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Saturday, 27 October 2018

MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES CLASS X


MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
TOPIC-1
(MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES- INTRODUCTION, LOCATION AND CLASSIFICATION)
QUICK REVIEW
Ø  Manufacturing is production of goods in large quantities after processing raw materials to more valuable products. Industries that manufacture finished products from primary materials are called manufacturing industries in the secondary sector.
Ø  Importance of Manufacturing
·         Manufacturing industries help in modernizing agriculture, which forms the backbone of our country.
·         Manufacturing industries also reduce the heavy dependence of people on agricultural income because of creation of new jobs secondary and tertiary sectors.
·         Industrial development helps in eradication of unemployment and poverty.
·         Export of manufactured goods expands trade and commerce and brings in much needed foreign exchange.
·         A country with high level of manufacturing activities becomes prosperous.
Ø  Contribution of Industry to National Economy.
·         The share of manufacturing sector in the GDP (Gross Domestic Product) has been stagnant at 17% over the last two decades.
·         The total contribution of industry to the GDP is 27% out of which 10% comes from mining, quarrying, electricity and gas.
·         The growth of the manufacturing sector had been 7% in the last decade. Since 2003, the growth rate has been 9 to 10% per annum. The desired growth rate over the next decade is 12%.
·         The National Manufacturing Competitiveness Council (NMCC) has been set with the objectives of improving productivity through proper policy interventions by the government and renewed efforts by the industry.
Ø  Location and Classification
Ø  Some of the factors which affect the industrial location are as follows:
·         Availability of raw materials.
·         Availability of labour.
·         Availability of capital.
·         Availability of power.
·         Availability of market.
·         Infrastructure.
Ø  A manufacturing industry promotes the urbanisation of its neighbourhood. Already urbanised areas also attract industries, since they provide ready facilities for transport, banking, labour, consultancy, etc. If an urban agglomeration. These industries together form an agglomeration economy.
Ø  Before independence, most industries in India were located in port cities to enable easy overseas trade.
Ø  Classification of industries on the basis of raw materials:
·         Agro Based Industries: Cotton, Woolen, jute, silk textile, rubber, sugar, tea, coffee, etc.
·         Mineral Based Industries: Iron and steel, cement, aluminium, petrochemical, etc.
·         Classification of Industries According to their main role:
·         Basic or key industries: These industries supply their products or raw materials to manufacture other goods, e.g., iron and steel, copper smelting, aluminium smelting.
·         Consumer Industries: These industries produce goods which are directly used by consumers, e.g. sugar, paper, electronics, soap, etc.
Ø  Classification of industries on the basis of capital investment:
·         Small Scale Industry: If the invested capital is upto Rs. One crore, then the industry is called a small scale industry.
·         Large Scale Industry: If the invested capital is more than Rs. One crore, then the industry is called large scale industry.
Ø  Classification of industries on the basis of ownership:
·         Public Sector: These industries are owned and operated by government agencies, e.g. SAIL, BHEL, ONGC, etc.
·         Private Sector: These industries are owned and operated by individuals or a group of individuals, e.g. TISCO, Reliance, Mahindra, etc.
·         Joint sector: These industries are jointly owned by the government and individuals or a group of individuals, e.g. Oil India Limited.
·         Cooperative Sector: These industries are owned and operated by the producers or suppliers of raw materials, workers or both. The resources are pooled by each stakeholder and profits or losses are shared proportionally. AMUL which is milk cooperative is a good example. The sugar industry in Maharashtra is another example.
Ø  Classification of Industries on the basis of bulk and weight of raw materials and finished goods:
·         Heavy Industries: Iron and Steel.
·         Light Industries: Electronics.

Sunday, 1 April 2018

CBSE class 9 NEW English Syllabus 2018-19


CBSE schools from this session (April 2018 onwards) in class 9. Those schools offering English Communicative till last session will now offer English Language and literature from session 2018-19.
Class 9th syllabus of English Language and literature has some modifications this year. The novels Guliver’s Travel and Three men in a boat have been discontinued this year. Now the 8 mark long question will be asked from the text book. There will be no question from novels this year onwards.
New Poem Added to the syllabus
Last year, 9 poems were part of syllabus but this year CBSE has added one new poem to class 9 English Language and literature syllabus. Now students have to study 10 poems. The new poem added is A Slumber did My Spirit Seal. Thus total number of chapters this year are 11 prose from Beehive, 10 poems from NCERT text book Beehive and 10 chapters from NCERT text book Moments.

ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (Code No. 184)
SYLLABUS CLASS – IX (2018-19)
SECTION – WISE WEIGHTAGE
·         Total Weightage 80 Marks
·         Section A Reading Skills 20 Marks
·         Section B Writing Skills with Grammar 30 Marks
·         Section C Literature Textbook and Supplementary Reading Text 30 Marks
The annual examination will be of 80 marks, with a duration of three hours.
SECTION A: READING
There will be 20 Marks to be covered in 50 Periods. This section will have two reading passages.
·         Q.1: A Factual passage 300-350 words with eight Very Short Answer type Questions. 8 marks
·         Q. 2: A Discursive passage of 350-400 words with four Short Answer type Questions to test inference, evaluation and analysis with four Very Short Answer Questions to test vocabulary. 12 marks
SECTION B: WRITING AND GRAMMAR
There will be 30 Marks to be covered in 60 Periods
·         Q. 3: Writing an Article/ Descriptive Paragraph( person/ place/ event/diary entry) in about 100-150 words based on visual or verbal
cue/s. The questions will be thematically based on the prescribed books. 8   marks
·         Q. 4: Writing a short story based on a given outline or cue/s in about 150 – 200 words.                                                                    10 marks
The Grammar syllabus will include the following areas in class IX :
1. Tenses
2. Modals
3. Use of passive voice
4. Subject – verb concord
5. Reporting Commands and requests, Statements, Questions
6. Clauses: (i) Noun clauses (ii) Adverb clauses of condition and time (iii) Relative clauses
7. Determiners
8. Prepositions
The above items may be tested through test types(grammar in context) as given below:
·         Q. 5: Gap filling with one or two words to test Prepositions, Articles, Conjunctions and Tenses. 4 marks
·         Q. 6: Editing or omission 4 marks
·         Q. 7: Sentences reordering or sentence transformation in context. 4 marks
SECTION C: LITERATURE TEXTBOOKS
There will be 30 Marks to be covered in 60 Periods
·         Q. 8. One out of two extracts from prose/poetry/play for reference to the context. Four Very Short Answer Questions: two questions of one mark each on global comprehension and two questions of one mark each on interpretation. (1×4=4 marks)
·         Q.9. Five Short Answer Type Questions from BEEHIVE AND MOMENTS (3 questions from BEEHIVE and 2 questions from MOMENTS) to test local and global comprehension of theme and ideas (30-40 words each) 2×5 = 10 marks
·         Q.10. One out two long answer type questions from the book BEEHIVE to assess Creativity, imagination and extrapolation beyond the text and across the texts. (100-150 words) 8 marks
·         Q.11. One out of two Long Answer Questions from the book MOMENTS on theme or plot involving interpretation, extrapolation beyond the text and inference or character sketch in about 100-150 words.
Prescribed Books for class 9 English
The books are Published by NCERT, New Delhi
·         BEEHIVE – Textbook for class IX
·         MOMENTS – Supplementary Reader for Class IX


Friday, 30 March 2018

Story of Village Palampur


CHAPTER -1
STORY OF VILLAGE PALAMPUR
Concepts
Palampur is a small village having about 450 families. It is 3 km away from Raiganj — a big village. Shahpur is the nearest town to the village.
Main Production Activities
Farming is the main production activity in the village Palampur. Most of the people are dependent on farming for their livelihood. Non-farming activities such as dairy, small-scale manufacturing (e.g. activities of weavers and potters, etc.), transport, etc., are carried out on a limited scale.
Factors of Production (Requirements for Production of Goods and Services)
Land, labour and capital are the basic requirements for production of goods and services which are popularly known as factors of production.
Land includes all free gifts of nature, e.g., soil, water, forests, minerals, etc.
Labour means human effort which of course includes physical as well as mental labour.
Physical capital is the third requirement for production. Physical capital includes fixed capital (e.g. tools, machines, building, etc.) and raw materials such as seeds for the farmer, yarn for the weaver.
Important Changes in Farm Activities
Land area under cultivation is virtually fixed. However, some wastelands in India had been converted into cultivable land after 1960. Over the years, there have been important changes in the way of farming, which have allowed the farmers to produce more crops from the same amount of land. These changes include:
(a) Multiple cropping farming   (b) Use of modern farming methods.
Due to these changes (in the late 1960s) productivity of land has increased substantially which is known as
Green Revolution. Farmers of Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh were the first to try out the modern farming methods in India.
Labour : After land, labour is the next basic factor of production. Small farmers provide their own labour, whereas medium and large farmers make use of hired labour to work on their fields.
Capital : After land and labour, capital is another basic factor of production. All categories of farmers (e.g. small, medium and large) require capital. Small farmers borrow from large farmers or the village moneylenders or the traders who supply them various inputs for cultivation. Modern farming requires a great deal of capital.
Sale of Surplus Farm Products
Farmers produce crops on their lands by using the three factors of production, viz. land, labour and capital. They retain a part of produce for self-consumption and sell the surplus in the nearby market. That part of farm produce which is sold in the market is called marketable surplus. Small farmers have little surplus output. It is the medium and large farmers only who have substantial surplus produce for selling in the market.
Non-farm activities
Out of every 100 workers in the rural areas in India, only 24 are engaged in non-farm activities. There is a variety of non-farm activities in the villages. Dairy, small scale manufacturing, transport, etc., fall under this category.
SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS (3 MARKS)
Q.1. What was the major impact of electricity on the farmers of Palampur? Explain.
Ans. 1. Electricity reaching in Palampur transformed irrigation system as electric-run tubewells could be used to irrigate much larger areas of land more effectively.
2. Electric tubewell would draw water from well electrically and no manual handling required.
3. Electricity has also facilitated the harvesting of crops with electric harvesters.
Q.2. What is the basic aim of production. What are the essential four requirements for production?
Ans. Basic aim of production was to produce goods and services that we want. Four requirements for production of goods and services were:
2. Land and other natural resources like water, forests, minerals Labour, i.e. people who would do the work.
3. Each worker is providing the labour necessary for production.
4. Third requirement is physical capital, i.e. variety of inputs required at every stage during production.
5. Fourth requirement is knowledge and enterprise to be able to put together land, labour and physical capital and produce an output.
Q.3. What do you mean by working capital? How does it affect the day-to-day activities in farming?
Ans. Raw materials and money in hand is known as working capital. Some money is always required during production to make payments and buy other necessary items. Working capital is related with day-to-day activities in farming like use of seeds, pesticides, insecticides, manure, wages of labour etc. So production in farming is high for more working capital. Higher working capital would facilitate more purchase of seeds, fertilisers and wages, so higher yield would be there.
Q.4. What do you mean by Rabi crops and Kharif crops? When are they sown and harvested? Give examples also.
Ans. Rabi crops are grown in winter season (between October to December) and harvested in spring season (between mid-late April to mid-late June). Potato, wheat, barley, mustard are Rabi crops.
Kharif crops are sown in rainy season (from July to September) and harvested in autumn season. Examples of Kharif crops are jowar and bajra, sugarcane, cotton, red chillies etc.
Q.5. What is the difference between multiple cropping and modern farming method?
Ans. To grow more than one crop on a piece of land during the year is known as multiple cropping. For example, sugarcane is sown along with wheat in winter season as sugarcane is harvested once every year. Modern farming methods are the use of improved methods and techniques to be used in agriculture to increase yield per hectare. Use of HYV seeds, insecticides, pesticides, electric tube-well etc. is modern farming methods.
Q.6. Modern farming methods require the farmers to invest more cash than before. Why? Explain.
Ans. Yes, modern farming methods like use of HYV seeds, chemical fertilizers, electric tubewell for irrigation require higher investment in farming because they carry higher cost than traditional one. HVY seeds need more water and also chemical fertilisers and pesticides to produce best results. Higher use of chemicals, cause environmental degradation also.
Q.7. What was the major disadvantage associated with HYV seeds? Explain.
Ans. 1. Biggest disadvantage associated with HYV seeds is bigger requirement of water and also chemical fertilisers and pesticides to produce best results.
2. Higher yields are possible only from combination of HYV seeds, irrigation, chemical fertilisers, pesticides etc.
3. Chemical fertilizers and pesticides degrade our environment killing necessary bacterias in soil. Poor farmers could not afford HYV seeds due to increased requirement of fertilisers and machinery.
4. New machinery replaced manual labour leading to unemployment and rural-urban migration.
Q.8. What are the various farming and non-farming activities in village Palampur?✔️
Ans. Farming activities: Farming is the main production activity in Palampur. About 75% of the people depend upon farming for their livelihood. They use methods of multiple farming and modern farming techniques for increase in their productivity. Well-developed irrigational facilities and use of HYV seeds has improved in production levels of agriculture in Palampur.
Non-farming activities : Non farming activities in Palampur includes dairy farming. Small scale manufacturing units, shop-keeping and transportation activities. Milk is transported to nearby and far of towns. Family members, without hired labours run small manufacturing units with simple techniques shop keepers buy various goods from wholesale markets in cities and sell them in villages. Road transport facilities include rickshaws, tongs, jeeps, tractors, trucks and bullock carts.
Q.9. What do the scientific reports indicate about the modern farming methods? Mention any three points.
Ans. Scientific reports indicate that the modern farming method has overused the natural resource base.
1. Green revolution, due to increased use of chemical fertilisers, has led to loss of soil fertility.
2. Use of ground water with due help of tube wells for irrigation has reduced the level of ground water.
3. Use of chemical fertilisers resulted in loss of soil fertility. Therefore, farmers are forced to use more and more chemical fertilisers to achieve the production level which in turn raises the cost of production.
Q.10. What are the sources of irrigation in Palampur?
Ans. Palampur holds a well developed system of irrigation. Due to introduction of electricity irrigation system transformed from Persian wheels to electric-run tube wells. Initially, the first few tube wells were installed by the government and then by mid of 1970s the entire cultivated area of 200 hectare was irrigated by privately installed tube wells.
Q.11. Explain any three types of production activities in Palampur.✔️
Ans. (i) Farming at Palampur : Farming is the main activity in village Palampur. Land area available for farming is fixed. Expansion in production is done due to methods of multiple cropping and use of modern farming methods.
(ii) Dairy farming : Dairy is a common activity in many families of Palampur. Many families have cows and buffalos. They feed them on jowar and bajra. They sell milk either in the village or in nearby villages or town.
(iii) Small-scale manufacturing : People at Palampur are engaged in same kind of small scale and cottage industries. Simple techniques of production are used on a small scale. Such small scale units are mostly carried at home or in fields with the help of family members. Sugarcan curshing, carpet weaving and basket – making activities are carried under such production units.
Q.12. State any three advantages of multiple cropping.
Ans. Advantages of multiple cropping are :
(a) Efficient use of land : Land is not left idle at any time of the year and therefore more efficiently used in the process of production.
(b) Increase of production : It increases the production on a piece of land during the year.
(c) Increase in income: Multiple cropping increases the agricultural income of the country as well as for the farmer.
Q.13. What is Green Revolution? Which crop is benefitted the most due to Green Revolution?
Ans. Green Revolution is a revolution of using modern farming methods for higher yield and achieving the self sufficiency in the production of wheat and rice. It includes use of High Yielding Variety (HYV) seeds, irrigation, chemical fertilisers, pesticides etc for producing best results. Wheat is benefitted most due to Green Revolution.
Q.14. What are the problems do form labourers face in terms of employment? Explain any three problems.
Ans. Problems faced by farm labourers are :
(a) Unadequate wages : Government has fixed the minimum wages as Rs 60 day but they donot usually get this amount of money.
(b) Availability of labour : Too much availability of labour forces the labourers to work on lower wages.
(c) Duration of employment : Labourers are sometimes employed on the daily wages and sometimes for the whole year. They do not have surety of job.
Q.15. Explain any three modern farming methods of Agriculture.✔️
Ans. (i) Use of HYV seeds : Use of High Yielding Variety seeds promises larger quantity of production of foodgrains.
(ii) Use of farm machinery : Use of machinery for irrigation, harvesting, threshing etc improves the quality of work as well as reduces time consumption.
(iii) Use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides : Use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides ensure the farmers about the better upbringing of crops in quality and quantity.
Q.16. Many factors are responsible for the poor economic condition of farm labourers like Dala and Ramkali. Can you explain a few of these factors?
Ans. The factors responsible for poor economic conditions of farm labourers like Dala and Ramkali are :
(i) Use of modern farming techniques : Use of modern farming techniques make it difficult for farm labourers to get work. Tractors are used for ploughing, harvesters for harvesting, threshers for threshing and weedicide for removing weeds. This leaves very less or no work for farm labourers.
(ii) Poorly Paid : Due to heavy competition for work among the farm labourers, people agree to work for lower wages. The minimum wages for a farm labourer set by government is Rs 60 per day but they are generally paid only half of it. This forces them to take loan from local money lenders which put them in the vicious circle of poverty.
LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS (5 MARKS)
Q.1. What are the different ways of increasing production on the same piece of land. Explain any four points.
OR
What are the different ways of increasing production on the same piece of land. Explain with the help of examples.
OR
State four steps of optimal utilisation of land.
Ans. Land area under cultivation is fixed. So, the ways of increasing farm produce on the same piece of land are :
(i) Multiple cropping : It is the most common way of increasing production on a given piece of land. Under it, more than one crop is grown on the same piece of land during the year.
Indian farmers should grow atlest two main crops in a year. Some farmers have been growing a third crop also over the past twenty years
(ii) Green Revolution : It was brought in India in the late 1960s, the use of HYV (High Yielding Variety) seeds for increase in production of rice and wheat. It promised to produce much greater amount of grains on a single plant.
(iii) Use of modern technology : By the use of well developed able to cultivate their land with greater efficiency.
(iv) Use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides Farmers use pumpsets for irrigation, threshers for threshing, harvesters for harvesting, tractors for floughing etc.: Use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides improves fertility of soil and reduces pest respectively for the particular period of production. This improves the quantity of production.
Q.2. Who provides labour for farming in Palampur? How are they paid for their work?
Ans. After land, labour is the second most necessary factor for production. Small farmers along with the other numbers of their family cultivate their own fields. Thus, they provide the labour required for farming themselves. Medium and large scale farmers hire farm labourers to work on their fields. Farm labourers either engaged from landless families or the families cultivating small piece of land.Farm labourers do not have any right over the crops grown on the land. They are paid in the following ways :
(i) Wages are paid to them in form of cash or kind, i.e., crops.
(ii) Government has set up minimum wages for farm labourers to be Rs 60 per day but unfortunately they do not get this much and are mostly exploited.
(iii) Sometimes poor farm labourers work for meal also.
(iv) Sometimes they are employed on daily basis and sometimes for the whole year. Thus, durations of their employment is not fixed.
Q.3. What are the four requirements for production of goods and services? Explain. OR
What are the four requirements of production? Explain with examples.
Ans. There are four requirements of production of goods and services. These requirements are known as factors of production.These are :
(i) Land : By land we mean not only the level surface but all gifts of nature which are amenable to human control, such as water, forests, minerals etc.
(ii) Labour : Manpower required to do the work. The mental and physical work done by people in an organisation comes under labour.
(iii) Physical Capital : It means a variety of inputs required at every stage during production. They can be classified as :
(a) Fixed capital : It includes tools, machines and building that can be used for production for many years.
(b) Working capital : Money in land and raw material that has to be used in current products are included in working capital.
(iv) Enterprise : It means need of knowledge and enterprise to put together all other factors of production and ability to sell the produce in the market. This is also called human capital.
Q.4. What is Green Revolution? Explain some of its features.✔️
Ans. Green Revolution is a revoluton with farmers using modern methods for higher yields and achieving selfsufficiency in the production of wheat and rice. It includes use of High YieldingVariety (HYV) seeds, irrigation, chemical fertilizers, pesticides etc for producing best results.Farmers of Punjab, Haryana and Western Uttar Pradesh were the first to try it in the late 1960s.Factors responsible for Green Revolution are :
(i) Increase in yield : HYV seeds promised to produce much greater amounts of grains on a single plant. As a result, the same piece of land produce for larger quantities of food grains.
(ii) Use of modern technology : Use of modern technology like tractors, harvesters, tubewells etc have made the implementation of green revolution possible in the environment.
(iii) Use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides : Unlike traditional fertilisers and manures, useof chemical fertilisers has increased as a requirement with HYV seeds which improves the quality and quantity of the produce.
Q.5. Explain any two positive and two negative effects of Green Revolution. OR
Explain two achievements and two drawbacks of Green Revolution in Indian agriculture.
Ans. Green Revolution was started in the late 1960s with an aim of achieving self sufficiency in the production of grains like wheat and rice.Two positive effects and achievements of green revolution are :
(i) Increase in productivity of grains : Use of HYV seeds produced much more amount of wheat and rice in comparison to traditional seeds.
(ii) Modernisation of agriculture : HYV seeds required well-developed irrigation, use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides. Use of farm machinery has also encouraged in the green revolution which resulted in development and modernisaton of agriculture. It also increased the surplus in the field of agriculture. Two Negative effects and drawbacks of Green Revolution :
(i) Decline in fertility of soil : Too much use of chemical fertilisers resulted in decline of fertility of soil. Farmers have to use more and more chemical fertilisers which increases the lost of production.
(ii) Level of groundwater : Use of groundwater for cultivation with the help of tube wells have caused decline in level of ground water.
Q.6. Is Palampur a developed village? Explain by presenting four arguments. OR
How can you say that Palampur is a well developed village?
Ans. Palampur is a well developed village. This can be made clear from the following arguments :
(i) Multiple cropping : Farmers of Palampur have adapted multiple cropping. They plant three crops on a year and never leave their land idle.
(ii) Modern facilities of agriculture : They have a well developed system of irrigation.
Electricity came early in Palampur. They use modern machinery like tractors, harvesters etc for farming. Use of HYV seeds and chemical fertilisers is also noticed in Palampur.
(iii) Markets and Education : There are small markets setup in Palampur which have all the daily need commodities available. Kareem is also running computer classes and a good number of students are learning there. High schools and education for women is available here.
(iv) Transportation : People of Palampur have facilities of transporting goods to other towns and village with a good transportation system and well developed roads.
Q.7. What are the various ways through which farmers can get loan? Write their advantages and disadvantages.
Ans. Farmers can get loans through the following ways :
(i) Large farmers or village moneylenders : Most of the small farmers prefer taking loans from large farmers or  village moneylenders. Advantages of taking loans from such sources are :
(a) They are flexible in terms and conditions of repayment and rate of interest.
(b) They know the lenders personally so get loans without collateral security.
Disadvantages:
(a) Rate of interest is very high. (b) Small farmers are exploited and are trapped in vicious circle of poverty.
(ii) Banks and cooperative societies : Although, very few number of small farmers approach banks for loan but they provide them better services. Advantages of loans from banks and cooperatives:
(a) No exploitation of farmers. (b) Uniform and nominal rate of interest for all.
Disadvantages:
(a) Needs proper security and have set terms and conditions.
HOTS
Q.1. Differentiate between fixed capital and working capital. State any four points.
Ans. Both fixed capital and working capital are the parts of physical capital required for production.
(i) Fixed Capital :
(a) It includes fixed factors of production which are used for years.
(b) Tools and machines range from very simple tools such as a farmer's plough to sophisticated machines such as generators, turbines etc.
(c) It includes tools, machines, buildings etc.
(d) They remain constant for many years of production and increased or decreased only when needed.
(ii) Working Capital :
(a) It includes variable factors of production which are needed to be arranged every time at the time of production.
(b) Whatever money and raw material required for production are included in it.
(c) It is required to be arranged according to the desired production.
(d) They are dynamic depending upon the profits and income of last season.
Q.2. Explain any four non-farming activities in Palampur village.
Ans. Most of the people living in palampur village are involved in production activities. Only 25% of the people working in Palampur village are engaged in activities other than agriculture.
Various non-farm activities in Palampur village are :
(a) Dairy : It is a common activity at Palampur village. People feed their buffalos on jowar and bajra and sold their milk in Raiganj village. Two traders from Shahpur town have set up collection cum chilling centres at Raiganj from where the milk is transported to far away towns and cities.
(b) Small scale manufacturing units : People get involved in very simple production methods in their homes only with their family members. They make baskets, pottery etc small things and sell them in the markets nearby.
Shopkeepers : People get involved in trade, they buy goods from nearby whole sale markets and sell them in the village. They sell wide range of items like sugar, tea, oil, soap etc. They open shops for eatables near bus stands.
Transport : People also get involved in providing transportation services like rickshaws, tongas, jeeps, tractors, trucks, bullok cart, bouggey etc. The number of people involved in transport has grown over the last several years.
Q.3. What do you mean by Green Revolution? Why was the initial impact of Green Revolution limited to wheat and only to a few regions?
Ans. 1.Green Revolution is a revolution which started in the late 1960s with an aim of achieving self-sufficiency in the production of grains like wheat and rice.
2. The initial impact of Green Revolution was limited to wheat and only to a few regions because initially only the farmers of Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh by out the modern farming method in India.
3. They used tubewells for irrigation and made use of HYV seeds, chemical fertilisers and pesticides in farming.
4. Capital required for using HYV seeds was very high. Therefore small farmers and many backward regions could not use the modern techniques.
5. Use of HYV seeds require all other modern techniques of cultivation also therefore for initial time it remained unapproachable in many backward villages and small farmers which work without electricity or own poor farm distribution.
Q.4. What is land? Suggest any three ways to sustain land.
Ans. Land is the levelled surface and other natural resources such as water, forests, minerals etc used for production of goods and services.Excessive use of chemical fertilisers or modern techniques of farming destroys land and all other natural resources.Land can be sustained through following ways :
(i) Limited use of chemical fertilisers : Chemical fertilisers should be used in a limited number and only as the per the requirement. Excessive use of chemical fertilisers destroys the fertility of land.
(ii) Crop rotation : Crops should be planted in such a way that land gets time of restore its fertility. Different nutrients are required with different lands, therefore planning of multiple cropping should be done in such a way that the land is also able to restore the lost nutrients.
(iii) Waste of chemical fertilisers : Waste of chemical fertilisers or pesticides should not be thrown in the water bodies of village as this will pollute the water.
(iv) Adequate use of ground water : Ground water should be adequately used so that there is minimum wastage of ground water.
Q.5. What is the main source of capital for medium and large farmers? How is it different from the small farmers? Explain.
Ans. (a) Surplus wheat selling : Main source of capital for medium and large farmers is supply of surplus wheat in market as they own large area of cultivable land. They retain part of wheat for their own use and sell rest of wheat in market. While for small farmers, no surplus wheat is available so they arrange capital from large farmers or village moneylenders or the traders.
(b) Extra work to landowner or large farmers : In order to get loan from landowner or large farmers they have to pay higher interest rates and also extra work on their fields to repay the loan, while medium and large farmers can devote their full time to their own land.
Q.6. What was the basic aim of the ‘Green Revolution’ in India? How did it affect the market economy?
Ans. The introduction of HYV seeds and the increased use of fertilisers and irrigation are known collectively as the Green Revolution which was associated with increase in production of food grains in India and make India self-sufficient in foodgrains.
Impact of Green Revolution on market economy
(a) Increased production of foodgrains like wheat and rice : Foodgrain yields continued to increase throughout the 1980s. In financial year 1980, almost 75 percent of the total cropped area under wheat was sown with HYV seeds.
(b) Increased income disparities, higher income growth and reduced incidence of poverty : Green revolution has increased income disparities, higher income growth andreduced incidence of poverty.


Value based Questions
Q.1. Explain four efforts that can be made to increase non-farming production activities in villages?
Q.2. What were the main terms on which Savita got a loan from Tejpal Singh? How can Savita be benefitted if she gets a loan from the bank?
Q.3. Why it is necessary to increase the area under cultivation? Explain.✔️
Q.4. What are the difficulties faced by small farmers in arranging capital in comparison with medium and large farmers.
Q.5. Why modern farming methods require more inputs which are manufactured in industry? Explain.