9th NCERT Notes
9th NCERT Notes
NCERT-Economics
(ANMOL CHOPRA)
CHAPTER-1
STORY OF VILLAGE
PA LA M P U R
INTRODUCTION
• Palampur- small village, well-connected with neighbouring villages and towns.
• It has two primary and one high school, a primary health centre run by the government and one
private dispensary.
• Most of the houses have electric connections.
• Farming is the main production activity, whereas small manufacturing, transport, shop-keeping
and farming are the other production activities of the village.
ORGANISATION OF PRODUCTION
• The goal of production is to produce goods and services which are wanted by people.
1. LAND: Includes all free gifts of nature, e.g., soil, water, forests, minerals, etc.
2. LABOUR: Human effort which includes physical as well as mental labour.
3. PHYSICAL CAPITAL: Variety of inputs, required at different stages during production.
A) Fixed capital: Tools, machines, buildings can be used in production over many years.
B) Working capital: Raw materials and money in hand.
4. HUMAN CAPITAL: Knowledge and enterprise to be able to put together land, labour and
physical capital and produce an output.
FARMING ACTIVITIES
(b) Modern farming methods: In this type of farming, high yielding variety seeds are used. As
a result the same piece of land produces larger quantities of food grains.
→ Due to these changes (in the late 1960s) productivity of land has increased substantially
which is known as the Green Revolution.
→ Farmers of Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh were the first to try out the
modern farming methods in India.
(v) Labour
→ Small farmers provide their own labour, whereas medium and large farmers make use of
hired labour to work on their fields.
→ As the work is less for the number of labourers they are not given minimum wages set by the
government.
→ Some labourers migrate to the cities, in search of better opportunities.
(vi) Capital
→ Huge capital is required in the method of modern farming.
→ Small farmers lack capital, hence they borrow money from large farmers and money lenders
at a higher rate of interest.
→ There are three types of capital which are mostly used i.e working capital, fixed capital and
human capital.
NON-FARMING ACTIVITIES
25% of the total population is engaged in non-farming activities, like:
(ii) Transporting
People and goods are ferried from one place to another through transporting service. For this
service the worker gets paid.
(iii) Dairy
Dairy is a type of business where harvesting or processing of animal milk are done mostly
from cows and buffaloes.
(iv) Shopkeeping
Shopkeepers earn money by selling a wide range of items like rice, wheat, sugar, tea, oil,
biscuits, soap, toothpaste etc.. Here, the shopkeeper is an individual who runs the shop.
CHAPTER-2
PEOPLE AS
RESOURCE
INTRODUCTION
→ Population of a nation can be its asset rather than a liability.
→ ‘People as resource’ refers to a country’s working people in terms of their existing
productive skills and abilities.
→ When an existing human resource is developed by becoming educated and healthy it turns
into human capital.
→ Human capital is superior to other resources like land and physical capital, as it uses these
capitals and adds value to them.
→ Investment in human capital via education and medical care can give high returns in the
future.
→ Countries like Japan have invested a lot in human resources. They do not have rich natural
resources, but still they are called developed nations.
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
Humans perform many activities which can be grouped into economic and non-economic.
Economic Activities: activities which are undertaken for monetary gain or to satisfy wants.
→ Activities of workers, farmers, shopkeepers, manufacturers, doctors, lawyers, taxi drivers, etc.
fall under this category.
→ Economic activities are also called market activities.
→ Non-market activities are production for self-consumption.
Non-Economic Activities: ones that are not undertaken for any monetary gain.
→ These are also called unpaid activities.
E.g: housekeeping, helping the poor or disabled, etc.
QUALITY OF POPULATION
Human Capital: Human capital is the stock of skill and productive knowledge embodied in
human beings. Population (human beings) become human capital when it is provided with better
education, training and health care facilities.
→ Quality of population depends upon the literacy rate, life expectancy and skills formation
acquired by the people of the country.
(ii) Health
→ Health is another very important component of human resource development. Efficiency of
workers largely depends on their health.
→ There has been considerable improvement in the country’s health standard.
For instance, the life expectancy at the time of birth in India rose from 37.2 years in 1951 to
69.2 years in 2018. Similarly, the infant mortality rate has come down from 147 to 28 by 2019.
→ India has built up a vast health infrastructure but still much more is needed to be done.
UNEMPLOYMENT
Unemployment is said to exist when people who are willing to work at the prevailing wage
rates cannot find jobs.
→ Increase in unemployment is an indicator of a depressed economy. It’s a liability to the
country, it leads to wastage of manpower resources.
(i) Seasonal unemployment: when people fail to get work during some months of the year
(during off-season). Farm labourers usually face this kind of problem.
(ii) Disguised unemployment: situation where the number of workers in a job is more than
actually required to do the job.
→ it arises due to excessive pressure of the population on agriculture.
Consequences of Unemployment:
(i) leads to wastage of manpower resources.
(ii) tends to increase the economic overload that is dependence of the unemployed on the
working population.
(iii) may lead to increase in social unrest and tension.
CHAPTER-3
POVERTY AS A
CHALLENGE
INTRODUCTION
→ Poverty means hunger and lack of shelter, clean water & sanitation, a situation in which
parents are not able to send their children to school or a situation where sick people cannot
afford treatment, lack of a regular job at a minimum decent level.
→ Above all it means living with a sense of helplessness.
→ It has both dimensions- economical and social
Social exclusion: which means, poor are excluded in the community of better off people.
Vulnerability: It describes the greater probability of certain communities or individuals
becoming, or remaining poor in the coming years.
→ The people from backward castes, individuals like widows, and the physically handicapped
are more vulnerable.
Poverty Line: It is based on the income or consumption level.
→ A person is considered poor if his or her income or consumption level falls below a given
‘minimum level’ necessary to satisfy basic needs.
→ The poverty line is estimated periodically by conducting sample surveys by the National
Sample Survey Organisation. (NSSO)
Estimates of Poverty
→ Incidence of poverty in India was around 55% in 1973 which declined to 36% in 1993 and
further to 26% in 2000.
→ Social groups which are most vulnerable to poverty are Scheduled Caste and Scheduled
Tribe households.
Inter-State Disparities
→ Proportion of poor people is not the same in every state.
→ In 20 states and union territories the poverty ratio is less than the national average.
→ Chattisgarh and Jharkhand are the poorest states of India (2020)
CAUSES OF POVERTY
→ There are a number of causes for the widespread poverty in India.
→ One historical reason is the low level of economic development under the British colonial
administration.
1. Rapid growth of population, particularly among the poor is considered a major cause of
Indian poverty.
2. Our agricultural sector has failed to generate much employment opportunities for the farm
labourers. Similarly, our industries could not provide many jobs for the job seekers.
3. One of the major causes of poverty is the unequal distribution of land and other resources.
→ Various land reform measures introduced after Independence could not improve the life of
millions of rural poor because of their poor implementation.
4. Social factors: People in India, including the very poor, spend a lot of money on social
occasions like marriages, festivals, etc.
→ Poor people hardly have any savings; they are, thus, forced to borrow. Unable to pay because
of poverty, they became victims of indebtedness.
1. Prime Minister Rojgar Yojana (PMRY): The aim of this programme (started in 1993) was
to create self-employment opportunities for educated unemployed youth in rural areas and small
towns.
2. Rural Employment Generation Programme (REGP): launched in 1995, to create
self-employment opportunities in rural areas.
3. Swarna Jayanti Gram Swarojgar Yojana (SGSY): started in 1999, the programme aims at
bringing the assisted poor families above the poverty line.
4. Pradhan Mantri Gramodaya Yojana (PMGY): launched in 2000, to achieve the objective
of sustainable human development at the village level.
5. Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY): Launched in 2000, to provide highly subsidised food to
millions of the poorest families and elders.
6. The National Food for Work Programme (NFWP): launched in 2004, in 150 of the most
backward districts of India with the objective of generating supplementary wage employment.
7. The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA): passed in September 2005.
The Act provides 100-days assured employment every year to every rural household in 200
districts.
FOOD SECURITY
Food security means availability, accessibility and affordability of food to all people at all
times.
→ Availability: Food production in the country, import of food
→ Accessibility: Food within the reach of every person
→ Affordability: To have enough money to buy sufficient amounts of food.
→ The poorest section of the society remains food insecure all the time.
→ People above the poverty line might also feel food insecure in times of natural calamity like
earthquake, drought, flood, tsunami, etc.
→ Natural calamities may lead to starvation. Starvation in the long run turns into famine.
Types of hunger
→ Hunger has chronic and seasonal dimensions.
Seasonal hunger: It is caused by the seasonal nature of agricultural activities in rural areas. In
urban areas, seasonal hunger occurs because of the casual type of work.
→ It is related to cycles of food growing and harvesting.
→ This type of hunger exists when a person is unable to get work for the entire year.
Buffer Stock
→ It is the stock of food grains (wheat and rice) procured by the government through the Food
Corporation of India (FCI).
→ The FCI purchases wheat and rice for the government from the farmers of surplus states at
pre-announced prices, which is called ‘minimum support price’.
→ The food is distributed to the poorer strata of society at a lower price than market place,
which is known as Issue price.
GOVERNMENT’S VIGILANCE
→ In the wake of high incidence of poverty levels in mid-1970s, three important food
intervention programmes were introduced:
(a) Public Distribution System
(b) Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) in 1975
(c) Food for work in 1977-78.
In 2000, two special schemes were launched- Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) and the
Annapurna scheme (APS) with special target groups of the poorest of the poor and indigent
senior citizens, respectively.
PDS has proved to be the most effective for stabilising prices and making food available to
consumers at affordable prices.
→ For the purpose of PDS, government provides three kinds of ration cards:
(a) Antyodaya cards for the poorest of the poor,
(b) BPL cards for those below poverty line and,
(c) APL cards for those above the poverty line.
MERITS OF PDS:
(i) It helps to keep food prices stable by providing food at a concessional rate.
(ii) It helps to prevent a large number of hunger and famine by supplying food from surplus
regions to deficit ones.
(iii) Poor section of the society can easily buy food at subsidized rates from fair price shops
(iv) It assures the farmers by the way of purchasing food at minimum support price.
DEMERITS OF PDS
(i) In this system, food grains are stored as buffer stock which becomes wasteful due to gradual
decrease in the quantity of foodgrains due to deterioration, wear and tear, and rotting etc.
(ii) Sometimes products of the Public Distribution System are malpracticed by the PDS dealers
through selling the foodgrains in the open market for better margin.
ROLE OF COOPERATIVES
→ Cooperative opens many fair price shops to sell food grains at a concessional rate.
→ Academy of Development Science is an organization of training and capacity building
programmes on food security for NGOs in Maharashtra. It facilitates a network of NGO for
setting up a bank of grains. It is a successful food security intervention.
→ In Tamil Naidu, 94% of the price shops are run by the cooperatives.
→ Mother Dairy is a success story of cooperatives in milk and vegetables in Delhi.
→ Amul is also a success story of cooperatives in milk and milk products in Gujarat.