measures was adopted.
6. Regional dialects were discouraged and French, as it was spoken and written in Paris, became
the common language of the nation
7. The revolutionaries further declared that it was the mission and the destiny of the French nation
to liberate the peoples of Europe from despotism, in other words, to help other peoples of
Europe to become nations
3. Who were Marianne and Germania? What was the importance of the way in which they were
portrayed?
Answer:
Female allegories were invented by artists in the nineteenth century to represent the nation.
Germania became the allegory of the German nation. In visual representations, Germania wears a
crown of oak leaves, as the German oak stands for heroism.
Answer:
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1. Nationalist sentiments were often mobilised by conservatives for promoting state power and
achieving political domination over Europe. This can be observed in the process by which
Germany and Italy came to be unified as nation-states
2. Middle-class Germans tried to unite the different regions of German Confederation, but their
plans were not materialised due to actions of large landowners called Junkers of Prussia. Three
wars over seven years with Austria, Denmark, and France ended in a Prussian victory. In Jan
1871, Prussian King William I was proclaimed German emperor.
3. Importance was given to modernising the currency, banking, legal and judicial systems in
Germany.’
5. What changes did Napoleon introduce to make the administrative system more efficient in the
territories ruled by him?
Answer:
The Civil Code of 1804 – usually known as the Napoleonic Code – did away with all privileges based on
birth, established equality before the law and secured the right to property. This Code was exported to
the regions under French control. In the Dutch Republic, in Switzerland, in Italy and Germany,
Napoleon simplified administrative divisions, abolished the feudal system and freed peasants from
serfdom and manorial dues. In the towns too, guild restrictions were removed. Transport and
communication systems were improved. Peasants, artisans, workers and new businessmen enjoyed
new-found freedom. Businessmen and small-scale producers of goods, in particular, began to realise
that uniform law, standardised weights and measures, and a common national currency would facilitate
the movement and exchange of goods and capital from one region to another.
Discuss:
1. Explain what is meant by the 1848 revolution of the liberals. What were the political, social
and economic ideas supported by the liberals?
Answer:
1. Parallel to the revolts of the poor, unemployed and starving peasants and workers in many
European countries in the year 1848, a revolution led by the educated middle classes was
underway. Events of February 1848 in France had brought about the abdication of the monarch
and a republic based on universal male suffrage had been proclaimed
2. In other parts of Europe where independent nation-states did not yet exist – such as Germany,
Italy, Poland, the Austro-Hungarian Empire – men and women of the liberal middle classes
combined their demands for constitutionalism with national unification
3. They took advantage of the growing popular unrest to push their demands for the creation of a
nation-state on parliamentary principles – a constitution, freedom of the press and freedom of
association.
4. The issue of extending political rights to women was a controversial one within the liberal
movement, in which large numbers of women had participated actively over the years. Women
had formed their own political associations, founded newspapers and taken part in political
meetings and demonstrations
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2. Choose three examples to show the contribution of culture to the growth of nationalism in
Europe.
Answer:
Language:
Played a very important role. After the Russian occupation, the Polish language was forced out of
schools and the Russian language was imposed everywhere. Clergy in Poland began using language
as a weapon of national resistance. Polish was used for Church gatherings and all religious instruction.
The use of Polish came to be seen as a symbol of struggle against Russian dominance.
Romanticism:
It was a cultural movement which sought to develop a particular form of nationalist sentiment. Romantic
artists and poets generally criticised the glorification of reason and science and focussed instead on
emotions, intuition and mystic feelings. They tried to portray a common cultural past as the basis of a
nation.
The true spirit of the nation was popularised through the above means. So collecting and recording
these forms of folk culture was an essential part of nation-building.
3. Through a focus on any two countries, explain how nations developed over the nineteenth
century.
Answer:
Germany
4. Nationalist sentiments were often mobilised by conservatives for promoting state power and
achieving political domination over Europe. This can be observed in the process by which Germany
and Italy came to be unified as nation-states
5. Middle-class Germans tried to unite the different regions of German Confederation, but their
plans were not materialised due to actions of large landowners called Junkers of Prussia. Three wars
over seven years with Austria, Denmark, and France ended in a Prussian victory. In Jan 1871, Prussian
King William I was proclaimed German emperor.
6. Importance was given to modernising the currency, banking, legal and judicial systems in
Germany.’
Italy
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7. During 1830’s Mazzini sought to unify Italy, had formed a secret society called Young Italy. It
had failed hence the responsibility fell on Sardinia-Piedmont under its ruler King Victor Emmanuel II to
unify Italian states through war.
8. Austrian forces were defeated in 1859, apart from Sardinia-Piedmont large number of
volunteers had joined the cause under the leadership of Giuseppe Garibaldi, in 1860, they marched to
South Italy and managed to defeat Spanish rulers. In 1861 Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed king of
Italy.
4. How was the history of nationalism in Britain unlike the rest of Europe?
Answer:
1. Formation of the nation-state was not due to sudden upheaval or revolution. It was the result of
a long-drawn-out process.
2. The primary identities of people who inhabited the British Isles were ethnic ones such as
English, Welsh, Scot or Irish.
3. The Act of Union between England and Scotland resulted in the formation of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain. Scottish people were forbidden from speaking their Gaelic language,
and from wearing their national dress. Many were driven out of their homeland.
4. Ireland was forcibly incorporated into the UK in 1801. This was achieved by English helping the
Protestants of Ireland to establish dominance over the Catholics.
5. The symbols of the new Britain - the British flag (Union Jack), the national anthem (God save
our Noble King), the English language were actively promoted and the older nations survived
only as subordinate partners in this union.
Answer:
1. It was a region of geographical and ethnic variation comprising modern-day Romania, Bulgaria,
Albania, Greece, Macedonia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Serbia, and Montenegro
who were broadly known as Slavs.
2. A large part was under the control of the Ottoman Empire. Gradually independence was
declared from them.
3. The spread of the ideas of romantic nationalism in the Balkans together with disintegration of
the Ottoman Empire made this region very explosive.
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Chapter 2 - Nationalism in India
1.Explain:
Answer:
1. People began discovering their unity in the process of their struggle with colonialism
2. The sense of being oppressed under colonialism provided a shared bond that tied many
different groups together.
3. But each class and group felt the effects of colonialism differently, their experiences were
varied, and their notions of freedom were not always the same. The Congress under Mahatma
Gandhi tried to forge these groups together within one movement. But the unity did not emerge
without conflict
b) How the First World War helped in the growth of the National Movement in India.
Answer:
1. Led to a huge increase in defence expenditure which was financed by war loans and increasing
taxes: custom duties were increased and income tax introduced.
2. Forced recruitment in villages caused widespread anger.
3. Crops failed, this resulted in an acute shortage of food.
4. 12 to 13 million people died due to famines and epidemic.
Answer:
Answer:
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In February 1922, Mahatma Gandhi decided to withdraw the Non-Cooperation Movement. He felt the
movement was turning violent in many places and satyagrahis needed to be properly trained before
they would be ready for mass struggles.
Answer:
The idea of satyagraha emphasised the power of truth and the need to search for truth. It suggested
that if the cause was true, if the struggle was against injustice, then the physical force was not
necessary to fight the oppressor. Without seeking vengeance or being aggressive, a satyagrahi could
win the battle through nonviolence. This could be done by appealing to the conscience of the
oppressor. People – including the oppressors – had to be persuaded to see the truth, instead of being
forced to accept truth through the use of violence. By this struggle, the truth was bound to ultimately
triumph. Mahatma Gandhi believed that this dharma of non-violence could unite all Indians.
Answer:
On 13 April the infamous Jallianwalla Bagh incident took place. On that day a large crowd gathered in
the enclosed ground of Jallianwalla Bagh. Some came to protest against the government’s new
repressive measures. Others had come to attend the annual Baisakhi fair. Being from outside the city,
many villagers were unaware of the martial law that had been imposed. Dyer entered the area, blocked
the exit points, and opened fire on the crowd, killing hundreds. His object, as he declared later, was to
‘produce a moral effect’, to create in the minds of Satyagrahis a feeling of terror and awe.
Answer:
When the Simon Commission arrived in India in 1928, it was greeted with the slogan ‘Go back, Simon’.
All parties, including the Congress and the Muslim League, participated in the demonstrations. In an
effort to win them over, the viceroy, Lord Irwin, announced in October 1929, a vague offer of ‘dominion
status’ for India in an unspecified future, and a Round Table Conference to discuss a future
constitution. This did not satisfy the Congress leaders.
4. Compare the images of Bharat Mata in this chapter with the image of Germania in Chapter 1.
Answer:
Germania:
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1. Symbol of Germany
2. The image was painted by Philip Veit in 1848.
3. Carrying sword in one hand and flag in another hand
4. Germania is wearing a crown of oak leaves, as the German oak stands for heroism.
Bharat Mata:
1. Symbol of India
2. Painted by Abindranath Tagore in 1905
3. Bharat is standing with a Trishul, standing beside a lion and elephant, symbols of power and
authority.
Discuss
1. List all the different social groups which joined the Non-Cooperation Movement of 1921. Then
choose any three and write about their hopes and struggles to show why they joined the
movement.
Answer:
Below is the list of different social groups who joined the Non-Cooperation Movement and their
struggles.
Thousands of students left government-controlled schools and colleges, headmasters and teachers
resigned, and lawyers gave up their legal practices. The council elections were boycotted in most
provinces except Madras, where the Justice Party, the party of the non-Brahmans, felt that entering the
council was one way of gaining some power – something that usually only Brahmans had access to.
The effects of non-cooperation on the economic front were more dramatic. Foreign goods were
boycotted, liquor shops picketed, and foreign cloth burnt in huge bonfires. The import of foreign cloth
halved between 1921 and 1922, its value dropping from Rs 102 crore to Rs 57 crore. In many places,
merchants and traders refused to trade in foreign goods or finance foreign trade. As the boycott
movement spread, and people began discarding imported clothes and wearing only Indian ones,
production of Indian textile mills and handlooms went up. But this movement in the cities gradually
slowed down for a variety of reasons. Khadi cloth was often more expensive than mass-produced mill
cloth and poor people could not afford to buy it. Similarly, the boycott of British institutions posed a
problem. For the movement to be successful, alternative Indian institutions had to be set up so that they
could be used in place of the British ones. These were slow to come up. So students and teachers
began trickling back to government schools and lawyers joined back work in government courts.
In Awadh, peasants were led by Baba Ramchandra – a sanyasi who had earlier been to Fiji as an
indentured labourer. The movement here was against talukdars and landlords who demanded from
peasants exorbitantly high rents and a variety of other cesses. Peasants had to do begar and work at
landlords’ farms without any payment. As tenants they had no security of tenure, being regularly evicted
so that they could acquire no right over the leased land. The peasant movement demanded reduction
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of revenue, the abolition of begar, and social boycott of oppressive landlords. In many places nai –
dhobi bandhs were organised by panchayats to deprive landlords of the services of even barbers and
washermen.
Tribal peasants interpreted the message of Mahatma Gandhi and the idea of swaraj in yet another way.
In the Gudem Hills of Andhra Pradesh, for instance, a militant guerrilla movement spread in the early
1920s – not a form of struggle that the Congress could approve. Here, as in other forest regions, the
colonial government had closed large forest areas, preventing people from entering the forests to graze
their cattle, or to collect fuelwood and fruits. This enraged the hill people. Not only were their livelihoods
affected but they felt that their traditional rights were being denied. When the government began forcing
them to contribute begar for road building, the hill people revolted.
Workers too had their own understanding of Mahatma Gandhi and the notion of swaraj. For plantation
workers in Assam, freedom meant the right to move freely in and out of the confined space in which
they were enclosed, and it meant retaining a link with the village from which they had come. Under the
Inland Emigration Act of 1859, plantation workers were not permitted to leave the tea gardens without
permission, and in fact, they were rarely given such permission. When they heard of the Non-
Cooperation Movement, thousands of workers defied the authorities, left the plantations and headed
home. They believed that Gandhi Raj was coming and everyone would be given land in their own
villages. They, however, never reached their destination. Stranded on the way by a railway and
steamer strike, they were caught by the police and brutally beaten up.
2. Discuss the Salt March to make clear why it was an effective symbol of resistance against
colonialism.
Answer:
Mahatma Gandhi found in salt a powerful symbol that could unite the nation. On 31 January 1930, he
sent a letter to Viceroy Irwin stating eleven demands. Some of these were of general interest; others
were specific demands of different classes, from industrialists to peasants. The idea was to make the
demands wide-ranging so that all classes within Indian society could identify with them and everyone
could be brought together in a united campaign. The most stirring of all was the demand to abolish the
salt tax. Salt was something consumed by the rich and the poor alike, and it was one of the most
essential items of food. The tax on salt and the government monopoly over its production, Mahatma
Gandhi declared, revealed the most oppressive face of British rule.
Mahatma Gandhi started his famous salt march accompanied by 78 of his trusted volunteers. The
march was over 240 miles, from Gandhiji’s ashram in Sabarmati to the Gujarati coastal town of Dandi.
The volunteers walked for 24 days, about 10 miles a day. Thousands came to hear Mahatma Gandhi
wherever he stopped, and he told them what he meant by Swaraj and urged them to peacefully defy
the British. On 6 April he reached Dandi, and ceremonially violated the law, manufacturing salt by
boiling seawater.
Thousands in different parts of the country broke the salt law, manufactured salt and demonstrated in
front of government salt factories. As the movement spread, the foreign cloth was boycotted, and liquor
shops were picketed. Peasants refused to pay revenue and chaukidari taxes, village officials resigned,
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and in many places, forest people violated forest laws – going into Reserved Forests to collect wood
and graze cattle.
3. Imagine you are a woman participating in the Civil Disobedience Movement. Explain what the
experience meant to your life.
Answer:
Students are advised to put themselves in the shoes of women and share the experience.
4. Why did political leaders differ sharply over the question of separate electorates?
Answer:
Dr B.R. Ambedkar, who organised the Dalits into the Depressed Classes Association in 1930, clashed
with Mahatma Gandhi at the second Round Table Conference by demanding separate electorates for
Dalits. When the British government conceded Ambedkar’s demand, Gandhiji began a fast unto death.
He believed that separate electorates for Dalits would slow down the process of their integration into
society. Ambedkar ultimately accepted Gandhiji’s position and the result was the Poona Pact of
September 1932.
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, one of the leaders of the Muslim League, was willing to give up the demand for
separate electorates if Muslims were assured reserved seats in the Central Assembly and
representation in proportion to population in the Muslim-dominated provinces (Bengal and Punjab).
Negotiations over the question of representation continued but all hope of resolving the issue at the All
Parties Conference in 1928 disappeared when M.R. Jayakar of the Hindu Mahasabha strongly opposed
efforts at compromise.
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NCERT Solutions for Class 10 History Chapter 3 - The Making of a Global World
1. Give two examples of different types of global exchanges which took place in the seventeenth
century, choosing one example from Asia and one from the Americas.
Solution: The following are examples of cross-cultural exchanges from Asia and the Americas:
a. The Silk Route (Asia): The silk routes are a good example of cross-cultural trade and connectivity
between distant parts of the world. The name ‘silk routes’ points to the importance of West-bound
Chinese silk cargoes along this route.
Trade and cultural exchange always went hand in hand. Early Christian missionaries almost certainly
travelled this route to Asia, as did early Muslim preachers a few centuries later.
b. Food from the Americas: The food that is part of our staple diet today like potatoes, soya, groundnuts,
maize, tomatoes, chillies, sweet potatoes etc. were not known to our ancestors until the accidental
discovery of the Americas by Christopher Columbus.
These foods only made it to Europe and the rest of the world after this monumental discovery of the new
continent.
2. Explain how the global transfer of disease in the pre-modern world helped in the colonisation of
the Americas.
Solutions: The global transfer of disease in the pre-modern world helped in the colonization of the
Americas. The reason was that the native Americans were not immune to the diseases that the European
settlers brought with them. The Europeans were to a certain extent immune to the effects of diseases like
smallpox due to centuries of exposure, but the native Americans had no such defence against this disease,
as they were isolated from diseases native to the old world.
At times, settlers deliberately practised biological warfare on the natives by giving items laced with
smallpox germs as ‘gifts of friendship’. The disease was far more effective in wiping out entire tribes and
communities without having to resort to firearms.
Solution:
a. The British government’s decision to abolish the Corn Laws was due to pressure from the landed groups,
who were unhappy with the high price of food and the cheap inflow of agricultural products from Australia
and America. As a result, many English farmers left their profession and migrated to towns and cities.
Some went overseas. This indirectly led to global agriculture and rapid urbanization, a prerequisite of
industrial growth.
b. Rinderpest (a fast-spreading disease of cattle plague) arrived in Africa in the late 1880s. It had a terrifying
impact on people’s livelihoods and the local economy. It started in East Africa and soon spread to the other
parts of the continent. Within five years, it reached the Cape of Good Hope (Africa’s Southernmost tip) by
which it had killed 90 % of the cattle population in that part of Africa. It spread through infected cattle
imported from British Asia to feed the Italian soldiers invading Eritrea in East Africa. Using this situation
to their advantage, colonizing nations conquered and subdued Africa by monopolizing scarce cattle
resources to force Africans into the labour market. The Africans were forced to work for a wage due to the
loss of their livelihood due to the effect of Rinderpest.
c. The First World War was the first modern industrial war. It saw the use of machine guns, tanks, aircraft,
chemical weapons etc. on a massive scale. To fight such a war millions of soldiers had to be recruited from
around the world and moved to the frontlines on large ships and trains. The scale of death and destruction
was unlike any other conflict in the modern era. Most of the killed and maimed were men of working age;
the deaths and injuries of these men drastically reduced the able-bodied workforce in Europe. Within fewer
members within the family, household incomes declined after the war. Thus women stepped in to do the
jobs that were earlier done by men. It increased the role of women led to a demand for equal status in
society. It made the feminist movement even stronger.
d. In the nineteenth century, colonial India had become an exporter of agricultural goods and importer of
manufactures. The impact of the Great Depression in India was felt, especially in the agricultural sector. It
was evident that the Indian economy was closely becoming integrated into the global economy. India was
a British colony and exported agricultural goods and imported manufactured goods. As international prices
crashed so did the prices in India. The wheat prices in India fell by 50 % between 1928 and 1934.
e. Wages were relatively low in Asian countries like China. Thus, they became lucrative destinations for
investment by foreign MNCs competing to dominate world markets. The relocation of industry to low-
wage countries stimulated world trade and capital flow.
b. It stimulated world trade and increased capital inflow in the Asian Countries
c. The local population now had a greater choice of goods and services along with prospects of greater
employment opportunities for them.
4. Give two examples from history to show the impact of technology on food availability.
Solution:
1. Improved transportation systems: Improved transportation systems helped the foods get delivered on time
to the markets without any harm. Faster railways, lighter wagons and larger ships helped move food
cheaply and quickly from faraway farms to final markets.
2. Refrigerated ships: The development of refrigerated ships enabled the transport of perishable foods over
long distances. Animals were slaughtered for food at the starting point -in America, Australia or New
Zealand - and then transported to Europe as frozen meat. This reduced shipping costs and lowered meat
prices in Europe. The poor in Europe could now add meat to their diet, which was monotonous with only
bread and potatoes.
Solution: In order to preserve economic stability and full employment in the industrial world, the post-
war international economic system was established. To execute the same, the United Nations Monetary
and Financial Conference was held in July 1944 at Bretton Woods in New Hampshire, USA. The Bretton
Woods Conference established the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to deal with external surpluses
and shortages of its member-nations. The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(popularly known as the World Bank) was set up to financial post-war reconstruction, and they started the
financial operations in 1947.
Under the agreement, currencies were pegged to the price of gold, and the US dollar was seen as a
reserve currency linked to the price of gold. Decision-making authority was given to the Western
industrial powers. The US was given the right of veto over key IMF and World Bank decisions. The
Bretton Woods system was based on fixed exchange rates. The Bretton Woods system Opened an era of
unique growth of trade and incomes for the Western industrial nations and Japan.
6. Imagine that you are an indentured Indian labour in the Caribbean. Drawing from the details in
the chapter, write a letter to your family describing your life and feelings
My work as an indentured labourer Jamaica is far from a walk in the park. Through this letter, I want to
tell you about my life here.
When the contractor hired me, he was quite economical with the truth about the living and working
conditions. To say nothing of the kind of work and place of work.
We have very few rights, with the contractor living up to the behaviour standards expected of them in the
Caribbean -extremely harsh. He treats us like animals since we are a minority and thus easy targets for his
wrath. Accidents are common in the sugar plantations in Jamaica. One time I saw a worker burnt alive
when the liquid sugar we were boiling accidentally spilt on him. Since he cannot work with his third-
degree burns, the contractor saw it fit to throw him out without any due wages paid. We don’t have any
rights to speak or to express our dissatisfaction about the working conditions. And if we do, we will face
the overseer’s whips.
Whenever I do not attend my work, I am liable to be to jail. There is a lot of work at the plantations with
a heavy workload and less time to finish it all.
In case of unsatisfactory work, my wages are cut. If there is hell on earth, it certainly is this. I know my
writing will cause you anguish but rest assured there is the talk of new laws underway to protect
labourers like us. Thus, this situation will pass soon.
7. Explain the three types of movements or flows within the international economic exchange. Find
one example of each type of flow which involved India and Indians, write a short account of it.
Solution: The three types of movements or flows within the international economic exchange are trade
flows, human capital flows and capital flows or investments. These can be explained as—the trade in
agricultural products, migration of labour, and financial loans to and from other nations.
India was a hub of trade in the pre-modern world, and it exported textiles and spices in return for gold
and silver from Europe.
Fine cotton was produced in India and was exported to Europe. With industrialization, British cotton
manufacture began to expand, and industrialists pressurized the government to restrict cotton imports and
protect local industries. As a result of the tariffs that were imposed on cloth imports, the inflow of fine
Indian Cotton began to decline.
In the field of labour, indentured labour was provided for mines, plantations and factories abroad, in huge
numbers, in the nineteenth century. This was an instrument of colonial domination by the British.
Indentured labourers were hired under contacts which promised return travel to India after they had
worked five years on their employer’s plantation. The living conditions were harsh, and the labourers had
little protection of the law or from it as they had little rights.
Lastly, Britain took generous loans from the USA to finance the World War. Since India was an English
colony, the impact of these loan debts was felt in India too. Food and other crops for the world market
required capital. Large plantations could borrow it from banks and markets.
1. Agriculture overproduction was a major problem. As a result, agricultural prices fell. As prices fell, so did
agricultural incomes. This increased the volume of goods in the market. The situation got worsened in the
market. Prices fell down further. Farm produce began to rot due to the lack of buyers.
2. Prosperity in the USA during the 1920s created a cycle of higher employment and incomes. It led to a rise
in consumption and demands. More investment and more employment created tendencies of speculations
which led to the Great Depression of 1929 up to the mid-1930s. The stock market crashed in 1929. It
created panic among investors and depositors who stopped investing and depositing. As a result, it created
a cycle of depreciation.
3. The withdrawal of US loans affected the rest of the world in many different ways. In Europe, it led to the
failure of the major banks and the collapse of major currencies such as the British pound sterling. Some of
the banks closed down when people withdrew all their assets, leaving them unable to invest. Some banks
called back loans taken from them at the same dollar rate, in spite of the falling value of the dollar.
9. Explain what is referred to as the G-77 countries. In what ways can G-77 be seen as a reaction to
the activities of the Bretton Woods twins?
Solution: After the Second World War, many parts of the world were still under European colonial rule,
and it took over two decades for the colonies in Asia and Africa to become free independent nations.
When they became free, they faced many other problems such as poverty, lack of resources, etc.
Economies and societies were handicapped for being under colonial rule for long periods.
As colonies, many of the less developed regions of the world had been part of Western empires. The
policy of the Bretton Woods twins tilted more in favour of the developed nations of the Western world.
Now, ironically, as newly independent countries facing urgent pressures to lift their populations out of
poverty, they came under the guidance of international agencies dominated by the former colonial
powers.
Therefore, these colonies organised themselves as a group – the Group of 77 (or G-77) – to demand a
new international economic order (NIEO). By the NIEO they meant a system that would give them real
control over their natural resources, more development assistance, fairer prices for raw materials, and
better access for their manufactured goods in developed countries’ markets.
NCERT Solutions Class 10 Social Science History (India
and the Contemporary World - II) Chapter 4 - Age of
Industrialisation
Solution: (a) James Hargreaves designed the Spinning Jenny in 1764. This machine speeded up the
spinning process and reduced the demand for labour. By the use of this machine, a single worker could
turn a number of spindles, and spin several threads at a time. Due to this many weavers would lose
employment. The fearful prospect of unemployment drow women workers, who depended on
hand-spinning, to attack the new machines.
(b) World trade expanded at a very fast rate during the 17th and 18th centuries. The acquisition of
colonies was also responsible for the increase in demand. The producers in the towns failed to produce
the required quantity of cloth. The producers could not expand the production in the towns because
urban crafts and trade guilds were powerful. These were the associations of producers that restricted
the entry of new people into the trade. The rulers granted different guilds the monopoly right to produce
and the trade-in specific products.
(c) The European companies were gaining power by securing a variety of concessions from the local
courts. It was very difficult for the Indian merchants and traders to face the competition as most of the
European countries had huge resources. Some of the European companies got the monopoly rights to
trade.
All this resulted in the decline of Surat Port by the end of the eighteenth century. In the last years of the
seventeenth century, the gross value of trade that passed through Surat had been ` 16 million. By the
1740s, it had slumped to 3 million. With the passage of time, Surat and Hooghly decayed, while
Bombay (Mumbai) and Calcutta (Kolkata) grew.
(d) The company tried to eliminate the existing traders and brokers connect with the cloth trade, and
establish more direct control over the weavers. It appointed a paid servant called Gomastha to
supervise weavers, collect supplies, and examine the quality of cloth.
a) At the end of the nineteenth century, 80 per cent of the total workforce in Europe was
employed in the technologically advanced industrial sector
b) The international market for fine textiles was dominated by India till the eighteenth
century
c) The American Civil War resulted in the reduction of cotton exports from India
d) The introduction of the fly shuttle enabled handloom workers to improve their
productivity.
Solution:
a) False
b) True
c) False
d) True
Solution: Even before factories began to appear on the landscape of England and Europe, there was a
large scale industrial production for an international market. This was not based on factories. Many
historians now refer to this phase of industrialization as proto-industrialization or the precursor to
industrialization. During this period most of the goods were hand manufactured by trained
crafts-persons for the international market.
Q.4 Why did some industrialists in nineteenth-century Europe prefer hand labour over
machines?
Solution: In the 19th century, Europe some British industrialists preferred hand labour over machines
because
(i) New technologies and machines were expensive and untested. So the producers and the
industrialists were cautious about using them.
(ii) Machines often broke down and repairing them was an expensive affair.
(iii) Poor peasants and migrants moved to cities in large numbers in search of jobs. As a result, there
was a large pool of labourers available for cheap labour
(iv) In seasonal industries, where production fluctuated with the seasons, industrialists usually preferred
hand labour, employing workers only for the season, when it was needed.
(v) The variety of products required in the market could not be produced by the machines available at
that time. In the mid-nineteenth century, Britain, for instance, 500 varieties of hammers and 45 kinds of
axes were produced, these required human skills, and not mechanical technology.
Q.5 How did East India Company procure regular supplies of cotton and silk textiles from Indian
weavers?
Solution: The East India Company adopted various steps to ensure regular supplies of cotton and silk
textiles.
(i) They established political power to assert a monopoly on the right to trade.
(ii) The company tried to eliminate the existing traders and brokers connected with the cloth trade, and
establish direct control over the weavers. It appointed paid servants called the Gomasthas, to supervise
weavers, collect supplies and examine the quality of cloth.
(iii) It prevented the company weavers from dealing with other buyers. Once an order was placed, the
weavers were given loans to purchase the raw material. Those who took loans had to hand over the
cloth they produced to the Gomasthas only. They could not take it to any other trader.
(iv) They developed a system of management and control that would eliminate competition, control cost
and ensure regular supply of cotton and silk goods. This system forced the sell at a price dictated by
the company. By giving the weavers a loan, the company tied the weavers with them.
Q.6 Imagine that you have been asked to write an article for an encyclopedia on Britain and the
history of cotton. Write your piece using information from the entire.
Solution: The following inventions in 18th century England (given in chronological order) are important
milestones in the history of cotton.
(i) James Hargreaves invented the Spinning Jenny' in 1764. This speeded up spinning work
significantly.
(ii) John Key invented the 'Flying Shuttle' in 1769, which sped up the weaving process.
(iii) Richard Arkwright improved the 'Spinning Jenny' in 1769 so that it could be run by water power. He
called it the 'Water Frame'.
(iv) In 1776, Samuel Crompton invented the 'Mule', which combined the advantages of both the 'Water
Frame' and the 'Spinning Jenny'.
(v) In 1785, Edmund Cartwright invented the power loom, which used steam power for both spinning
and weaving.
(vi) Eli Whitney (in the USA) invented the 'Cotton Gin' in 1793, which solved the problem of removing
seeds from cotton fibres. This could separate the seeds from the fibres 300 times faster than by hand.
Later on, Arkwright created a complete cotton mill where all the textile manufacturing process could be
completed under one roof and management.
(vii) The use of steam power played a very significant role in running cotton mills. Production of textiles
increased in a very short time and with less manual labour. At the beginning of the 19th century, there
were near about 321 steam engines in England, out of which 80 were in use in cotton textile mills.
(viii) The East India Company appointed Gomasthas, a paid servants of the company to supervise
weavers, collect supplies and judge and inspect the quality of textiles. Gomasthas was the link between
the East India Company and the weavers. The company arranged loans to the weavers to purchase
raw material for weaving the cloth.
Q.7 Why did industrial production in India increase during the First World War?
Solution: Industrial production in India increased during the First World War due to the
following reasons
(i) The British mills were busy with war production to meet the needs of the army, thus Manchester
imports into India declined.
(ii) With the decline of imports suddenly, Indian mills had a vast home market to supply.
(iii) As the war prolonged, Indian factories were called upon to supply war needs also, such as jute
bags, cloth for uniforms of soldiers, tents, leather boots.
(iv) New factories were set up and old ones organized multiple shifts; during the war years, Indian
industries boomed.
(v) Overall, the First World War gave a boost to Indian industries.
NCERT Solutions For Class 10 Social Science History
Chapter 5 - Print Culture and the Modern World
Q.1 Give reason for the following:
Solution: (a) Marco Polo, the Italian explorer, visited China and learnt the technology of woodblock
printing. When he returned to Italy in 1295 he brought this knowledge back with him. Gradually this
knowledge spread from Italy to other parts of Europe.
(b) In 1517, Martin Luther, the religious reformer wrote Ninety Five Theses that criticised the corrupt
practices of the Catholic Church and pasted these on the church door in Wittenberg. Very soon
thousands of copies of Luther's Theses were printed, spreading his ideas among people. Martin Luther
was deeply moved by realizing the power of printing which brought about reformation movement and
the eventual birth of Protestantism.
(c) Print and popular literature encouraged many distinctive interpretations of religious faiths and ideas.
In the 16th century, Manocchio, a roller in Italy began to read books available readily in his locality. He
gave a new interpretation of the Bible and formulated a view of God, and creation that enraged the
Roman Catholic Church. As a result, Manocchio was hauled up twice and ultimately executed when the
Roman Catholic Church began its inquisition
(d) Mahatma Gandhi said these words in 1922 during the Non-cooperation Movement (1920-22).
According to him, without the liberty of speech, the liberty of the press and freedom of association, no
nation can even survive. If the country was to get free from foreign domination, then these liberties
were quite important.
Solution: (a) The Gutenberg Press 'Gutenberg' press was the first printing press of Europe. It was
invented by Johann Gutenberg of Strasbourg. He grew up in a large agricultural estate and had
knowledge and experience in operating olive and wine presses. He invented the printing press around
the year 1448 with the Bible being the first book to be printed.
(b) Erasmus's Idea of the Printed Book Erasmus, the Latin scholar, was not happy with the printing of
books because he was afraid that this would lead to the circulation of books with rebellious ideas. He
felt that although a few books may give useful information, the majority of books may just be irrelevant
or illogical through which scandalous of irreligious ideas will spread, ultimately leading to incitement of
rebellion.
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(c) The Vernacular Press Act was passed in 1878 by the British government in India. This act provided
the government with extensive rights to censor reports and editorials in the Vernacular Press. If a
Vernacular Paper published any seditious material, the paper was banned and its printing machinery
was seized and destroyed.
Q.3 What did the spread of print culture in the nineteenth century India mean to:
a. Women
b. The poor
c. Reformers
Solution: (a) Women: Women became as important as readers and writers. Reading habits improved
among them. With an increase in literacy, women took great interest in reading and writing. Many
journals started emphasizing the importance of women's education. Many magazines and books were
especially published for women. The print culture gave women some amount of freedom to read and
develop their own views on various issues, especially those related to women.
(b) The Poor: As the literacy rate improved in Europe as well as in India, printed material, especially for
entertainment, began to reach even the poor. In England 'penny magazines' were carried by peddlers
and sold for a penny, so that even poor people could buy them. Those who could not read could listen
to the stories and folklore. These could be read out to them by others. Books could be hired on a
nominal fee from some book owners. Even in India, very cheap small books were brought to market in
19th century Madras towns, allowing poor people to have access to print culture.
(c) Reformers: Reformers used newspapers, journals and books to highlight the social evils prevailing
in the society. Raja Ram Mohan Roy published the Sambad Kaumudi to highlight the plight of widows.
From the 1860s, many Bengali women writers like Kailashbashini Debi wrote books highlighting the
experiences of women, about how women were imprisoned at home, kept in ignorance, forced to do
hard domestic labour and treated unjustly by the menfolk they served.
Discuss
Q.1 Why did some people in the eighteenth century Europe think that culture would bring
enlightenment and end despotism?
Solution: (i) Spreading of New Ideas After the coming of print culture, the ideas of scientists and
philosophers now became more accessible to the common people. Ancient and medieval scientific
texts were compiled and published.
(ii) Books as Medium of Progress By the eighteenth century, books became a medium of spreading
progress and enlightenment which could change society and the world. It was also believed that the
books could liberate society from despotism and tyranny.
(iii) Writings of Scholars The writings of thinkers such as Jean Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Paine and
Voltaire were also widely printed and could gain popularity. Thus their ideas about science, rationality
and reasoning found their way into popular literature.
(iv) Scientific Discoveries Maps and more accurate scientific diagrams were widely printed when
scientists like Issac Newton began to publish their discoveries. They could influence a much wider
circle of scientifically-minded readers.
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Q.2 Why did some people fear the effect of easily available printed books? Choose one example from
Europe and one from India.
Solution: Some people, especially from the upper class fear the effect of easily available printed books due to
the spread of literacy among the common people. They feared that they might lose their position or authorities.
Some people thought that it might lead to the spread of rebellions and irreligious thoughts.
Example:
(i) In Europe, the Roman Catholic Church tried to curb the printed books through the Index of Prohibited Books.
(ii) In India, the Vernacular Press Act imposed restrictions on Indian press and various local newspapers.
Q.3 What were the effects of the spread of print culture for poor people in nineteenth-century
India?
Solution: Public libraries were set up from the early twentieth century, expanding access to books.
These libraries were located mostly in cities and towns, and at times in prosperous villages. For rich
local patrons, setting up a library was a way of acquiring prestige.
From the late nineteenth century, issues of caste discrimination began to be written about in many
printed tracts and essays.
Jyotiba Phule, the Maratha pioneer of ‘low caste’ protest movements, wrote about the injustices of the
caste system in his Gulamgiri (1871). In the twentieth century, B.R. Ambedkar in Maharashtra and E.V.
Ramaswamy Naicker in Madras, better known as Periyar, wrote powerfully on caste and their writings
were read by people all over India. Local protest movements and sects also created a lot of popular
journals and tracts criticising ancient scriptures and envisioning a new and just future.
At the very least it made pooer people aware of their rights and place in society and Print media
showed the way in which they can improve their lot in life
Q.4 Explain how the print culture assisted in the growth of nationalism in India.
Solution: Print culture assisted in the growth of nationalism in India in the following ways:
i) By the end of the 19th century, a large number of newspapers in Indian vernacular languages were
published, making it easier to circumvent the language barriers among the various ethnic groups of
Indians.
(ii) These newspapers published articles written by national leaders. Their ideas were communicated to
the masses through these newspapers.
(iii) The people of different communities and places were thus connected by print media. Newspapers
conveyed news from one place to another, creating a pan-Indian identity.
(iv) The nationalist newspapers exposed the colonial misrule and encouraged nationalist activities. As
these were written in spoken languages of various regions common man could easily understand the
content.
(v) For example, when Punjab revolutionaries were deported in 1907, Balagangadhar Tilak wrote
articles sympathising with them. He was arrested which provoked protest among masses.
Thus it is clear, print culture assisted the growth of nationalism in India.
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NCERT Solutions For Class 10 Social Science Geography
Chapter 1 - Resources and Development
1. Multiple choice questions.
(a) Renewable
(b) Biotic
(c) Flow
(d) Non-renewable
Answer:
Non-renewable
(ii) Under which of the following type of resource tidal energy cannot be put?
(a) Replenishable
(b) Human-made
(c) Abiotic
(d) Non-recyclable
Answer:
Replenishable
(iii) Which one of the following is the main cause of land degradation in Punjab?
Answer:
Over irrigation
(a) Punjab
(b) Plains of Uttar Pradesh
(c) Haryana
(d) Uttarakhand
Answer:
Uttarakhand
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Answer:
Maharashtra
(i) Name three states having black soil and the crop which is mainly grown in it.
Answer:
3 states are
1. Maharashtra
2. Gujarat
3. Madhya Pradesh
(ii) What type of soil is found in the river deltas of the eastern coast? Give three main features of
this type of soil.
Answer:
(iii) What steps can be taken to control soil erosion in the hilly areas?
Answer:
1. Contour ploughing
2. Terrace farming
3. Strips of grass are allowed to grow between the crops, this method is known as strip cropping.
(iv) What are the biotic and abiotic resources? Give some examples.
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Answer:
Biotic resource:
Abiotic resource:
(i) Explain the land use pattern in India and why has the land under forest not increased much
since 1960-61?
Answer:
The use of land is determined both by physical factors such as topography, climate, soil types as well
as human factors such as population density, technological capability and culture and traditions etc.
The pattern of the net sown area varies greatly from one state to another. It is over 80 per cent of the
total area in Punjab and Haryana and less than 10 per cent in Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Manipur
and Andaman Nicobar Islands. Forest area in the country is far lower than the desired 33 per cent of
geographical area, as it was outlined in the National Forest Policy (1952). It was considered essential
for the maintenance of the ecological balance. A part of the land is termed as wasteland and land put to
other non-agricultural uses. Wasteland includes rocky, arid and desert areas and land put to other non-
agricultural uses includes settlements, roads, railways, industry etc. Continuous use of land over a long
period of time without taking appropriate measures to conserve and manage it has resulted in land
degradation.
(ii) How has technical and economic development led to more consumption of resources?
Answer:
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Chapter 2 - Forest and Wildlife Resources
1. Multiple choice questions.
(i) Which of these statements is not a valid reason for the depletion of flora and fauna?
Answer:
(ii) Which of the following conservation strategies do not directly involve community
participation?
Answer:
Answer:
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Animals/Plants Category of existence
Reserved Other forests and wastelands belonging to both government and private
Forests individuals and communities
Protected Forests are regarded as most valuable as far as the conservation of forest
Forests and wildlife resources
Answer:
Reserved Forests are regarded as most valuable as far as the conservation of forest and
Forests wildlife resources
Unclassed Other forests and wastelands belonging to both Government and private individuals
Forests and communities
Answer:
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Biodiversity is made up of various types of life forms found on earth. It is a measure of variation at the
ecosystem, species, and genetic level. Biodiversity is abundant in Tropical areas. Tropical areas cover
10 per cent of earth surface but it hosts 90% of the world species.
(ii) How have human activities affected the depletion of flora and fauna? Explain
Answer:
1. Various river valley projects have affected the flora and fauna
2. Many illegal Mining projects have depleted the flora and fauna
3. Too many development projects for leisure activities in the forests have negatively affected.
4. Too many human activities in the forest area due to rising population and lack of space has
created human-animal conflict.
(i) Describe how communities have conserved and protected forests and wildlife in India?
Answer:
Chipko Movement:
The famous Chipko movement in the Himalayas has not only successfully resisted deforestation in
several areas but has also shown that community afforestation with indigenous species can be
enormously successful.
Certain societies revere a particular tree which they have preserved from time immemorial. The
Mundas and the Santhal of Chota Nagpur region worship mahua (Bassia latifolia) and kadamba
(Anthocaphalus cadamba) trees, and the tribals of Odisha and Bihar worship the tamarind (Tamarindus
indica) and mango (Mangifera indica) trees during weddings. To many of us, peepal and banyan trees
are considered sacred.
In Sariska Tiger Reserve, Rajasthan, villagers have fought against mining by citing the Wildlife
Protection Act. In many areas, villagers themselves are protecting habitats and explicitly rejecting
government involvement. The inhabitants of five villages in the Alwar district of Rajasthan have
declared 1,200 hectares of forest as the Bhairodev Dakav ‘Sonchuri’, declaring their own set of rules
and regulations which do not allow hunting and are protecting the wildlife against any outside
encroachments
(ii) Write a note on good practices towards conserving forest and wildlife.
Answer:
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In India, joint forest management (JFM) programme furnishes a good example for involving local
communities in the management and restoration of degraded forests. The programme has been in
formal existence since 1988 when the state of Odisha passed the first resolution for joint forest
management. JFM depends on the formation of local (village) institutions that undertake protection
activities mostly on degraded forest land managed by the forest department. In return, the members of
these communities are entitled to intermediary benefits like nontimber forest produces and share in the
timber harvested by ‘successful protection’. The clear lesson from the dynamics of both environmental
destruction and reconstruction in India is that local communities everywhere have to be involved in
some kind of natural resource management. But there is still a long way to go before local communities
are at the centre stage in decision-making. Accept only those economic or developmental activities,
that are people-centric, environment-friendly and economically rewarding
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Chapter 3 - Water Resources
1. Multiple choice questions.
(i) Based on the information given below classify each of the situations as ‘suffering from water
scarcity’ or ‘not suffering from water scarcity’.
Answer:
(a) A region with high annual rainfall. - Not suffering from water scarcity
(b) A region having high annual rainfall and large population. - Suffering from water scarcity
(c) A region having high annual rainfall but water is highly polluted. - Suffering from water scarcity
(d) A region having low rainfall and low population.- Not suffering from water scarcity
(ii) Which one of the following statements is not an argument in favour of multipurpose river
projects?
(a) Multi-purpose projects bring water to those areas which suffer from water scarcity.
(b) Multi-purpose projects by regulating water flow help to control floods.
(c) Multi-purpose projects lead to large scale displacements and loss of livelihood.
(d) Multi-purpose projects generate electricity for our industries and our homes.
Answer:
(c) Multi-purpose projects lead to large scale displacements and loss of livelihood
(iii) Here are some false statements. Identify the mistakes and rewrite them correctly.
(a) Multiplying urban centres with large and dense populations and urban lifestyles have helped
in proper utilisation of water resources.
(b) Regulating and damming of rivers does not affect the river’s natural flow and its sediment
flow.
(c) In Gujarat, the Sabarmati basin farmers were not agitated when higher priority was given to
water supply in urban areas, particularly during droughts.
(d) Today in Rajasthan, the practise of rooftop rainwater water harvesting has gained popularity
despite high water availability due to the Indira Gandhi Canal.
Answer:
(a) Multiplying urban centres with large and dense populations and urban lifestyles have resulted in
improper utilisation of water resources.
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(b) Regulating and damming of rivers does affect the river’s natural flow and its sediment flow.
(c) In Gujarat, the Sabarmati basin farmers were agitated when higher priority was given to water
supply in urban areas, particularly during droughts.
(d) Today in Rajasthan, the practice of rooftop rainwater water harvesting popularity has declined due
to high water availability from Indira Gandhi Canal.
Answer:
Water can be considered as a renewable resource since there will be rains and surface water and
groundwater will get recharged continuously due to the 3 process involved in the hydrological cycle.
1. Evaporations
2. Condensation
3. Precipitation
(ii) What is water scarcity and what are its main causes?
Answer:
Many of our cities are such examples. Thus, water scarcity may be an outcome of large and growing
population and consequent greater demands for water, and unequal access to it. A large population
requires more water not only for domestic use but also to produce more food. Hence, to facilitate higher
food-grain production, water resources are being over-exploited to expand irrigated areas for dry-
season agriculture. Irrigated agriculture is the largest consumer of water. Most farmers have their own
wells and tube-wells in their farms for irrigation to increase their produce. This has adversely affected
water availability and food security of the people.
(iii) Compare the advantages and disadvantages of multi-purpose river projects.
Answer:
Advantages:
1. Irrigation
2. Electricity generation
3. Flood control
4. Water supply for industrial and domestic purposes.
5. Tourist attraction
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6. Inland navigation
Disadvantages:
(i) Discuss how rainwater harvesting in semi-arid regions of Rajasthan is carried out.
Answer:
In the semi-arid and arid regions of Rajasthan, particularly in Bikaner, Phalodi and Barmer, almost all
the houses traditionally had underground tanks or tankas for storing drinking water. The tanks could be
as large as a big room; one household in Phalodi had a tank that was 6.1 metres deep, 4.27 metres
long and 2.44 metres wide. The tankas were part of the well-developed rooftop rainwater harvesting
system and were built inside the main house or the courtyard. They were connected to the sloping roofs
of the houses through a pipe. Rain falling on the rooftops would travel down the pipe and was stored in
these underground ‘tankas’. The first spell of rain was usually not collected as this would clean the
roofs and the pipes. The rainwater from the subsequent showers was then collected. The rainwater can
be stored in the tankas till the next rainfall making it an extremely reliable source of drinking water when
all other sources are dried up, particularly in the summers. Rainwater, or palar pani, as commonly
referred to in these parts, is considered the purest form of natural water.
(ii) Describe how modern adaptations of traditional rainwater harvesting methods are being
carried out to conserve and store water.
Answer:
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highest rainfall in the world, yet the state capital Shillong faces acute shortage of water. Nearly every
household in the city has a rooftop rainwater harvesting structure. Nearly 15-25 per cent of the total
water requirement of the household comes from rooftop water harvesting. Tamil Nadu is the first state
in India which has made rooftop rainwater harvesting structure compulsory to all the houses across the
state.
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Chapter 4 - Agriculture
1. Multiple choice questions.
(i) Which one of the following describes a system of agriculture where a single crop is grown on
a large area?
(a) Shifting Agriculture (b) Plantation Agriculture (c) Horticulture (d) Intensive Agriculture
Answer:
Plantation agriculture
Answer:
Gram
Answer:
Pulses
(i) Name one important beverage crop and specify the geographical conditions required for its
growth.
Answer:
(ii) Name one staple crop of India and the regions where it is produced.
Answer:
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Rice is a major staple crop of India.
1. Plains of North
2. North East India
3. Coastal Areas
4. Deltaic Regions
(iii) Enlist the various institutional reform programmes introduced by the government in the
interest of farmers.
Answer:
(iv) The land under cultivation has got reduced day by day. Can you imagine its consequences?
Answer:
1. Shortage of food
2. The rise in prices of food
3. Imports increase will put stress on the economy
4. Rise in Unemployment
(i) Suggest the initiative taken by the government to ensure the increase in agricultural
production.
Answer:
The Government of India embarked upon introducing agricultural reforms to improve Indian agriculture
in the 1960s and 1970s. The Green Revolution based on the use of package technology and the White
Revolution (Operation Flood) were some of the strategies initiated to improve a lot of Indian agriculture.
But, this too led to the concentration of development in a few selected areas. Therefore, in the 1980s
and 1990s, a comprehensive land development programme was initiated, which included both
institutional and technical reforms. Provision for crop insurance against drought, flood, cyclone, fire and
disease, the establishment of Grameen banks, cooperative societies and banks for providing loan
facilities to the farmers at lower rates of interest were some important steps in this direction. Kissan
Credit Card (KCC), Personal Accident Insurance Scheme (PAIS) are some other schemes introduced
by the Government of India for the benefit of the farmers. Moreover, special weather bulletins and
agricultural programmes for farmers were introduced on the radio and television. The government also
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announces minimum support price, remunerative and procurement prices for important crops to check
the exploitation of farmers by speculators and middlemen.
Answer:
Globalisation is not a new phenomenon. It was there at the time of colonisation. In the nineteenth
century when European traders came to India, at that time too, Indian spices were exported to different
countries of the world and farmers of south India were encouraged to grow these crops. Till today it is
one of the important items of export from India. Under globalisation, particularly after 1990, the farmers
in India have been exposed to new challenges. Despite being an important producer of rice, cotton,
rubber, tea, coffee, jute and spices our agricultural products are not able to compete with the developed
countries because of the highly subsidised agriculture in those countries. Today, Indian agriculture finds
itself at the crossroads. To make agriculture successful and profitable, proper thrust should be given to
the improvement of the condition of marginal and small farmers.
(iii) Describe the geographical conditions required for the growth of rice.
Answer:
The tea plant grows well in tropical and sub-tropical climates endowed with deep and fertile well-
drained soil, rich in humus and organic matter. Tea bushes require warm and moist frost-free climate all
through the year. Frequent showers evenly distributed over the year ensure continuous growth of
tender leaves. Tea is a labour-intensive industry. It requires abundant, cheap and skilled labour. Tea is
processed within the tea garden to restore its freshness.
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Chapter 5 Minerals and Energy Resources
(i) Which one of the following minerals is formed by the decomposition of rocks, leaving a
residual mass of weathered material?
(ii) Koderma, in Jharkhand, is the leading producer of which one of the following minerals?
(iii) Minerals are deposited and accumulated in the strata of which of the following rocks?
(iv) Which one of the following minerals is contained in the Monazite sand?
Solution: (c ) Thorium
Solution:
a. Ferrous minerals are the metallic minerals containing iron. For e.g.- Iron ore, Manganese,
Nickel, Cobalt etc.
While non-ferrous minerals are also metallic but they do not contain iron. For e.g.- Manganese,
Nickel, Cobalt etc.
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b. Conventional sources of energy include firewood, cattle dung cake, coal, petroleum, natural gas
and electricity (both hydel and thermal).
While non-conventional sources of energy are solar, wind, tidal, geothermal, biogas and atomic
energy.
Solution:
Minerals can be defined as a homogenous, naturally occurring substance with a definable internal
structure. Minerals are found in varied forms in nature, ranging from the hardest diamond to the softest
talc.
Solution:
In igneous and metamorphic rocks, minerals can occur in the cracks, crevices, faults or joints. The
smaller deposits are called veins and the larger ones are called lodes.
Solution:
Mineral deposits form only one percent of the earth’s crust. We need to conserve mineral resources
because the geological processes of mineral formation are so slow that the rates of replenishment are
very small in comparison to the current rate of consumption.
Solution:
In India, coal can be found in rock series of two main geological ages:
a. Gondwana (200 million years old)
b. Tertiary deposits (55 million years old)
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Tertiary coal occurs in the northeastern states of Meghalaya, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and
Nagaland.
(ii) Why do you think that solar energy has a bright future in India?
Solution:
Solar Energy has a bright future in India because we are a tropical country with enormous possibilities
of tapping solar energy. Solar energy is fast becoming popular in rural and remote areas. India’s largest
solar power plant is located at Madhapur, near Bhuj, where solar energy is used to sterilise milk cans. It
is expected that use of solar energy will be able to minimise the dependence of rural households on
firewood and dung cakes, which in turn will contribute to environmental conservation and adequate
supply of manure in agriculture.
Solar energy is a non-conventional source of energy which is also renewable. Use of solar energy will
not only be good for the environment, but it will also reduce our dependence on oil and gas.
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Chapter 6 Manufacturing Industries
(i) Which one of the following industries uses limestone as a raw material.
(ii) Which one of the following agencies markets steel for the public sector plants?
(iii) Which one of the following industries uses bauxite as a raw material?
(iv) Which one of the following industries manufactures telephones, computer, etc.
Solution:
Manufacturing is the production of goods in large quantities after processing from raw materials to more
valuable products. For e.g.- paper is manufactured from wood, sugar from sugarcane, iron and steel
from iron ore and aluminium from bauxite.
(ii) Name any three physical factors for the location of the industry.
Solution:
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3. Availability of power
For e.g. - Jute textile industry is concentrated in West Bengal as the jute producing areas lie in the
Hugli basin, and there is cheap water transport for transportation and for processing of jute.
(iii) Name any three human factors for the location of an industry
Solution:
1. Labour
2. Capital
3. Closeness to cities
For e.g. - Jute textile industry in West Bengal gets cheap labour from the adjoining states and Kolkata
is a large urban centre for banking, insurance and port facilities.
Solution:
Basic or key industries are the industries which supply their product or raw materials to manufacture
other goods.
Example - Iron and steel industries provide iron and steel to other industries as the raw material.
(v) Name the important raw materials used in the manufacturing of cement?
Solution:
(i) How are integrated steel plants different from mini steel plants? What problems does the
industry face? What recent developments have led to a rise in the production capacity?
Solution:
Integrated steel plants are large and handle everything in one complex - from putting together raw
material to steel making, rolling and shaping.
Mini steel plants are smaller, have electric furnaces, use steel scrap and sponge iron. They have re-
rollers that use steel ingots as well. They produce mild and alloy steel of given specifications.
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The challenges faced by the steel industry are:
1. High cost and limited availability of coking coal
2. Lower productivity of labour
3. Irregular supply of energy
4. Poor infrastructure
Recent developments such as liberalisation and foreign direct investment (FDI) have given a boost to
the industry with the efforts of private entrepreneurs.
Solution:
Air pollution is caused by the presence of a high proportion of undesirable gases, such as sulphur
dioxide and carbon monoxide and airborne particulate matter.
Water pollution is caused by organic and inorganic industrial wastes and effluents discharged into water
bodies. Paper, refineries and tanneries are the main culprits.
Soil and water pollution are closely related. Dumping of waste makes the soil useless for agricultural
activities. The pollutants then reach the groundwater through the soil and contaminate it.
Solution:
The steps that can be taken to minimise environmental degradation by industries are:
1. Adopting the latest techniques and upgrading existing equipment to improve energy efficiency.
2. Providing green belts for nurturing ecological balance.
3. Particulate matter in the air can be reduced by fitting smokestacks to factories with electrostatic
precipitators, fabric filters, scrubbers and inertial separators.
4. Using silencers for noise generating equipment.
5. Minimising water usage by reusing and recycling it in two or more successive stages.
6. Harvesting of rainwater to meet water requirements
7. Treating hot water and effluents before releasing them in rivers and ponds. Treatment of
industrial effluents can be done in three phases:
a. Primary treatment by mechanical means. This involves screening, grinding, flocculation and
sedimentation.
b. Secondary treatment by biological process
c. Tertiary treatment by biological, chemical and physical processes. This involves the recycling of
wastewater.
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Chapter 7 Lifelines of National Economy
(i) Which two of the following extreme locations are connected by the east-west corridor?
Solution:
a. Railways (c ) Pipelines
b. Roadways (d) Waterways
Solution:
(c ) Pipelines
(iii) Which one of the following states is not connected with the H.V.J. pipeline?
Solution:
(b) Maharashtra
(iv) Which one of the following ports is the deepest land-locked and well protected port along
the east coast?
a. Chennai (c ) Tuticorin
b. Paradip (d) Vishakhapatnam
Solution:
(d) Vishakhapatnam
(v) Which one of the following is the most important modes of transportation in India?
a. Pipeline (c ) Roadways
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b. Railways (d) Airways
Solution:
(b) Railways
(vi) Which one of the following terms is used to describe trade between two or more countries?
Solution:
(b ) International Trade
Solution:
(ii) Where and why is rail transport the most convenient means of transportation?
Solution:
Rail transport is the most convenient means of transportation in the northern plains as there is level
land, high population density and rich agricultural resources
Solution:
Border roads are of strategic importance and these roads in the bordering areas of the country have
improved accessibility in areas of difficult terrain and have helped in the economic development of
these areas.
(iv) What is meant by trade? What is the difference between international and local trade?
Solution:
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The exchange of goods among people, states and countries is referred to as trade.
(i) Why are the means of transportation and communication called the lifelines of a nation and
its economy?
Solution:
The means of transportation and communication are called the lifelines of a nation and its economy
because they are the pre-requisites for fast development. Today, India is well-linked with the rest of the
world despite its vast size, diversity and linguistic and socio-cultural plurality. Railways, airways,
waterways, newspapers, radio, cinema, television and internet etc. have been contributing to its socio-
economic progress in many ways.
Along with trade, these different means of transport and communication have enriched our life and
added substantially to growing amenities and facilities for the comforts of life.
(ii) Write a note on the changing nature of international trade in the last fifteen years.
Solution:
Trade between two countries is known as international trade. It has undergone a vast change in the last
fifteen years. Exchange of goods and commodities have been superseded by the exchange of
information and knowledge. For e.g. - India has emerged as a software giant at the international level
and it is earning large foreign exchange through the export of information technology.
International trade also depends on the relationship between the countries and other external factors
like duties and tariffs on the transportation of goods. In the last fifteen years, different trade blocks have
emerged which have changed how international trade was conducted previously.
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NCERT Solutions For Class 10 Social Science Civics
Chapter 1 Power-sharing
1. What are the different forms of power sharing in modern democracies? Give an example of
each of these.
Answer.
There are different forms of power sharing in modern democracies. These are given below:
a. Horizontal distribution of power - Power is shared among different organs of government, such
as the legislature, executive and judiciary. Example - India
b. Federal division of power - Power can be shared among governments at different levels – a
general government for the entire country and governments at the provincial or regional level. Example
- India (Union Government & State Government)
c. Community government - Power may also be shared among different social groups such as the
religious and linguistic groups. Example - Belgium
d. Power-sharing between political parties, pressure groups and movements - Such competition
ensures that power does not remain in one hand. In the long run, power is shared among different
political parties that represent different ideologies and social groups.
2. State one prudential reason and one moral reason for power sharing with an example from
the Indian context.
Answer.
While prudential reasons stress that power-sharing will bring out better outcomes, In India, the power is
shared horizontally among various organs of government. Legislature, Executive and Judiciary are
responsible to administer India. Reservation is applicable in India where various sections are given
benefits over others to avoid conflicts.
Moral reasons emphasise the very act of powersharing as valuable. In India, citizens are conferred with
fundamental rights and directive principles of state policies are implied on the government.
3. After reading this chapter, three students drew different conclusions. Which of these do you
agree with and why? Give your reasons in about 50 words. Thomman - Power sharing is
necessary only in societies which have religious, linguistic or ethnic divisions. Mathayi – Power
sharing is suitable only for big countries that have regional divisions. Ouseph – Every society
needs some form of power sharing even if it is small or does not have social divisions.
Answer.
Ouseph conclusion is the right one. Every state should have some or the other form of power-sharing.
Power-sharing ensures optimum balance between different sections in the society. The chances of
conflict lessen and so does the injustice. Hence, power-sharing becomes the value of democracy. Also,
power-sharing is a good way to ensure the stability of political order
4. The Mayor of Merchtem, a town near Brussels in Belgium, has defended a ban on speaking
French in the town’s schools. He said that the ban would help all non-Dutch speakers integrate
into this Flemish town. Do you think that this measure is in keeping with the spirit of Belgium’s
power-sharing arrangements? Give your reasons in about 50 words.
Answer.
The measure of Mayor of Merchtem to ban on French-speaking in the town’s schools near Brussels is
unfair. It does not keep with Belgium’s power-sharing arrangement. Power-sharing helps maintain a
balance between different sections of the society, and in Belgium, there is a need to maintain the
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power-sharing between Dutch and French to avoid civil unrest. Mayor, by banning French will promote
tendency of civil unrest. To promote peace among different communities, the Mayor should promote
bilingual education system in the town’s schools.
5. Read the following passage and pick out any one of the prudential reasons for power sharing
offered in this. “We need to give more power to the panchayats to realise the dream of Mahatma
Gandhi and the hopes of the makers of our Constitution. Panchayati Raj establishes true
democracy. It restores power to the only place where power belongs in a democracy – in the
hands of the people. Giving power to Panchayats is also a way to reduce corruption and
increase administrative efficiency. When people participate in the planning and implementation
of developmental schemes, they would naturally exercise greater control over these schemes.
This would eliminate the corrupt middlemen. Thus, Panchayati Raj will strengthen the
foundations of our democracy.”
Answer.
The prudential reason in the given passage is - “Giving power to Panchayats is also a way to reduce
corruption and increase administrative efficiency.”
6. Different arguments are usually put forth in favour of and against power-sharing. Identify
those which are in favour of power-sharing and select the answer using the codes given below?
Power-sharing:
A. reduces conflict among different communities
B. decreases the possibility of arbitrariness
C. delays the decision-making process
D. accommodates diversities
E. increases instability and divisiveness
F. promotes people’s participation in government
G. undermines the unity of a country
(a) A B D F
(b) A C E F
(c) A B D G
(d) B C D G
Answer.
(a) A B D F
7. Consider the following statements about power sharing arrangements in Belgium and Sri
Lanka.
A. In Belgium, the Dutch-speaking majority people tried to impose their domination on the
minority French-speaking community.
B. In Sri Lanka, the policies of the government sought to ensure the dominance of the Sinhala-
speaking majority.
C. The Tamils in Sri Lanka demanded a federal arrangement of power sharing to protect their
culture, language and equality of opportunity in education and jobs.
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D. The transformation of Belgium from unitary government to a federal one prevented a
possible division of the country on linguistic lines.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
(a) A, B, C and D
(b) A, B and D
(c) C and D
(d) B, C and D
Answer.
(d) B, C and D
8. Match List I (forms of power sharing) with List II (forms of government) and select the correct
answer using the codes given below in the lists:
List I List II
Answer.
List I List II
9. Consider the following two statements on power-sharing and select the answer using the
codes given below:
A. Power-sharing is good for democracy.
B. It helps to reduce the possibility of conflict between social groups.
Which of these statements are true and false?
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Answer.
(b) Both A and B are true
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Chapter 2 - Federalism
1. Locate the following States on a blank outline political map of India: Manipur, Sikkim,
Chhattisgarh and Goa.
Answer.
Green - Sikkim
Blue - Manipur
Orange - Chattisgarh
Red - Goa
2. Identify and shade three federal countries (other than India) on a blank outline political map of
the world.
Answer.
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a. South Africa
b. Pakistan
c. Australia
3. Point out one feature in the practice of federalism in India that is similar to and one feature
that is different from that of Belgium.
Answer.
Feature in the practice of federalism in India that is similar to that of Belgium - There is power-sharing
between the union government and state government.
Feature in the practice of federalism in India that is similar to that of Belgium - India has no community
government in practice while Belgium has one.
4. What is the main difference between a federal form of government and a unitary one? Explain
with an example.
Answer.
There is a sharing of power between union and state The power is centralised with the
government. union government and there is no
role of state governments.
Example - India (India is a federal country with union Example - Sri Lanka (The national
government at the centre and state governments at government has all the powers.)
the state level and Panchayati Raj at the local level.)
5. State any two differences between the local government before and after the Constitutional
amendment in 1992.
Answer.
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Local governments did not The State governments are required to share some powers
have any powers or resources and revenue with local government bodies. The nature of
of their own. sharing varies from State to State.
7. Here are three reactions to the language policy followed in India. Give an argument and an
example to support any of these positions.
Sangeeta: The policy of accommodation has strengthened national unity.
Arman: the Language-based States have divided us by making everyone conscious of their
language.
Harish: This policy has only helped to consolidate the dominance of English over all other
languages.
Answer.
The policy of Accommodation mentioned by Sangeeta is a correct reaction to the language policy
followed in India. Due to this policy, India stands in unity with states having different languages. Had
India not followed the policy of accommodation, several states could have proposed separation from
the country.
9. A few subjects in various Lists of the Indian Constitution are given here. Group them under
the Union, State and Concurrent Lists as provided in the table below.
A. Defence
B. Police
C. Agriculture
D. Education
E. Banking
F. Forests
G. Communications
H. Trade
I. Marriages
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Union List
State List
Concurrent List
Answer.
10. Examine the following pairs that give the level of government in India and the powers of the
government at that level to make laws on the subjects mentioned against each. Which of the
following pairs is not correctly matched?
Answer.
11. Match List-I with List-II and select the correct answer using the codes given below the lists:
List-I List-II
State Sarpanch
Answer.
List-I List-II
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State Governor
Answer.
(c) A and B only
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1. Mention different aspects of life in which women are discriminated or disadvantaged in India.
Answer.
The women in India are discriminated or disadvantaged in the following ways:
a. Literacy - The literacy rate for women is 65.46 per cent against 82.14 per cent for men. This
shows the since independence, the gap between men and women ratio w.r.t. Literacy still cannot be
filled.
b. Higher education - Comparing the percentage of boys and girls opting for higher studies after
schools, it is lower for girls as they tend to drop out after schools as parents do not wish to spend their
resources on a girl’s education which is quite expected in boys’ cases.
c. High-Paid jobs - The percentage of women working in high-paid jobs is still smaller than men.
On an average, an Indian woman works one hour more than an average man every day. Yet much of
her work is not paid and therefore often not valued.
d. The Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 provides that equal wages should be paid to equal work.
However in almost all areas of work, from sports and cinema to factories and fields, women are paid
less than men, even when both do exactly the same work.
e. Sex-ratio - Sex Ratio of India is 107.48, i.e., 107.48 males per 100 females in 2019.
4. State two reasons to say that caste alone cannot determine election results in India
Answer.
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The two reasons that say that caste alone cannot determine election results in India:
a. In India, no parliamentary constituency has a clear majority of one single caste. So, every
candidate and party needs to win the confidence of more than one caste and community to win
elections.
b. No party wins the votes of all the voters of a caste or community. When people say that caste is
a ‘vote bank’ of one party, it usually means that a large proportion of the voters from that caste vote for
that party.
6. Mention any two constitutional provisions that make India a secular state.
Answer.
a. The fundamental right of religion clearly states that one has a right to practise, profess and
propagate any religion.
b. Prohibition on discrimination on the basis of religion is one of the tenets in the Constitution
under the fundamental right to equality.
Answer.
(b) Unequal roles assigned by society to men and women
Answer.
(d) Panchayati Raj bodies
9. Consider the following statements on the meaning of communal politics. Communal politics
is based on the belief that:
A. One religion is superior to that of others.
B. People belonging to different religions can live together happily as equal citizens.
C. Followers of a particular religion constitute one community.
D. State power cannot be used to establish the domination of one religious group over others.
Which of the statements is/are correct?
(a) A, B, C, and D
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(b) A, B, and D
(c) A and C
(d) B and D
Answer.
(c) A and C
10. Which among the following statements about India’s Constitution is wrong? It
(a) prohibits discrimination on grounds of religion.
(b) gives official status to one religion.
(c) provides to all individuals freedom to profess any religion.
(d) ensures equality of citizens within religious communities.
Answer.
(c) provides to all individuals freedom to profess any religion.
12. Match List-I with List-II and select the correct answer using the codes given below the Lists:
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1 2 3 4
(a) B C A D
(b) B A D C
(c) D C A B
(d) C A B D
Answer.
(b) B A D C
NCERT Solutions For Class 10 Social Science Civics
3. Suggest some reforms to strengthen parties so that they perform their functions well?
Answer.
The various reforms that a political party can takes are:
a. A provision within a political party to tackle internal conflicts.
b. The 1/3rd representation in the party should be given to women candidates.
c. The parties should not promote candidates having criminal records.
d. State funding during elections should be promoted so that candidates coming from poor
background stand an equal chance to win.
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b. They seek to introduce policies which are for the welfare of the citizens.
c. There are three components - leader, active members, and followers.
6. A group of people who come together to contest elections and hold power in the government
is called a _____________________.
Answer.
A group of people who come together to contest elections and hold power in the government is called a
political party.
7. Match List-I (organisations and struggles) with List-II and select the correct answer using the
codes given below the lists:
List-I List-II
1 2 3 4
(a) C A B D
(b) C D A B
(c) C A D B
(d) D C A B
Answer.
1 2 3 4
(c) C A D B
8. Who among the following is the founder of the Bahujan Samaj Party?
A. Kanshi Ram
B. Sahu Maharaj
C. B.R. Ambedkar
D. Jotiba Phule
Answer.
A. Kanshi Ram
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A. Bahujan Samaj
B. Revolutionary democracy
C. Integral humanism
D. Modernity
Answer.
C. Integral humanism
Answer.
(b) A and B
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2. What are the conditions under which democracies accommodate social diversities?
Answer.
Social diversities can be accommodated by focussing on all the communities of the society. The
majority and minority communities should be equally given attention. Democracy is not the rule of the
majority. In democratic countries, both the majority and minority work together to achieve progress and
development of the nation. It is equally important to understand that the rule of the majority is not
expressed in terms of religion or languages. Any person or group may become a majority in a
democracy.
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diverse diaspora. The social divisions in the society are reflected in the form of riots, protests and
strikes. Hence, no democracy can eliminate social divisions.
5. In the context of democracies, which of the following ideas is correct – democracies have
successfully eliminated:
A. conflicts among people
B. economic inequalities among people
C. differences of opinion about how marginalised sections are to be treated
D. the idea of political inequality
Answer.
D. the idea of political inequality
6. In the context of assessing democracy which among the following is odd one out.
Democracies need to ensure:
A. free and fair elections
B. dignity of the individual
C. majority rule
D. equal treatment before law
Answer.
C. Majority rule
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A. democracy and development go together.
B. inequalities exist in democracies.
C. inequalities do not exist under a dictatorship.
D. dictatorship is better than democracy.
Answer.
B. inequalities exist in democracies.
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Chapter 1 – Development
2. Which of the following neighbouring countries has better performance in terms of human
development than India?
(i) Bangladesh
(ii) Sri Lanka
(iii) Nepal
(iv) Pakistan
Answer: (ii) Sri Lanka
3. Assume there are four families in a country. The average per capita income of these families
is Rs 5000. If the income of three families is Rs 4000, Rs 7000 and Rs 3000 respectively, what is
the income of the fourth family?
(i) Rs 7500
(ii) Rs 3000
(iii) Rs 2000
(iv) Rs 6000
Answer: (iv) Rs 6000
(4000+7000+3000+x) ÷ 4 = 5000
14000+x = 5000 × 4
x = 20000-14000
x = 6000
4. What is the main criterion used by the World Bank in classifying different countries? What are
the limitations of this criterion, if any?
Answer: The World Bank uses the per capita income to classify different countries. The per capita
income is calculated by dividing the total income of the country by the population of the country. For the
year 2017, the countries with per capita income of US $12,056 per annum were declared rich countries
and the countries with per capita income of US $ 955 or less are called low-income countries.
The limitations of the criterion are:
1. Other important factors including literacy rate, infant mortality rate, healthcare are ignored while
classifying the countries.
2. Information about the unequal distribution of income is not mentioned by The World Bank
3. The economy of the country cannot determine the development of the country.
5. In what respects is the criterion used by the UNDP for measuring development different from
the one used by the World Bank?
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Answer: The criterion used by UNDP is different from the one used by the World Bank because
UNDP compares countries based on the educational level of the people, their health status and per
capita income. This is in contrast with the method used by the World Bank because the World Bank
only calculates the per capita income for measuring development.
6. Why do we use averages? Are there any limitations to their use? Illustrate with your own
examples related to development.
Answer: Different countries have a different population so calculating the average helps in getting an
estimated answer which can be used to compare different things at different levels. There are
limitations of calculating averages because we cannot know the difference in the income of the people
and the unfair distribution of income in a country or state.
For example, if we calculate the per capita income of two countries A and B with 5 people each, the
salary of five people in country A is Rs.23,000, Rs.22,000, Rs.23,500, Rs.28,000 and Rs.25,000 and
the income of people living in country B are Rs.1,50,000, Rs. 22,000, Rs.50,000, Rs.4000, Rs.2500.
The average income of country A will be Rs.24,300 and that of country B will be Rs.45,700. This proves
that however, the average of country B is higher than that of country A, yet there is a disparity in the
income distribution of country B and the income is evenly distributed for country A.
7. Kerala, with lower per capita income has a better human development ranking than Haryana.
Hence, per capita income is not a useful criterion at all and should not be used to compare
states. Do you agree? Discuss.
Answer: Kerala, with lower per capita income, has a better human development ranking than Haryana.
Hence, per capita income is not a useful criterion at all and should not be used to compare states. This
is true because the literacy rate, infant mortality rate, healthcare facilities, etc are better in Kerala in
comparison to Haryana. The per capita income is only calculated by calculating the average income of
the state, irrespective of any other factor.
8. Find out the present sources of energy that are used by the people in India. What could be the
other possibilities fifty years from now?
Answer: The present sources of energy used by people in India which includes firewood, coal,
petroleum, crude oil and natural gas. The other possibilities fifty years from now can be using solar
energy and wind energy as a source for various energy forms. This is because of the current usage of
sources of energy may result in loss of these resources for future generations.
10. “The Earth has enough resources to meet the needs of all but not enough to satisfy the
greed of even one person”. How is this statement relevant to the discussion of development?
Discuss.
Answer: Development not just depends on the economic factors of a country but are also dependent
on resources that are available for the people of a country to use. The statement: “The Earth has
enough resources to meet the needs of all but not enough to satisfy the greed of even one person” is
completely relevant in terms of the development of a country because natural resources are non-
renewable resources and it is the responsibility of the people to use them only to meet their needs and
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to satisfy their greed. If natural resources are not used wisely now, future generations may not be able
to use them for their needs, which will result in the downfall of development of a country.
11. List a few examples of environmental degradation that you may have observed around you.
Answer: A few examples of environmental degradation that we can observe around us are:
1. Pollution caused by vehicles and the excess use of fuels in vehicles.
2. Industrial waste collected in residential areas and discarded into water bodies
3. Deforestation
4. Mining
5. Soil Erosion
The increased pollution in the environment has resulted in global warming and depletion of glaciers and
the atmospheric conditions.
12. For each of the items given in Table 1.6, find out which country is at the top and which is at
the bottom.
Answer: As per table 1.6, Sri Lanka tops in all the four categories. It has the highest Gross National
Income, Life expectancy at birth, mean years of schooling of people aged 25 and above and HDI rank
in the world. Nepal has the lowest Gross National Income among the given countries. Pakistan has the
least Life Expectancy at birth and ranks the lowest HDI rank in the world among the given countries.
Mean years of schooling of people aged 25 and above is the lowest for Myanmar and Nepal.
13. The following table shows the proportion of adults (aged 15-49 years) whose BMI is below
normal (BMI <18.5 kg/m2) in India. It is based on a survey of various states for the year 2015-16.
Look at the table and answer the following questions.
Kerala 8.5 10
Karnataka 17 21
Madhya Pradesh 28 28
All States 20 23
(i) Compare the nutritional level of people in Kerala and Madhya Pradesh.
Answer: The nutritional level of people in Kerala is higher than the nutritional level of people in Madhya
Pradesh.
(ii) Can you guess why around one-fifth of people in the country are undernourished even
though it is argued that there is enough food in the country? Describe in your own words.
Answer: One-fifth of the population in the country are undernourished even though it is argued that
there is enough food in the country because of the following reasons:
1. The disparity in the distribution of food grains through Public Distribution System (PDS)
2. Nutritious food cannot be afforded by the poor population in the country.
3. Educational backwardness of people results in unemployment because of which people cannot
afford the basic necessity of food.
4. There is no proper distribution of ration at the fixed price stores.
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1. Fill in the blanks using the correct option given in the bracket:
(i) Employment in the service sector _________ increased to the same extent as production.
(has / has not)
(ii) Workers in the _________ sector do not produce goods. (tertiary / agricultural)
(iii) Most of the workers in the _________ sector enjoy job security. (organised / unorganised)
(iv) A _________ proportion of labourers in India are working in the unorganised sector. (large /
small)
(v) Cotton is a _________ product and cloth is a _________ product. [natural /manufactured]
(vi) The activities in primary, secondary and tertiary sectors are_________ [independent /
interdependent]
(a) The sectors are classified into public and private sector on the basis of:
(i) employment conditions
(ii) the nature of economic activity
(iii) ownership of enterprises
(iv) number of workers employed in the enterprise
Answer: (iii) ownership of enterprises
(b) Production of a commodity, mostly through the natural process, is an activity in _________
sector.
(i) primary
(ii) secondary
(iii) tertiary
(iv) information technology
Answer: (i) primary
(c) GDP is the total value of _________ produced during a particular year.
(i) all goods and services
(ii) all final goods and services
(iii) all intermediate goods and services
(iv) all intermediate and final goods and services
Answer: (ii) all final goods and services
(d) In terms of GDP the share of tertiary sector in 2013-14 is between _________ per cent.
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(i) 20 to 30
(ii) 30 to 40
(iii) 50 to 60
(iv) 60 to 70
Answer: (iii) 50 to 60
5. Compelled to sell their grains to the local (e) Banks to provide credit with
traders soon after harvest low interest
Answer:
5. Compelled to sell their grains to the local traders (b) Cooperative marketing societies
soon after harvest
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Answer: Vegetable vendor is the odd one out because he works in the primary sector, while jobs of
teacher, lawyer and doctor come under the tertiary sector.
(iv) MTNL, Indian Railways, Air India, Jet Airways, All India Radio
Answer: Jet Airways is the odd one out because it is owned by a private company and MTNL, Indian
Railways, Air India and All India Radio are owned by the Government of India
5. A research scholar looked at the working people in the city of Surat and found the following.
Complete the table. What is the percentage of workers in the unorganised sector in this city?
Answer:
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NCERT Solutions For Class 10 Social Science Economics
6. Do you think the classification of economic activities into primary, secondary and tertiary is
useful? Explain how.
Answer: The classification of economic activities into primary, secondary and tertiary is useful as it
helps to classify the different occupations that are taken up by the people in the country and how much
each sector contributes to the growth of the country. It is also important because it helps in asserting
that which sector contributes the most in the GDP and which sector has the scope to employ more
people and increase the National Income
7. For each of the sectors that we came across in this chapter why should one focus on
employment and GDP? Could there be other issues which should be examined? Discuss.
Answer: Employment and GDP are two of the most important factors in the development of a country.
Employment and GDP are used to calculate the overall productivity and National income of a country. If
a country has a high employment rate, its GDP, National Income and per capita income will
automatically increase. Hence these are the two things which have been given major emphasis in this
chapter.
Other issues which should be examined are as follows:
1. Health care facilities
2. Education
3. Poverty
4. Food Production
5. Nourishment
8. Make a long list of all kinds of work that you find adults around you doing for a living. In what
way can you classify them? Explain your choice.
Answer: The activities performed by human beings for a living are classified into three sectors:
primary, secondary and tertiary. When we see people around us, we can classify their employment
sector in either of the three classifications. Activities like cleaning, agriculture, selling vegetables are
examples of the primary sector. Manufacturing of goods is an example of the secondary sector.
Teaching, mining, banking, transportation are all examples of the tertiary sector.
9. How is the tertiary sector different from other sectors? Illustrate with a few examples.
Answer: The are activities that help in the development of the primary and secondary sectors are
called tertiary activities. These activities are different from the primary and secondary sector activities.
These activities, by themselves, do not produce a good but they are an aid or support for the production
process. For example, goods that are produced in the primary or secondary sector would need to be
transported by trucks or trains and then sold in wholesale and retail shops. These transportation
facilities and shopkeepers come under the tertiary sector. They do not produce goods but play a very
important role in selling and bringing those goods to the market.
10. What do you understand by disguised unemployment? Explain with an example each from
the urban and rural areas.
Answer: The situation of underemployment, where people are apparently working but all of them are
made to work less than their potential is called disguised unemployment. In this case, the person
considers himself employed but is actually not working.
In rural areas, where agriculture is the main source of income, this kind of unemployment can be seen
often. If a piece of land requires only three people to work on it and instead five people are working on
it, then the two extra people are said to be in a situation of disguised unemployment.
In urban areas, disguised unemployment is seen when painters, plumbers, electricians are unable to
find work on a daily basis and work way less than their potential.
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12. “Tertiary sector is not playing any significant role in the development of Indian economy.”
Do you agree? Give reasons in support of your answer.
Answer: No, this is not correct. The tertiary sector is playing a significant role in the development of the
Indian Economy. In the year 2003, the tertiary sector replaced the primary sector as the most producing
sector in the country. A few reasons to support this are given below:
1. The primary and secondary sectors can only flourish if the tertiary sector is there to support
them.
2. The tertiary sector adds up a lot to the National income of the country.
3. Education, which is the basis of everything comes under the tertiary sector. A person working as
a teacher comes under the tertiary sector.
4. This sector provides the maximum employment opportunities to the people in the country.
13. Service sector in India employs two different kinds of people. Who are these?
Answer: Service sector in India employs two different types of people. These people are:
1. Highly Skilled labour, which includes teachers, bankers, IT officials, etc. These people are
permanently employed.
2. Less Skilled Labour, which includes vendors, electricians, plumber, etc. These people are not
permanently employed.
14. Workers are exploited in the unorganised sector. Do you agree with this view? Give reasons
in support of your answer.
Answer: The unorganised sector is characterised by small and scattered units which are largely
outside the control of the government. There are rules and regulations but these are not followed. Jobs
here are low paid and not regular. Hence it correct to say that workers are exploited in the unorganised
sector because more work is taken from them in comparison to what they are paid. They have no
provisions or extra pay for overtime and no medical benefits. The biggest problem in working in this
sector is that there is no job security.
15. How are the activities in the economy classified on the basis of employment conditions?
Answer: On the basis of the employment conditions, the economy can be classified into two sectors:
1. Organised Sector: Enterprises registered under the Government of India, have an employee-
friendly environment and are provided with various facilities including high wages.
2. Unorganised Sector: Small and scattered units which are temporary and employees in this
sector are paid less.
16. Compare the employment conditions prevailing in the organised and unorganised sectors.
Answer: In the organised sector, the employees are given higher wages, medical facilities, a healthy
working environment and their jobs are permanent. They are not liable to look for a new source of
income each day.
In the unorganised sector, the wages are low, the employees are exploited, no extra income for extra
time is given, no medical facilities are provided and the work environment is unhealthy.
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18. Using examples from your area compare and contrast that activities and functions of private
and public sectors.
Answer: In the private sector, the assets and industries are owned by individuals and in the public
sectors industries and enterprises are owned by the Government. Private sector works to earn profits
and the public sector works to provide facilities to the public and to earn profits. The common examples
of public sector that we can see around us are Government Banks, Post Offices, municipal hospital and
Indian railways. The common examples of private sector that we can see around us are IT companies,
malls and multiplex,etc.
19. Discuss and fill the following table giving one example each from your area.
Public Sector
Private Sector
Answer: Students must answer this question based on their own observations.
20. Give a few examples of public sector activities and explain why the government has taken
them up.
Answer: The public sector activities are set for the betterment of the public itself. The reason
government has taken up the public sector is so that proper facilities can be provided to the people of
the country. Banks, transport, irrigation, electricity, water and all the basic things that are necessary for
people, come under the public sector and proving these facilities to its citizens is the responsibility of
the Government.
21. Explain how public sector contributes to the economic development of a nation.
Answer: The public sector is the sector that comes under the government of India. The reason for the
government to take responsibility of this sector is because the basic necessities of people including
water, electricity, irrigation, all fall under this category and if these departments are left unattended it will
result in the downfall of the economy of a country because the growth of the country would stop. The
economic development of a country depends upon the development of the people and if people are
deprived of the basic necessities, the country’s economic development would be affected. Government
encourages small and large industry to flourish and provides employment under this section.
22. The workers in the unorganised sector need protection on the following issues : wages,
safety and health. Explain with examples.
Answer: The unorganised sector is characterised by small and scattered units which are largely
outside the control of the government. There are rules and regulations but these are not followed. The
workers in the unorganised sector need protection:
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Wages: the income of the workers in the unorganised sector is not fixed and they are barely able to
meet the needs to lead a decent livelihood. Hence proper and fixed wages should be given to these
workers so that they can grow and contribute to the growth of the country. For example - a painter only
gets paid the wages for the days he works and the other days he is jobless and is able to earn nothing.
Safety: No safety is provided to the workers working in the unorganised sector. There is no job security
and anyone can be fired and removed from their work as per the requirement of the labourers. For
example - A labour working in the construction of a building is left with no work once the construction is
complete and has no guarantee of getting work again.
Health: Health is a very important factor for the growth and development of the country. The
unorganised sector is given no medical security and if any accident occurs while they are working, the
employer is not responsible for their health. For example - there is no sick leave for labourers working
on daily wages.
23. A study in Ahmedabad found that out of 15,00,000 workers in the city, 11,00,000 worked in
the unorganised sector. The total income of the city in this year (1997-1998) was Rs 60,000
million. Out of this Rs 32,000 million was generated in the organised sector. Present this data as
a table. What kind of ways should be thought of for generating more employment in the city?
Answer:
The table clearly shows that the income generated in the unorganised sector is close to 50% of the total
income of Ahmedabad. In order to increase employment opportunities for the people more industries
should be set up, proper education must be provided to all, proper facilities under the public sector
must be provided to all.
24. The following table gives the GDP in Rupees (Crores) by the three sectors:
(i) Calculate the share of the three sectors in GDP for 2000 and 2013
(ii) Show the data as a bar diagram similar to Graph 2 in the chapter.
(iii) What conclusions can we draw from the bar graph?
Answer:
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(i) In 2000,
primary sector = 22.22%, secondary sector = 20.73%, tertiary sector = 57.04%
And In 2013,
primary sector = 13.94%, secondary sector = 18.70%, tertiary sector = 67.36%
(ii)
(iii) We can draw the conclusion that the share of the tertiary sector in the GDP has increased by 10%,
while that of the primary sector has almost halved. The secondary sector has grown by about 2% in the
last 13 years.
NCERT Solutions For Class 10 Social Science Economics
1. In situations with high risks, credit might create further problems for the borrower. Explain.
Answer: In situations with high risks, credit might create further problems for the borrower. Credit
involves a certain amount of loan that is taken by a borrower from a lender at a high interest rate. In
case there is failure and the borrower faces loss, then he further falls in the trap of credit. This is known
as debt trap. The borrower has to repay the credit along with the interest applied by the lender and he
further falls into the trap of credit, increasing the problems for the borrower. The borrower also has to
sell a part of his or her land to repay the loan.
2. How does money solve the problem of double coincidence of wants? Explain with an example
of your own.
Answer: What a person desires to sell is exactly what the other wishes to buy, such a case is known
as double coincidence of wants. In a barter system where goods are directly exchanged without the use
of money, double coincidence of wants is an essential feature. Money solved the problem of double
coincidence of wants because after the introduction of money, people could use money as an
intermediate to buy or sell things and no specific buyer or seller was required for interchanging of
products. For example a trader wishes to sell 10 sacks full of rice and expects to get it in exchange of
five sacks of cereal. To find a suitable buyer to sell the sacks of rice in exchange of cereals would be
very tough. However, money will solve this problem and the trader can sell the sacks of rice to
someone who needs it and in return buy cereals from the money he gets from the buyer of rice.
3. How do banks mediate between those who have surplus money and those who need money?
Answer: Banks mediate between those who have surplus funds (the depositors) and those who are in
need of funds (the borrowers) by lending money to people who are in need. People can open accounts
in banks and banks make use of that money to fulfil the loan requirements of the people. A higher
interest rate is charged for the borrower and that profit is given to the depositor as interest for offering
deposits.
4. Look at a 10 rupee note. What is written on top? Can you explain this statement?
Answer: “Reserve Bank of India” and “Guaranteed by the Central Government” is written on the top of
a 10 rupee note. Currency in India is issued by the central bank of the country, in the case of India, the
Reserve Bank of India is the central bank of the country. This currency is issued on behalf of the central
Government and these two are the only authorities which are responsible for issuing notes and
currency in India.
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6. What is the basic idea behind the SHGs for the poor? Explain in your own words.
Answer: The Self Help Groups (SHGs) have been set in India with an aim to rural poor, especially
women. A typical Self Help Group comprises 15-20 people from the same neighbourhood who save
some money from their daily wages and collect them together. People can borrow money from these
groups during an emergency or in need and they charge a minimum rate of interest from the borrowers.
Once the SHG has managed to save a defined amount of money, they are also eligible to take loans
from banks. The main purpose of introducing these Self Help Groups was to increase small scale
employment opportunities for the rural people so that they could start a small business to earn a
livelihood.
7. What are the reasons why the banks might not be willing to lend to certain borrowers?
Answer: The reasons why banks might not be willing to lend money to certain borrowers are given
below:
1. Some people fail to provide the required set of documents to get a loan
2. Irregular wages and no fixed job is also one reason because it increases the chances of non
repayment of loans
3. Certain borrowers are added in the list of NPAs
4. There is high risk in approving loans to entrepreneurs.
8. In what ways does the Reserve Bank of India supervise the functioning of banks? Why is this
necessary?
Answer: The Reserve Bank of India is the central bank of India and all the other public sector banks
work under the supervision of the Reserve Bank of India. It manages the functioning of the banks in the
following ways:
1. It monitors the bank in maintaining cash balance
2. Loans are not just given to profit making organisations but also to small cultivators and small
scale industries
3. RBI maintains periodic report of other banks regarding the amount loaned to people
4. It also keeps a regular check on the interest rates asked on loans in public sector banks.
10. Manav needs a loan to set up a small business. On what basis will Manav decide whether to
borrow from the bank or the moneylender? Discuss.
Answer: Manav wants to set up a small business. He needs to keep the below mentioned things in
mind while deciding whether to borrow money from a bank or money lender:
1. He needs to compare the interest rate charged by both the bank and the moneylender.
Whoever charges less should be his option.
2. He needs to analyse whether he has all the eligible documents required by the banks to get his
loan approved
3. How he wishes to repay the lender
11. In India, about 80 per cent of farmers are small farmers, who need credit for cultivation.
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(a) Why might banks be unwilling to lend to small farmers?
Answer: Banks might be unwilling to lend money to small farmers because there are high risks that if
the harvest gets ruined there is a possibility that they might not be able to receive the installments on
time. Also proper documentation is required for getting a loan from the bank, which might not be
available with the small scale farmers.
(b) What are the other sources from which the small farmers can borrow?
Answer: Small farmers can move to informal sources of credit if they re not borrowing money from a
bank. These informal sources of credit include moneylenders, agricultural traders, etc.
(c) Explain with an example how the terms of credit can be unfavourable for the small farmer.
Answer: When a small scale farmer borrows money from a bank he has to repay the amount at a fixed
rate of interest. For example if a farmer borrows money from the bank and during the harvest season
his crops are ruined, then he shall not be able to repay the amount loaned him by the bank and will
further fall into the debt trap.
(d) Suggest some ways by which small farmers can get cheap credit.
Answer: Small farmers can get cheap credit by the formal sources of credit like banks.
(i) In a SHG most of the decisions regarding savings and loan activities are taken by
(a) Bank.
(b) Members.
(c) Non-government organisation.
Answer: (b) Members
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2. What was the reasons for putting barriers to foreign trade and foreign investment by the
Indian government? Why did it wish to remove these barriers?
Answer: The main reason for putting barriers to foreign trade and foreign investment by the Indian
government was to protect the interest earned by producers and small industrialists of our country from
foreign competition.
But later it was accepted by the government that foreign competition would encourage Indian
industrialists to improve the quality of their products and removing these barriers would increase trade
and quality of products produced in the country.
4. What are the various ways in which MNCs set up, or control, production in other countries?
Answer: MNC’s set up or control the production by investing a huge amount of money in a country’s
economy. It sets up production units close to the market so that they get cheaper labour. To increase
production, MNC’s collaborate with some local companies as the production rate would rapidly
increase. In most of the cases, the MNC’s buy local companies and expand their production. The other
way in which they control production is by placing the orders for production with small and local
producers. They help production using technology and heavy machinery which makes the work more
efficient and productive.
5. Why do developed countries want developing countries to liberalise their trade and
investment? What do you think should the developing countries demand in return?
Answer: Developed countries want developing countries to liberalise their trade and investment
because MNCs can set up industries in small and developing nations, which are less expensive and
can earn them more profit. The labour cost decreases the manufacturing cost decreases and their profit
increases. Also setting up factories and industries in developed countries increases competition. The
developing countries should, in turn, ask for a fair removal of trade barriers in order to protect their own
industries.
6. “The impact of globalisation has not been uniform.” Explain this statement.
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Answer: The impact of globalisation has not been uniform because only the developed countries have
gained profits due to globalisation. The developing countries are only a source of setting industries and
getting cheaper labour and the entire profits are earned by the developed countries. The small
industries and companies in developing countries have been constantly facing challenges in terms of
earning profits and brings their goods in the market.
7. How has liberalisation of trade and investment policies helped the globalisation process?
Answer: The liberalisation of trade and investment policies helped the globalisation process because it
has helped in the removal of trade barriers. It has made foreign trade and investment easier. The
choices of the buyers have also expanded as now they get to choose products manufactured by not
only domestic companies but also by the foreign companies. Competition among traders has resulted
in cheaper price of products. Liberalisation has spread globalisation as the decision making power of
export and import now lies with the businessmen themselves.
8. How does foreign trade lead to integration of markets across countries? Explain with an
example other than those given here.
Answer: Foreign trade has led to the integration of markets across the countries. Because of foreign
trade, the producers are now able to compete and export their goods to the markets of other countries.
Opportunities are provided not just for the seller but also for the buyer to get goods outside their own
country. Their choices have expanded as now they get to choose products manufactured by not only
domestic companies but also by the foreign companies.
The price of these goods has decreased because of the competition in the market. Producers from
different countries are now able to compete not just with the competitors in their own country with
across the world. The Indian market today is not flooded with goods made in India but goods from all
across the world at an affordable price.
9. Globalisation will continue in the future. Can you imagine what the world would be like twenty
years from now? Give reasons for your answer.
Answer: Globalisation will continue in the future as well. Twenty years from now, the production of
goods will be more efficient, competition in the market will increase, advancement in every field will be
evident and the quality and quantity of goods produced will also increase. Small industries and
entrepreneurs will increase as more opportunities will be provided to them.
10. Supposing you find two people arguing: One is saying globalisation has hurt our country’s
development. The other is telling, globalisation is helping India develop. How would you
respond to these arguments?
Answer: Globalisation has its pros and cons and there are various advantages and disadvantages of
the increasing globalisation in the country. The advantages of increased globalisation include that trade
opportunities have improved, employed has improved because of setting up of small scale industries.
The profit market has increased and the increase in imports and exports has increased the economy of
the nation. People can buy goods that are made across the world at cheaper prices.
The disadvantages of globalisation include that globalisation has increased the income of the rich and
has decreased the income of the poor because the small scale local industrialists are unable to earn
much profit. Thereby increasing income inequality.
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in India. MNCs are investing in India because _____________
___________________________________________ . While consumers have more choices in the
market, the effect of rising _______________ and ______________has meant greater
_________________among the producers.
Answer:
Indian buyers have a greater choice of goods than they did two decades back. This is closely
associated with the process of globalisation. Markets in India are selling goods produced in many
other countries. This means there is increasing trade with other countries. Moreover, the rising number
of brands that we see in the markets might be produced by MNCs in India. MNCs are investing in India
Because of the cheaper production costs. While consumers have more choices in the market, the
effect of rising demand and purchasing power has meant greater competition among the
producers.
(i) MNCs buy at cheap rates from small (a) Automobiles producers
(ii) Quotas and taxes on imports are used to regulate (b) Garments, footwear,
trade items sports
(iii) Indian companies who have invested abroad (c) Call centres
(iv) IT has helped in spreading of production of services (d) Tata Motors, Infosys,
Ranbaxy
(v) Several MNCs have invested in setting up factories in (e) Trade barriers
India for production
Answer:
(i) MNCs buy at cheap rates from small producers (b) Garments, footwear, sports
items
(ii) Quotas and taxes on imports are used to regulate trade (e) Trade barriers
(iii) Indian companies who have invested abroad (d) Tata Motors, Infosys,
Ranbaxy
(v) Several MNCs have invested in setting up factories in (a) Automobiles producers
India for production
(i) The past two decades of globalisation has seen rapid movements in
(a) goods, services and people between countries.
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(b) goods, services and investments between countries.
(c) goods, investments and people between countries.
Answer: (b) goods, services and investments between countries
(ii) The most common route for investments by MNCs in countries around the world is to
(a) set up new factories.
(b) buy existing local companies.
(c) form partnerships with local companies.
Answer: (b) buy existing local companies
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2. What factors gave birth to the consumer movement in India? Trace its evolution.
Answer: The consumer movement arose out of dissatisfaction of the consumers. The factors that gave
birth to the consumer movement in India are as follows:
1. There was no legal system available to consumers to protect them from exploitation in the
marketplace.
2. It was started because of the necessity of protecting and promoting the interests of consumers
against unethical and unfair trade practices.
3. Rampant food shortages
4. Black marketing
5. Adulteration of food and edible oil
Till the mid-1970s, the consumer organisations were busy writing articles and holding exhibitions to
arouse consciousness among the consumers. There has been an upsurge in the number of consumer
groups since the 1980s. Currently, there are about 700 consumer organisations in India working in the
field of consumer protection. Greater awareness among the consumers about their rights also led to a
gradual transition from a predominantly ‘sellers’ market to a buyers’ market.
These movements have also influenced the government to work for the protection of the consumer and
the Consumer Protection Act was passed in 1986 to safeguard the interest of the consumers.
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4. Lack of consumer consciousness. A consumer must always check the MRP, expiry date and
manufacturing date and then buy a product.
5. What is the rationale behind the enactment of the Consumer Protection Act 1986?
Answer: The rationale behind the enactment of the Consumer Protection Act 1986 was to set up a
department solely responsible to handle the complaints raised by the consumer and a separate
department for the Central and state governments. Its main aim was to address the problems of
consumers who reach the consumer courts for exploitation in the marketplace.
6. Describe some of your duties as consumers if you visit a shopping complex in your locality.
Answer: Some of our duties as consumers are given below:
1. Always ask for a proper bill
2. Check the MRP and do not pay more than the market price to the shopkeeper.
3. Check the expiry and manufacture date before buying any good from the market
4. If you see any rule or regulation under the marketplace laws being exploited, immediately report
the consumer courts.
5. Do not leave a small amount of disparity unattended. This may let the shopkeeper liable to
continue the disparity for the other consumers as well.
7. Suppose you buy a bottle of honey and a biscuit packet. Which logo or mark you will have to
look for and why?
Answer: If you buy a bottle of honey or a packet of biscuit looks for the Agmark and the ISI mark
before buying it. It is because these symbols specify that the products have been made Government
authorised companies only.
8. What legal measures were taken by the government to empower the consumers in India?
Answer: The legal measures taken by the government to empower the consumers are as mentioned
below:
1. The Consumer Protection Act (COPRA) was passed by the Government for the security of the
consumers and to prevent them from exploitation at the market level.
2. The Right to Information Act was passed in the year 2005 so that the people of the country
could be made aware about the functioning of the Government
3. A consumer Court was set up for people where cases against any disparity with the consumer
were raised.
9. Mention some of the rights of consumers and write a few sentences on each.
Answer: A few rights of the consumers include:
1. Right to information - The RTI Act was passed in 2005 with an aim to make every citizen of the
country aware of the functioning of the Government.
2. Right to Choose - Any consumer who receives a service in whatever capacity, regardless of
age, gender and nature of service, has the right to choose whether to continue to receive the
service. No customer can be denied the right to choose what they want to buy.
3. Right to Seek Redressal - Consumers have the right to seek redressal against unfair trade
practices and exploitation. If any damage is done to a consumer, she has the right to get
compensation depending on the degree of damage.
4. Right to Represent - This act gives the right of the consumer to present before the consumer
court and present their case of disparity in form of law.
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Answer: Consumers can express their solidarity by organising themselves in small groups that can
fight against the exploitative trade policies. Such groups get financial aid from the government to fight
the case against the shopkeeper.
(iii) Accident due to faulty engine in a (c) Certification of edible oil and cereals
scooter
(iv) District Consumer Court (d) Agency that develop standards for goods
and services
(vi) Bureau of Indian Standards (f) Global level institution of consumer welfare
organisations
Answer:
(vi) Bureau of Indian Standards (d) Agency that develop standards for goods and
services
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13. Say True or False.
(ii) India is one of the many countries in the world which has exclusive courts for consumer
redressal.
Answer: True
(iii) When a consumer feels that he has been exploited, he must file a case in the District
Consumer Court.
Answer: True
(iv) It is worthwhile to move to consumer courts only if the damages incurred are of high value.
Answer: True
(vii) A consumer has the right to get compensation depending on the degree of the damage.
Answer: True
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