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Revision: History (India and the Contemporary World-II) >> The Making of a Global World Social Science English Medium Class 10 CBSE

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Definitions [1]

Definition: Indentured Labour

Indentured labour is a bonded labourer under contract to work for an employer for a specific amount of time, to pay off his passage to a new country or home

Key Points

Key Points: Silk Routes Link the World
  • The Silk Routes connected Asia with Europe and North Africa through land and sea routes.
  • These routes existed from before the Christian Era and flourished till the fifteenth century.
  • Chinese silk, pottery, Indian textiles, and spices were traded along these routes.
  • In return, gold and silver flowed from Europe to Asia.
  • The Silk Routes also spread religions and cultures, including Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam.
Key Points: Food Travels: Spaghetti and Potato
  • Food travelled from one region to another through traders and travellers.
  • Spaghetti and noodles may have originated from the same source.
  • Similar foods were known in different countries in early times.
  • Many crops were introduced from the Americas about five hundred years ago.
  • Potatoes improved people’s lives, but their failure caused famine in Ireland.
Key Points: The Pre-modern World
  • Globalisation did not begin recently but has a long historical background of trade, migration, and cultural exchange.
  • From ancient times, traders, travellers, priests, and pilgrims moved across regions carrying goods and ideas.
  • By 3000 BCE, coastal trade linked the Indus Valley civilisation with West Asia.
  • Cowries from the Maldives were used as currency and reached China and East Africa over many centuries.
  • The movement of people also led to the spread of diseases, becoming widespread by the thirteenth century.
Key Points: Conquest, Disease and Trade
  • In the sixteenth century, European sea routes to Asia and America reduced distances and increased global contact.
  • The Indian Ocean had long been an important centre of trade, with India playing a key role.
  • The discovery of America brought new lands, crops, and minerals that changed world trade.
  • Silver from mines in Peru and Mexico increased Europe’s wealth and trade with Asia.
  • European conquest of America succeeded largely due to diseases like smallpox, not just weapons.
  • Many Europeans migrated to America due to poverty, disease, and religious conflicts in Europe.
  • The rise of American trade and China’s isolation shifted the centre of world trade to Europe.
Key Points: The Nineteenth Century (1815 - 1914)
  • The nineteenth century brought major economic, political, social, and technological changes worldwide.
  • International economic exchanges involve three main types of flows.
  • The first flow was trade in goods such as cloth and wheat.
  • The second flow was labour migration as people moved for work.
  • The third flow was capital movement for investments, and all three flows were closely connected.
Key Points: A World Economy Takes Shape
  • In nineteenth-century Britain, food self-sufficiency led to high prices and social conflict.
  • Population growth and the Corn Laws increased food grain prices in Britain.
  • The abolition of the Corn Laws allowed cheap food imports, harming British agriculture.
  • Many farm workers lost jobs and migrated to cities or overseas.
  • Rising incomes increased food demand, leading other regions to expand food production.
  • Railways, ports, capital investment, and labour migration supported global food trade.
  • By 1890, a global agricultural economy had developed with large-scale migration and trade.
Key Points: Role of Technology
  • Technologies such as railways, steamships, and the telegraph played a major role in transforming the nineteenth-century world.
  • Technological developments were encouraged by colonisation and the need for faster and cheaper transport.
  • Before the 1870s, live animals were transported to Europe, making meat costly and difficult to supply.
  • The invention of refrigerated ships made it possible to transport frozen meat over long distances.
  • This reduced food prices, improved diets in Europe, and helped create social stability and support for imperialism.
Key Points: Late nineteenth-century Colonialism
  • Late nineteenth-century trade expansion also caused loss of freedom and livelihoods in colonised regions.
  • European colonialism brought major economic, social, and ecological changes to colonised societies.
  • In 1885, European powers met in Berlin to divide Africa among themselves.
  • Britain, France, Belgium, Germany, and later the USA expanded their colonial empires during this period.
  • Explorers like Henry Morton Stanley supported imperial conquest through mapping and military force.
Key Points: Rinderpest, or the Cattle Plague
  • In the 1890s, Rinderpest spread rapidly in Africa and severely damaged people’s livelihoods and the economy.
  • Africans traditionally depended on land and cattle and had little need to work for wages.
  • Europeans wanted African labour for plantations and mines but faced labour shortages.
  • Rinderpest, introduced through imported cattle, killed about 90% of African cattle.
  • The loss of cattle forced Africans into wage labour and strengthened European colonial control.
Key Points: Indentured Labour Migration from India
  • In the nineteenth century, many Indian and Chinese labourers migrated to work on plantations, mines, and construction projects.
  • Indian indentured labourers worked under contracts promising return to India after five years.
  • Most migrants came from eastern Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, central India, and parts of Tamil Nadu due to poverty and debt.
  • Recruitment agents often used false promises or force to send workers abroad.
  • Working and living conditions on plantations were harsh, with few legal rights.
  • Indentured labourers developed new cultural traditions, such as Hosay and Chutney music.
  • The system was opposed by Indian nationalists and was abolished in 1921.
Key Points: Rise of Mass Production and Consumption
  • The US economy recovered quickly after the war and grew strongly in the 1920s.
  • Mass production became common, with Henry Ford pioneering the assembly-line system.
  • The T-Model Ford was the world’s first mass-produced car, made cheaply and quickly.
  • Higher wages and hire-purchase systems increased consumer buying of goods like cars and appliances.
  • By 1929, rapid growth ended, and the world moved towards a major economic depression.
Key Points: The Great Depression
  • The Great Depression began in 1929 and lasted until the mid-1930s, causing worldwide economic collapse.
  • Agricultural regions were worst affected because farm prices fell more than industrial prices.
  • Overproduction and falling prices forced farmers to produce more, worsening the crisis.
  • The sudden withdrawal of US loans led to bank failures, currency collapse, and a fall in world trade.
  • In the US, banks failed, businesses closed, unemployment rose sharply, and many people lost homes and jobs.
Key Points: India and the Great Depression
  • The Great Depression showed how closely India was linked to the global economy.
  • India’s exports and imports fell sharply between 1928 and 1934.
  • Agricultural prices in India collapsed, with wheat prices falling by 50%.
  • Peasants suffered greatly as land revenue demands were not reduced by the colonial government.
  • Jute prices in Bengal fell by over 60%, pushing farmers into heavy debt.
  • Many peasants sold land, jewellery, and gold, making India a major exporter of gold.
  • Urban groups with fixed incomes benefited from lower prices, and industry grew with tariff protection.
Key Points: Second World War
  • The Second World War was fought between the Axis Powers and the Allies and lasted for six years.
  • About 60 million people were killed, many of them civilians.
  • Large parts of Europe and Asia were destroyed, causing severe economic and social damage.
  • Post-war reconstruction was difficult and required long-term efforts.
  • After the war, the USA and the Soviet Union emerged as the two dominant world powers.
Key Points: End of Bretton Woods and the Beginning of ‘Globalisation’
  • From the 1960s, rising US costs weakened the dollar and led to the end of fixed exchange rates.
  • The Bretton Woods system collapsed, and a system of floating exchange rates was introduced.
  • From the mid-1970s, developing countries borrowed from private banks, leading to debt crises.
  • Multinational companies shifted production to low-wage Asian countries like China.
  • Globalisation increased trade and investment, transforming economies such as India, China, and Brazil.
Key Points: Decolonisation and Independence
  • Many Asian and African countries became independent after the Second World War.
  • These newly independent nations faced poverty due to long years of colonial rule.
  • The IMF and World Bank mainly supported developed countries in the early years.
  • Former colonial powers and multinational companies continued to control key resources.
  • Developing countries formed the Group of 77 to demand a fairer global economic system.
Key Points: The Early Post-war Years
  • The Bretton Woods system led to rapid growth in trade and incomes in Western countries and Japan.
  • World trade grew by over 8% per year between 1950 and 1970.
  • Incomes increased steadily at nearly 5% annually during this period.
  • Economic growth was stable, with unemployment remaining below 5% in most industrial nations.
  • Developing countries invested heavily in modern technology to catch up with advanced economies.
Key Points: Post-war Settlement and the Bretton Woods Institutions
  • Economists learned that mass production requires mass consumption with stable incomes and full employment.
  • Governments needed to intervene in the economy to ensure stability, as markets alone were insufficient.
  • Full employment required government control over trade, capital, and labour flows.
  • The post-war economic system was planned at the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944.
  • The IMF and World Bank were created to maintain financial stability and support post-war reconstruction.
Key Points: Post-war Recovery
  • After the First World War, economic recovery was slow, especially in Britain.
  • Britain lost its industrial dominance due to competition from India and Japan.
  • Heavy borrowing from the USA during the war left Britain with large external debts.
  • When the war boom ended, production fell and unemployment rose sharply.
  • Agricultural economies suffered as wheat overproduction caused falling prices and farmer debt.
Key Points: Wartime Transformations
  • The First World War (1914–1918) was mainly fought in Europe but affected the whole world.
  • It was the first modern industrial war, using machines, tanks, aircraft, and chemical weapons.
  • Around 9 million people were killed and 20 million injured, mostly working-age men.
  • Industries and societies were reorganised for war, and women took up jobs earlier done by men.
  • The war broke economic links and turned the USA into an international creditor after lending to Britain.
Key Points: Indian Trade, Colonialism and the Global System
  • Indian bankers like the Shikaripuri Shroffs and Nattukottai Chettiars financed export agriculture in Asia and Southeast Asia.
  • These Indian financiers used advanced money-transfer systems and indigenous business organisations.
  • Indian traders and moneylenders expanded their activities to Africa along with European colonisers.
  • From the 1860s, Hyderabadi Sindhi traders set up emporia at major ports across the world.
  • British industrialisation reduced imports of Indian cotton textiles through tariffs.
  • India’s cotton textile exports declined sharply, falling below 3% by the 1870s.
  • India increasingly exported raw materials like cotton and indigo instead of finished goods.
Key Points: Indian Entrepreneurs Abroad
  • Export agriculture required capital, which small peasants could not afford.
  • Indian bankers helped finance farming in Asia and Southeast Asia.
  • They developed efficient systems to transfer money over long distances.
  • Indian traders and moneylenders expanded their work into Africa.
  • From the 1860s, Sindhi traders opened shops at major ports worldwide.
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