This page provides complete NCERT Class 11 Indian Economic Development Chapter 1 questions, including MCQs, one-word and descriptive questions. All questions are extracted line-by-line from NCERT for full syllabus coverage and exam preparation.
Before British rule, India had an independent economy with agriculture as the main livelihood, but it was also well-known for its handicraft industries, particularly cotton and silk textiles, metal works, and precious stone works, which enjoyed a worldwide market.
However, the economic policies pursued by the colonial government were concerned more with protecting British economic interests than with developing India. The chapter notes that while some individual attempts were made to estimate national income (by Dadabhai Naoroji, William Digby, V.K.R.V. Rao, and R.C. Desai), most studies found that India’s growth of aggregate real output during the first half of the twentieth century was less than two per cent, with a meagre half per cent growth in per capita output per year.
The chapter then examines the agricultural sector, which remained fundamentally agrarian with about 85 per cent of the population living in villages. Despite this, agriculture experienced stagnation and deterioration. The main cause was the various systems of land settlement introduced by the colonial government, particularly the zamindari system implemented in the Bengal Presidency.
Under this system, profit from agriculture went to zamindars instead of cultivators, and zamindars did nothing to improve agricultural conditions:their main interest was only to collect rent regardless of the economic condition of cultivators. Low levels of technology, lack of irrigation facilities, and negligible use of fertilisers aggravated the plight of farmers.
While there was some commercialisation of agriculture (farmers shifted from food crops to cash crops), this did not improve their economic condition as these cash crops were ultimately used by British industries. The industrial sector also suffered as India could not develop a sound industrial base. The British systematically deindustrialised India: first, to reduce India to an exporter of raw materials for British industries; second, to turn India into a market for finished British goods.
The decline of handicrafts created massive unemployment while a new demand was profitably met by imports from Britain. Modern industry began during the second half of the nineteenth century with cotton and jute textile mills, and TISCO was incorporated in 1907, but there was hardly any capital goods industry to promote further industrialisation.
The chapter concludes with discussions on foreign trade, demographic conditions, occupational structure, and infrastructure. India’s foreign trade generated a large export surplus, but this surplus came at a huge cost:essential commodities were scarcely available domestically, and the surplus was used to make payments for British expenses, leading to the drain of Indian wealth.
Demographically, the first census was conducted in 1881, and before 1921 India was in the first stage of demographic transition. Overall literacy was less than 16 per cent (female literacy at only seven per cent), infant mortality was about 218 per thousand, and life expectancy was only 32 years. Occupationally, the agricultural sector accounted for 70-75 per cent of the workforce, with manufacturing and services sectors accounting for only 10 per cent and 15-20 per cent respectively.
Infrastructure such as railways (introduced in 1850), roads, ports, and telegraphs did develop, but the real motive was to subserve colonial interests:mobilising the army and drawing out raw materials:not to provide basic amenities to the people. By the time India won independence, the agricultural sector was saddled with surplus labour and low productivity, the industrial sector needed modernisation and diversification, foreign trade was oriented to feed British industry, infrastructure needed upgradation, and rampant poverty and unemployment required welfare orientation of public economic policy. The chapter thus sets the stage for understanding why India adopted planned development after independence.
The sole purpose of the British colonial rule in India was to: (Pg. 4)
According to most studies, India’s growth of aggregate real output during the first half of the twentieth century was: (Pg. 5)
Under the zamindari system, the profit from agriculture went to: (Pg. 6)
The decline of indigenous handicraft industries in India led to: (Pg. 7)
Capital goods industries produce: (Pg. 7)
The most important characteristic of India’s foreign trade during the colonial period was: (Pg. 8)
Before 1921, India was in which stage of demographic transition? (Pg. 10)
The agricultural sector accounted for what percentage of the workforce at the time of independence? (Pg. 10-11)
The railways were introduced in India by the British in the year: (Pg. 11)
The infant mortality rate at the time of independence was about ______ per thousand. (Pg. 10)
The finest variety of muslin from Bengal was called ______. (Pg. 4) Page 4
About ______ per cent of India’s population lived mostly in villages during the colonial period. (Pg. 5) Page 5
The main interest of the zamindars was only to collect ______ regardless of the economic condition of cultivators. (Pg. 6) Page 6
The Tata Iron and Steel Company (TISCO) was incorporated in the year ______. (Pg. 7) Page 7
India became an exporter of ______ products and an importer of finished consumer goods during the colonial period. (Pg. 8) Page 8
The Suez Canal was opened in the year ______, which intensified British control over India’s foreign trade. (Pg. 9) Page 9
The overall literacy level in India during the colonial period was less than ______ per cent. (Pg. 10) Page 10
Life expectancy in India during the colonial period was only ______ years. (Pg. 10) Page 10
The railways fostered ______ of Indian agriculture which adversely affected self-sufficiency of village economies. (Pg. 11) Page 11
India’s first official census operation was undertaken in the year ______. (Pg. 9) Page 9
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