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Revision: Indian Economic Development >> Current Challenges Facing Indian Economy Economics Commerce (English Medium) Class 12 CBSE

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Definitions [5]

Define worker-population ratio.

Worker-Population ratio is defined as the proportion of population that is actively contributing to the production of goods and services. It is measured by the ratio between the country’s workforce and its total population. This ratio acts as an indicator for assessing the employment level in a particular country at any point of time. Higher the worker-population ratio higher is the engagement of people in the productive activities and vice-versa. Worker-population ratio is estimated by dividing the total work force by the total population and multiplying by 100. Algebraically,

`"Worker-Population Ratio" = "Total Workforce"/"Total Population" xx 100`

Definition: Environment

Environment is defined as the total planetary inheritance and the totality of all resources. It includes all the biotic and abiotic factors that influence each other. While all living elements—the birds, animals and plants, forests, fisheries etc.—are biotic elements, abiotic elements include air, water, land etc. Rocks and sunlight are examples of abiotic elements of the environment.

Define:

sustainable development

Sustainable development is the development that meets the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

Answer the following question in about 30 words.

Define the concept of sustainable development.

Sustainable development means a development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

Definitions: Sustainable Development
  • In 1987, the Brundtland Commission cited the definition of sustainability.
    "Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generation to meet their own needs."
  • “Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”
                    -World Commission on Environment and Development, 1987-
  • “The alternative approach (to sustainable development) is to focus on natural capital assets and suggest that they should not decline through time.”
                                                                             -Pearce, Markandya and Barbier, 1989-

Key Points

Key Points: Introduction to Human Capital Formation in India
  • Education and training increase a person’s skills, productivity, and income.
  • Educated individuals contribute more to a nation’s economic growth.
  • Education also provides social status, better choices, innovation, and adaptability to change.
  • Human capital means the productive power of people developed through education, training, and health.
  • Like physical capital, a country must invest in people to build more skilled professionals.
  • Investment in human capital leads to economic development and overall human progress.
Key Points: Sources of Human Capital
  • Education – Increases skills, productivity, and income.
  • Health – A healthy worker is more productive.
  • On-the-job training – Improves efficiency and output.
  • Migration – Higher income opportunities boost earning capacity.
  • Information – Helps make better education and job decisions.

Note: Human capital is intangibleinseparable from its ownerless mobile, and provides both private and social benefits.

Key Points: Human Capital and Economic Growth
  • Educated and healthy people are more productive and earn higher income.
  • Education and health boost innovation and technological progress.
  • Human capital and income growth are mutually reinforcing.
  • India values human resources as the key to development.
  • NEP 2020 aims to build a skilled, knowledge-based economy.
Key Points: Human Capital and Human Development
  • Human capital views education and health as means to raise productivity and income.
  • Human development sees education and health as goals in themselves, essential for well-being and personal freedom.
  • Human capital treats people as a means to an end, while human development treats people as the end itself.
  • Investments in basic education and health are vital, even if they don’t directly boost output.
Key Points: State of Human Capital Formation in India
  • Human capital formation in India depends mainly on education and health.
  • India’s Union, State, and local governments share responsibility for these sectors.
  • Government intervention is needed since education and health provide social benefits and prevent exploitation by private providers.
  • Key bodies: NCERTUGCAICTE for education; NMC and ICMR for health.
  • Due to poverty, many cannot afford these services, so governments must offer free or subsidized education and healthcare, aiming for universal literacy and improved educational attainment.
Key Points: Growth of Education Sector in India
  • Government expenditure on education rose from 7.92% (1952) to 16.54% (2020) of total expenditure, and from 0.64% to 4.47% of GDP, though still below the recommended 6%.
  • Elementary education takes the largest share, but per-student spending is highest in higher/tertiary education.
  • Spending varies widely across states — from ₹96,968 in Sikkim to ₹10,710 in Bihar (2020–21).
  • The Education Commission (1964–66) and Tapas Majumdar Committee (1999) emphasized higher investment; the Right to Education Act (2009) made schooling free and compulsory for ages 6–14.
  • India also levies a 2% education cess to fund elementary education.
  • Educational achievements have improved: adult literacy, primary completion, and youth literacy have risen substantially for both males and females since 1990.
Key Points: Future Prospects
  • Education for All: Literacy has improved, yet many Indians remain illiterate — the goal of free and compulsory education for all (ages 6–14) is still unmet.
  • Gender Equity: The literacy gap between men and women is narrowing, but women’s education still needs promotion for economic and social empowerment.
  • Higher Education: Few pursue higher studies, and educated youth unemployment remains high, especially among rural females. There’s a need to raise funding and quality in higher education to enhance employability.
  • Conclusion: Education and health investment drives growth and equity. India must build on its strong scientific and technical talent with better quality and domestic opportunities.
Key Points: Rural Development in India
  • Rural development covers health, education, gender equality, law, land, infrastructure, credit, and poverty reduction.
  • Government and private programs together drive change—you can see the results in better roads, schools, and cleaner villages.
  • Participation of all villagers makes development sustainable.
  • Most of India’s poor live in rural areas dependent on agriculture.
  • Rural development focuses on improving education, health, land reforms, infrastructure, and employment.
  • Agriculture’s growth has slowed due to low investment and poor infrastructure.
  • Need to promote non-farm jobs, credit access, and organic farming for sustainable rural growth.
Key Points: Credit and Marketing in Rural Areas
  • Rural credit funds farm inputs and family needs.
  • Earlier, farmers relied on moneylenders; now banks, RRBs, cooperatives, and NABARD provide loans.
  • SHGs and microcredit promote savings and empower women.
  • Issues: loan defaults, weak deposit culture, and misuse of funds.
  • Jan-Dhan Yojana improved financial inclusion with zero-balance accounts and direct benefits.
Key Points: Agricultural Market System
  • Govt improved farm marketing through regulated marketsinfrastructurecooperatives, and MSP–PDS policies.
  • Private traders still dominate and storage is poor.
  • Direct markets like Apni Mandi and Rythu Bazar help farmers earn more.
  • Contract farming offers assured prices but remains debated, along with the 2020 farm laws.
Key Points: Diversification into Productive Activities
  • Move labour from crops to allied activities like dairy, poultry, fisheries and horticulture to stabilise incomes.
  • Promote non-farm work such as food processing, crafts, tourism, beekeeping and IT-enabled services in rural areas.
  • These activities especially support small farmers and women, and make rural livelihoods more sustainable.
Key Points: Sustainable Development and Organic Farming

Organic farming is an eco‑friendly alternative to chemical farming.

  • Protects soil, water, ecosystem and health by avoiding synthetic fertilisers and pesticides.
  • Uses local organic inputs, can give better prices and safer food, and creates more rural jobs.
  • Faces lower initial yields and marketing/storage problems, so needs support and good infrastructure.
Key Points: The Nature and Importance of Work in Society
  • People work in farms, factories, offices, shops and from home, including IT and other remote work.
  • Modern technology and Covid‑19 have expanded work-from-home and home-based production.
  • Studying workers helps understand employment quality, national income contribution, and issues like exploitation and child labour.
Key Points: Workers and Employment

Employment means participating in economic activities that add to national income.

  • A worker is anyone (paid or self‑employed) whose work contributes to output, including those temporarily not working.
  • India’s workforce is mostly rural and male; much of women’s unpaid work at home and on farms is not officially counted as employment.
Key Points: Participation of People in Employment

Worker-population ratio tells how many people work out of the total population.

  • In India, about 41 out of 100 people are workers; rural ratio is slightly higher than urban.
  • Men’s participation is much higher than women’s, especially in cities.
  • Much of women’s unpaid household and farm work is not counted as employment.
Key Points: Self-Employed and Hired Workers
  • Self-employed: Own and run their own work (shops, farms, small businesses); this is the largest group in India.
  • Casual wage workers: Paid daily/irregularly for temporary work (like construction labour), with little job security.
  • Regular salaried employees: Have fixed, regular jobs in offices, factories, etc., with more stable income; more common in urban areas.
Key Points: Employment in Firms, Factories and Offices
  • As the economy develops, workers move from agriculture (primary) to industry (secondary) and then to services (tertiary).
  • Primary sector still employs the largest share of workers, especially in rural areas.
  • In rural areas, most workers are in agriculture; in urban areas, most are in services and some in industry.
  • Women are heavily concentrated in the primary sector; men are more spread across secondary and service sectors.
Key Points: Growth and Changing Structure of Employment
  • GDP has grown faster than employment since 1950, especially from the late 1990s, creating a gap called jobless growth (more output without enough new jobs).
  • Workers have shifted from primary (farm) work to secondary (industry) and especially services; primary employment fell from about 74% to about 46%, while secondary rose from about 11% to 25% and services from about 15% to 29%.
  • Over time, many workers moved towards casual wage work (casualisation), which is insecure and less protected, though self‑employment still provides the largest share of jobs.
  • Recently, there is some rise in regular salaried employment, likely due to growth of organised and service sectors and higher education/skills, improving access to more stable jobs.
Key Points: Informalisation of Indian Workforce

Informalisation of Indian workforce means most workers are in unorganised, insecure jobs instead of organised, protected ones.

  • Formal sector: Government and larger private units (10+ workers) with better wages, job security and social security (PF, pension, maternity benefits, etc.).
  • Informal sector: Small farms, tiny enterprises, self‑employed and casual labourers with low, irregular incomes and almost no legal or social protection.
  • Around 2011–12, only about 6% of all workers were in the formal sector; about 94% worked in the informal sector.
  • Informalisation makes workers vulnerable: they can be fired anytime, lack benefits and often live in poor conditions (slums/squatter settlements).
Key Points: Concept of Unemployment
  • India’s unemployment is structurally and cyclically driven, with youth at the highest risk.
  • Unemployment is measured by hours worked, with underemployment also common.
  • Solutions include focused skill development, industrial growth, and targeted government schemes.
Key Points: Government and Employment Generation
  • MGNREGA gives 100 days of guaranteed unskilled wage work to rural households each year.
  • Government creates jobs directly (hiring in departments/public enterprises) and indirectly (its enterprises’ output makes private firms expand and hire).
  • Many anti‑poverty schemes generate employment while providing basic services like health, education, housing, sanitation, roads and assets.
  • Most new jobs are in services and are often informal, with weak social security, despite rapid GDP growth.
Key Points: Environment and Sustainable Development in India

Economic growth in India has caused serious environmental damage, so development now must be sustainable (growth without degrading the environment).

  • Environment = all living (plants, animals, forests, fisheries) and non‑living (air, water, land, rocks, sunlight) elements and their interactions.
  • It supplies resources, absorbs waste, sustains life via biodiversity, and provides aesthetic services like scenery.
  • When resource use and waste exceed nature’s capacity to regenerate and absorb pollution, we face environmental crisis (pollution, resource depletion, health problems, climate issues like global warming and ozone loss).
Key Points: State of India's Environment

India has rich natural resources but they are under severe pressure from both poverty and rapid industrialisation.

  • Main problems: land degradation, loss of biodiversity, air pollution (especially vehicles), freshwater scarcity and solid waste issues.
  • Causes of land degradation: deforestation, overgrazing, wrong farming practices, overuse of fertilisers/pesticides, over‑pumping groundwater and poor irrigation.
  • Pollution Control Boards monitor and regulate water and air pollution, but unplanned urbanisation and industrial growth mean that India must consciously follow sustainable development.
Key Points: Concept of Sustainable Development

Sustainable development means improving life today without reducing the ability of future generations to meet their needs.

  • It links needs with fairness in resource use, especially for the poor (food, jobs, health, education, water, energy, housing).
  • Environment and economy must stay within nature’s carrying capacity: use renewables no faster than they regenerate and gradually replace non‑renewables with sustainable alternatives.
Key Points: Strategies for Sustainable Development
  • Shift to cleaner energy: wind, solar, CNG, mini‑hydel, LPG and gobar gas to cut pollution and deforestation.
  • Promote eco‑friendly farming: biocomposting and biopest control instead of excessive chemical fertilisers and pesticides.
  • Revive traditional knowledge and practices (like Ayurveda, herbal products, mixed cropping) that are more environment friendly and low‑chemical.

Important Questions [37]

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