Class 10
SOCIAL SCIENCE NOTES ECONOMICS
CHAPTER 2 (SECTORS OF THE INDIAN ECONOMY)
Here is study notes for chapter 2 economics class 10. Sector of Indian economy class 10 notes are based on ncert book as prescribed by Cbse board. These notes are written in a very easy language. So it will be easy for Students to Understand. You can also find other Social Science Notes in this blog.
Table of Contents
Sectors of the Indian Economy Notes
1. Primary sector
2. Secondary sector
3. Tertiary Sector
Comparing the three Sectors
Rising Importance of the Tertiary Sector in Production
Underemployment
Creating More Employment
MGNREGA 2005
Division of Sectors as Organised and Unorganised
Organised Sector
Unorganised Sector
How to Protect Workers in the Unorganised Sector?
Sectors in terms of ownership: Public and Private Sectors
1. Public sector
2. Private sector
SECTORS OF THE INDIAN ECONOMY NOTES
There are three sectors of indian economy.
Primary sector
Secondary sector
tertiary sector
Sectors of indian economy class 10 notes
Sectors of indian economy
1. PRIMARY SECTOR
When we produce a good by exploiting natural resources, it is an activity of the primary sector.
This is because it forms the base for all other products that we subsequently make.
Cotton and milk are examples of primary sector.
Since most of the natural products we get are from agriculture, dairy, fishing, forestry, this sector is also called agriculture and related sector.
2. SECONDARY SECTOR
The secondary sector covers activities in which natural products are changed into other forms through ways of manufacturing that we associate with industrial activity.
It is the next step after primary.
For example, using cotton fibre from the plant, we spin yarn and weave cloth. Using sugarcane as a raw material, we make sugar orgur.
Since this sector gradually became associated with the different kinds of industries that came up, it is also called as industrial sector.
3. TERTIARY SECTOR
After primary and secondary, there is a third category of activities that falls under tertiary sector and is different from the above two.
These are activities that help in the development of the primary and secondary sectors. These activities, by themselves, do not produce a good but they are an aid or a support for the production process.
For example, goods that are produced in the primary or secondary sector would need to be transported by trucks or trains and then sold in wholesale and retail shops.
Transport, storage, communication, banking, trade are some examples of tertiary activities. Since these activities generate services rather than goods, the tertiary sector is also called the service sector.
Service sector also includes some essential services that may not directly help in the production of goods. For example, we require teachers, doctors, and those who provide personal services such as washermen, barbers, cobblers, lawyers, and people to do administrative and accounting works.
COMPARING THE THREE SECTORS
The value of final goods and services produced in each sector during a particular year provides the total production of the sector for that year.
And the sum of production in the three sectors gives what is called the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of a country.
It is the value of all final goods and services produced within a countryduring a particular year. GDP shows how big the economy is.
In India, the mammoth task of measuring GDP is undertaken by a central government ministry. This Ministry, with the help of various government departments of all the Indian states and union territories, collects information relating to total volume of goods and services and their prices and then estimates the GDP.
RISING IMPORTANCE OF THE TERTIARY SECTOR IN PRODUCTION
In the year 2011-12, the tertiary sector has emerged as the largest producing sector in India replacing the primary sector.
Why is the tertiary sector becoming so important in India? There could be several reasons.
First, in any country several services such as hospitals, educational institutions, post and telegraph services, police stations, courts, village administrative offices, municipal corporations, defence, transport, banks, insurance companies, etc. are required.
Second, the development of agriculture and industry leads to the development of services such as transport, trade, storage etc.
Third, as income levels rise, certain sections of people start demanding many more services like eating out, tourism, shopping, private hospitals, private schools, professional training etc.
Fourth, over the past decade or so, certain new services such as those based on information and communication technology have become important and essential. The production of these services has been rising rapidly.
UNDEREMPLOYMENT
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