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Sectors Of The Indian Economy

Question
CBSEENSS10017948

'Agriculture' and 'industry' are complementary to each other.' Explain with five examples.

Solution

The explanations:


(i) Raw material - Agriculture provides basic raw material to the industrial sector, e.g., cotton to a cloth industry and sugarcane to a sugar industry. Industrial sector, in turn, provides the basic inputs to the agricultural sector. Industrial goods such as tractor, harvesting machines, fertilisers are a few basic inputs that are used by the agricultural sector.

 (ii) Market - Agricultural sector provides market to the industrial sector. This implies that the people engaged in agriculture consume the products produced by the industries. These products, to name a few, include soaps, fridges, televisions and so on.

 (iii) Labour - Agricultural sector provides labour to the industrial sector. In other words, the industrial sector provides employment to the excess labour in the agricultural sector.

(iv) Wage goods - The most important support that agriculture provides to the industries is the wage goods, the food grains. In simple words, agricultural sector feeds the industrial labourers, which keeps them healthy, and thereby makes them more productive.

(v) Mutual dependence - Both the agricultural and industrial sector are mutually dependent on each other. In case of good harvest, the farmers have high incomes, which they use to demand more industrial goods. For example, during good harvests, many farmers buy new televisions, mobiles, clothes, etc. Similarly, when the people engaged in the industrial sector experience good income, they demand higher quantities of food grains, eat more fish, meat and drink milk.

Some More Questions From Sectors of the Indian Economy Chapter

GDP is the total value of _______ produced during a particular year.

 

In terms of GDP the share of tertiary sector in 2010-2011 is ____________.

Match the following:

Find the odd one out and say, why.

(i) Tourist guide, dhobi, tailor, potter

(ii) Teacher, doctor, vegetable vendor, lawyer.

(iii) Postman, cobbler, soldier, police constable.

(iv) MTNL, Indian Railways, Air India, Sahara Airlines, All India Radio.

A research scholar looked at the working people in the city of Surat and found the following:

Place of work

Nature of employment

Percentage of working people

1. In offices and factories registered with the government

Organised

15

2. Own shops, office, clinics in marketplaces with formal license

 

15

3. People working on the street, construction workers, domestic workers

 

20

4. Working in small workshops usually not registered with the government

   

Complete the table. What is the percentage of workers in the unorganised sector in this city?

Do you think the classification of economic activities into primary, secondary and tertiary sectors is useful? Explain, how?

For each of the sectors that we came across in this chapter, why should one focus on employment and G.D.P.? Could there be other issues which should be examined? Discuss.

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.

How is the tertiary sector different from other sectors? Illustrate with a few examples.

What do you understand by disguised unemployment? Explain with an example each from the urban and rural areas