Chapter 1 : Development

Chapter 1: Development | NCERT Class X Economics | Legacy IAS
NCERT Class X | Understanding Economic Development

Chapter 1: Development

A comprehensive, exam-ready guide covering every concept, table, and fact from the NCERT chapter — with UPSC-standard MCQs.

Per Capita Income HDI Sustainability Public Facilities National Development
📚 Source Credit: This study material is based on Understanding Economic Development, NCERT Textbook for Class X, Chapter I: Development (Reprint 2026–27). All data, tables, and conceptual content are sourced from NCERT. Compiled and enriched for UPSC/State PCS aspirants by Legacy IAS, Bengaluru.

1. Introduction to Development

The idea of development or progress has always been with us. We have aspirations or desires about what we would like to do and how we would like to live. Similarly, we have ideas about what a country should be like.

🔑 Core Questions Development Addresses
  • What are the essential things that we require?
  • Can life be better for all?
  • How should people live together?
  • Can there be more equality?

Development involves thinking about these questions and about the ways in which we can work towards achieving these goals.

Answers to development questions come not just from economics but also from history and political science, because the way we live today is influenced by the past. It is only through a democratic political process that these hopes and possibilities can be achieved in real life.

⭐ UPSC Perspective

Development is a multidimensional concept — it encompasses economic growth, social equity, environmental sustainability, political freedom, and human well-being. The chapter establishes that income alone is an inadequate measure of development.

2. What Development Promises — Different People, Different Goals

Different persons have different notions of development/progress because their life situations are different. What may be development for one person may not be development for another — it may even be destructive for the other.

TABLE 1.1 — Developmental Goals of Different Categories of Persons
Category of Person Developmental Goals / Aspirations
Landless rural labourers More days of work and better wages; local school providing quality education for children; no social discrimination; ability to become leaders in the village.
Prosperous farmers from Punjab Assured high family income through higher support prices; hardworking and cheap labourers; ability to settle children abroad.
Farmers dependent on rain Assured irrigation, fair prices for crops, debt relief, crop insurance, stable income.
Rural woman from land-owning family Equal freedom as her brother; ability to decide her own life path; pursue higher studies.
Urban unemployed youth Good employment opportunities, fair wages, respect, career growth.
Boy from a rich urban family Higher income, maintenance of lifestyle, good business/career.
Girl from a rich urban family Gets as much freedom as her brother; decides what she wants in life; able to pursue studies abroad.
Adivasi from Narmada valley Fair compensation/rehabilitation if displaced; protection of forest rights; no submergence of ancestral land; preservation of culture.
🌟 Two Key Conclusions

1. Different persons can have different developmental goals.

2. What may be development for one may not be development for the other — it may even be destructive for the other.

Example: Industrialists want more dams for electricity; tribals resent displacement and prefer small check dams or tanks for irrigation.

⚡ Conflicting Development Goals — Sardar Sarovar Example

The raising of the height of Sardar Sarovar Dam on Narmada River illustrates conflicting goals: industrialists and farmers upstream get water/power, while tribals and downstream communities face submergence of land and displacement. This led to significant protest movements.

Note: A demonstration meeting against raising the height of Sardar Sarovar Dam on Narmada River is highlighted in the NCERT chapter as an iconic image of conflicting development goals.

3. Income and Other Goals

If you examine the developmental goals across different categories, one common thread emerges: people desire regular work, better wages, and decent prices — in other words, more income.

However, besides income, people also seek:

  • Equal treatment
  • Freedom
  • Security
  • Respect from others
  • Freedom from discrimination
⭐ Critical Insight — Beyond Material Goals

Money, or material things one can buy with it, is one factor on which life depends. But the quality of our life also depends on non-material things — friendship, freedom, security, dignity — that are not easily measured but mean a lot. It would be wrong to conclude that what cannot be measured is not important.

Example: A job may give less pay but offer regular employment that enhances sense of security. Another job may offer high pay but no job security and no time for family — reducing sense of freedom.

🔑 Women’s Development — A Composite Goal

If women are engaged in paid work, their dignity in the household and society increases. However, if there is respect for women, there would also be more sharing of housework and greater acceptance of women working outside. A safe and secure environment allows more women to take up jobs or run businesses.

Hence, developmental goals are not only about better income but also about other important things in life.

4. National Development

Since individuals seek different goals, their notion of national development is also likely to be different. It is very important to keep in mind that different persons could have different as well as conflicting notions of a country’s development.

🇮🇳 What National Development Means
  • Considering whether an idea will benefit a large number of people or only a small group.
  • Identifying what is a fair and just path for all.
  • Thinking about whether there is a better way of doing things.
  • Resolving conflicts between competing development visions democratically.
⚡ Case Study: Toxic Waste Dumping — Abidjan, Ivory Coast

A vessel dumped 500 tonnes of liquid toxic waste into open-air dumps in Abidjan, Ivory Coast (Africa). The highly toxic fumes caused nausea, skin rashes, fainting, and diarrhoea. Within a month: 7 persons died, 20 were hospitalized, 26,000 were treated for poisoning symptoms. A multinational petroleum and metals company had contracted a local company to dispose the toxic waste from its ship.

Lesson: National development must include environmental protection; development for some cannot come at the cost of destruction for others.

5. How to Compare Different Countries or States?

For comparing countries, income is considered one of the most important attributes. Countries with higher income are considered more developed. This is based on the understanding that more income means more of all things that human beings need.

Per Capita Income (Average Income)

The total income of the country is the income of all its residents. For comparison between countries, we use Per Capita Income = Total Income ÷ Total Population, because countries have different population sizes.

🔑 World Bank Classification (2024 Data)
CategoryPer Capita Income (US$ per annum, 2024)
High Income / Rich CountriesUS$ 66,500 and above
Low Income CountriesUS$ 2,300 or less
India (Low Middle Income)US$ 11,000 (approx.)

Rich countries (excluding Middle East and certain small countries) are generally called Developed Countries.

⚠️ Limitation of Average Income — The Disparity Problem

While averages are useful for comparison, they also hide disparities.

TABLE 1.2 — Comparison of Two Countries (Monthly incomes of 5 citizens, in ₹)
Country Citizen I Citizen II Citizen III Citizen IV Citizen V Average
Country A 9,500 10,500 9,800 10,000 10,200 10,000
Country B 500 500 500 500 48,000 10,000
💡 Key Inference from Table 1.2

Both countries have the same average income (₹10,000), yet they are very different:

  • Country A: More equitable distribution — people are neither very rich nor extremely poor. Preferred by most.
  • Country B: Most citizens are poor (₹500), one person is extremely rich (₹48,000). Unequal society.

Hence, while average income is useful for comparison, it does not tell us how income is distributed among people. The equitable distribution of income is equally important.

6. Income and Other Criteria — State Comparison

TABLE 1.3 — Per Capita Income of Select States (2023–24)
StatePer Capita Income (₹)
Haryana₹3,25,759
Kerala₹2,81,001
Bihar₹60,337
Source: Economic Survey 2024–25, Statistical Appendix, p. 32

If per capita income were the only measure, Haryana would be the most developed and Bihar the least. But this picture changes significantly when we examine other indicators.

TABLE 1.4 — Comparative Data: Haryana, Kerala and Bihar
State Infant Mortality Rate (per 1,000 live births, 2020) Literacy Rate % (2017–18) Net Attendance Ratio — Secondary (aged 15–17 yrs, 2017–18)
Haryana2882%73
Kerala694%94
Bihar2762%69
Sources: Economic Survey 2024–25, NSSO (Report No. 585), NSO, Govt. of India; NFHS-5, 2019-21, IIPS Mumbai.
⭐ Key Inferences — The Kerala Paradox
  • Kerala’s IMR is only 6 vs Haryana’s 28 — nearly 3 times better, despite Kerala having lower per capita income than Haryana.
  • Kerala’s literacy rate (94%) and Net Attendance Ratio (94) are the highest among the three.
  • This is because Kerala has adequate provision of basic health and educational facilities (public facilities model).
  • Bihar’s Net Attendance Ratio of 69 means nearly one-third of children aged 15–17 are not in school.
  • Conclusion: Per capita income alone is not a completely adequate indicator of development.
📖 Key Definitions (from NCERT)
  • Infant Mortality Rate (IMR): Number of children dying before the age of one year per 1,000 live births in a given year.
  • Literacy Rate: Proportion of literate population in the 7-and-above age group.
  • Net Attendance Ratio: Total number of children aged 15–17 years attending school as a percentage of total children in the same age group.

7. Public Facilities

🔑 Why Money Alone is Insufficient

“Money in your pocket cannot buy all the goods and services that you may need to live well.”

  • Money normally cannot buy a pollution-free environment.
  • Money cannot ensure you get unadulterated medicines unless you shift to a community that has them.
  • Money cannot protect you from infectious diseases unless the whole community takes preventive steps.
🏥 The Case for Collective Provision

For many important things in life, the best way, also the cheapest way, is to provide these goods and services collectively:

  • Collective security for a locality is cheaper than individual security for each house.
  • If no one else in your village wants to study, you cannot study either — unless parents can afford a private school elsewhere.
  • Ability to study depends on many other children wanting to study and government opening schools.
  • Even now in many areas, particularly girls cannot go to high school because of inadequate government/societal facilities.

Kerala’s Public Distribution System (PDS) functions well — this leads to better health and nutritional status.

⭐ UPSC Value Addition — Public Goods vs Private Goods

The chapter introduces the concept of public goods — goods and services that are best provided collectively (education, health, sanitation, security) as opposed to private provision. This aligns with the concept of market failures in economics, where markets fail to provide certain goods optimally, necessitating government intervention.

TABLE 1.5 — Educational Achievement of Rural Population of Uttar Pradesh
CategoryMaleFemale
Literacy rate for rural population76%54%
Literacy rate for rural children (age 10–14 yrs)90%87%
% of rural children (10–14 yrs) attending school85%82%
⚠️ Activity 2 — Fill in the Blanks (Standard Answers)

(a) Literacy rate is 76% for rural males and 54% for rural females. Beyond adult illiteracy, there are children currently not in school.

(b) 18% of rural girls and 15% of rural boys are not attending school. Illiteracy among 10–14 age group is 13% for rural females and 10% for rural males.

(c) This high illiteracy among the 10–14 age group, even after 75+ years of independence, is most disturbing. India is nowhere near the constitutional goal of free and compulsory education for all children up to age 14, which was expected by 1960.

8. Human Development Report (UNDP)

Once it is realised that income is inadequate as a development measure, we look for other criteria. Health and education indicators, along with income, form the basis of the Human Development Index (HDI).

🔑 Human Development Report — Key Facts
  • Published by UNDP (United Nations Development Programme).
  • Compares countries based on: Educational levels + Health status + Per Capita Income.
  • Per Capita Income is calculated in dollars using Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) — so every dollar buys the same amount of goods and services in any country.
  • Life Expectancy at birth: Average expected length of life of a person at birth.
  • HDI Ranks are out of 193 countries.
TABLE 1.6 — India and Neighbouring Countries (Human Development Report 2025, Data for 2023)
Country GNI Per Capita (2021 PPP $) Life Expectancy at Birth Mean Years of Schooling (25+ yrs) HDI Rank (2021–22)
Sri Lanka12,61677.510.889
India9,04772.06.9130
Myanmar4,91966.96.4150
Pakistan5,50167.64.3168
Nepal4,72670.44.5145
Bangladesh8,49874.76.8130
Source: Human Development Report 2025, UNDP, New York.
⭐ Key Inferences from Table 1.6
  • Sri Lanka is much ahead of India in every respect (HDI rank 89 vs India’s 130).
  • Nepal and Bangladesh have lower per capita income than India, yet Nepal and Bangladesh are better than India in life expectancy.
  • Bangladesh has the same HDI rank as India (130) despite lower GNI per capita.
  • Pakistan has a higher GNI per capita than Nepal but much worse HDI rank (168 vs 145).
  • This confirms that income alone does not determine human development.
📊 Comparing World Bank vs UNDP Approach
AspectWorld BankUNDP (HDR)
Primary CriterionPer Capita Income (GNI)Education + Health + Income
Index UsedPer Capita GNIHuman Development Index (HDI)
Currency BasisUS Dollars (market rate)PPP Dollars
FocusEconomic outputHuman well-being
LimitationIgnores health, education, equityMay still not capture all dimensions
🌟 The Essence of Human Development

By pre-fixing “Human” to “Development”, UNDP makes it very clear that what is important in development is what is happening to citizens of a country — their health and their well-being. It is people that matter most.

Activity 3 — Body Mass Index (BMI)

BMI Formula: Weight (kg) ÷ [Height (m)]²

  • BMI within normal range = healthy
  • BMI below normal = underweight/undernourished
  • BMI above normal = obese/overweight
  • Example: Girl aged 14 yrs 8 months with BMI 15.2 = undernourished
  • Example: Boy aged 15 yrs 6 months with BMI 28 = overweight
BMI Data — Adults (15–49 yrs) with BMI below normal (<18.5 kg/m²), India, 2019–21
StateMale (%)Female (%)
Kerala8.5%10%
Karnataka17%21%
Madhya Pradesh28%28%
All States20%23%
Source: National Family Health Survey-5, 2019–21, http://rchiips.org
💡 Inference from BMI Table
  • Kerala has the best nutritional levels (only 8.5% males, 10% females undernourished).
  • Madhya Pradesh is worst (28% both males and females undernourished).
  • Nationally, 1 in 5 persons is undernourished even though India argues there is enough food — pointing to distribution and access failures, not production failures.

9. Sustainability of Development

We would like the current level of development to go up further or at least be maintained for future generations. However, since the second half of the twentieth century, scientists have been warning that the present type and levels of development are not sustainable.

“We have not inherited the world from our forefathers — we have borrowed it from our children.” — Widely cited principle of intergenerational equity

Types of Resources

🔄 Renewable Resources

Resources that are replenished by nature, e.g., crops, plants, groundwater (replenished by rain).

However: Even renewable resources can be overused. If groundwater is extracted more than what is replenished by rain, it will be overused.

⚡ Non-Renewable Resources

Resources that will get exhausted after a few years of use. A fixed stock on earth — cannot be replenished. New discoveries add to stock, but over time even these will get exhausted. Example: Crude oil.

Example 1 — Groundwater Crisis in India

💧 Groundwater Overuse (from NCERT)
  • About 300 districts have reported water level decline of over 4 metres in the past 20 years.
  • Nearly one-third of the country is currently overusing groundwater reserves.
  • In another 25 years, 60% of the country would be doing the same if present use continues.
  • Groundwater overuse is particularly found in: Punjab, Western U.P., hard rock plateau areas of central and south India, some coastal areas, and rapidly growing urban settlements.
TABLE 1.7 — Crude Oil Reserves
Region/Country Reserves (2017) (Thousand Million Barrels) Years Reserves Will Last
Middle East83670 years
United States of America6910.5 years
World1,73247 years
Source: Energy Institute’s Statistical Review of World Energy, 2024.
⭐ Key Points on Crude Oil
  • World crude oil reserves (as of 2017) would last only about 47–50 years at present extraction rates.
  • India depends on importing oil from abroad — lack of sufficient domestic reserves.
  • Rising oil prices become a burden for oil-importing countries like India.
  • Countries like USA with low reserves seek to secure oil through military or economic power.
  • The question of sustainability raises fundamentally new issues about the nature and process of development.
🌍 Environmental Degradation — Cross-border Impact

Consequences of environmental degradation do not respect national or state boundaries. This issue is no longer region or nation specific — our future is linked together. Sustainability of development is a comparatively new area of knowledge in which scientists, economists, philosophers and other social scientists are working together.

10. UPSC Value Addition — Beyond the NCERT

📌 Amartya Sen’s Capability Approach

Nobel laureate Amartya Sen (who contributed to UNDP’s HDI) argues that development should be seen as expansion of human capabilities and freedoms — not just income growth. Real development means having the freedom to live a life of value: health, education, political participation, and social respect.

📌 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

The UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development has 17 SDGs, replacing the earlier Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). They address poverty, hunger, health, education, gender equality, clean water, clean energy, economic growth, inequality, climate action, etc. India has committed to achieving SDGs by 2030.

📌 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) vs Gross National Income (GNI) vs HDI
MetricMeaning
GDPTotal value of goods/services produced within a country’s borders
GNIGDP + Net factor income from abroad (used by World Bank for HDR)
PPPPurchasing Power Parity — adjusts for price differences across countries
HDIComposite index of GNI per capita (PPP) + Life Expectancy + Education (UNDP)
IMRInfant Mortality Rate — proxy for healthcare quality
⭐ India’s Data Points (for Quick Recall)
  • India’s HDI Rank: 130 out of 193 countries (HDR 2025, 2021–22 data)
  • India’s GNI per capita: $9,047 (PPP, 2021)
  • India’s Life Expectancy: 72 years
  • India’s Mean Years of Schooling: 6.9 years
  • India’s per capita income (World Bank, 2024): ~US$ 11,000 (Low Middle Income)
  • Haryana Per Capita (2023–24): ₹3,25,759 | Kerala: ₹2,81,001 | Bihar: ₹60,337

11. NCERT Exercise Questions with Answers

NCERT Exercises — Key Q&A
  1. Development of a country can generally be determined by (MCQ):
    Answer: (iv) All the above — per capita income, average literacy level, and health status of its people.
  2. Which neighbouring country has better human development than India?
    Answer: (ii) Sri Lanka — HDI rank 89 vs India’s 130.
  3. Average per capita income = ₹5,000. Three families earn ₹4,000, ₹7,000, ₹3,000. What does the 4th earn?
    Answer: (iv) ₹6,000. [Total = 5,000 × 4 = ₹20,000; 20,000 – (4,000+7,000+3,000) = ₹6,000]
  4. World Bank’s criterion for classifying countries and its limitations:
    Criterion: Per capita income (GNI). Limitations: Hides income inequality; does not reflect health, education, freedom, dignity, or quality of life. Two countries with same average income may be very different in actual well-being.
  5. UNDP vs World Bank — difference in measuring development:
    World Bank uses only per capita income. UNDP uses a composite HDI — combining per capita income (PPP), life expectancy at birth, and educational attainment (mean years of schooling). UNDP focuses on human well-being, not just economic output.
  6. Kerala with lower per capita income has better HDI than Haryana — does this make per capita income useless?
    No — per capita income is still a useful but insufficient criterion. Kerala’s better outcomes stem from strong public facilities (health, education, PDS), not higher income. Both income AND quality of public services matter. We need multiple indicators, not just one.
  7. Why is sustainability important for development?
    Because present patterns of resource use deplete non-renewable resources and overuse renewables, jeopardising future generations’ ability to meet their needs. Environmental degradation crosses national boundaries. Development must be inter-generationally equitable.
  8. “The Earth has enough resources to meet the needs of all but not enough to satisfy the greed of even one person.” — Relevance to development?
    This Gandhian statement underlines that the problem is not resource scarcity but unequal distribution and greed. Equitable development that conserves resources (sustainable development) can meet everyone’s genuine needs. Overconsumption by a few depletes resources for all.

12. “Let’s Work These Out” — Key Section Questions

💡 Answers to In-text Questions
  • Why do different persons have different notions of development? — (b) Because life situations of persons are different. This is more important than (a) people being different in personality, because it is the material and social circumstances that shape aspirations.
  • “People have different goals” vs “conflicting goals” — same? — Not the same. Different goals means each person has unique aspirations (e.g., labourers want work, farmers want better prices). Conflicting goals means the fulfilment of one person’s goal harms another (e.g., industrialists want dams; tribals don’t).
  • Where factors other than income matter: Safety at night, clean environment, freedom from discrimination, good health infrastructure, job security, social respect.
  • Is Haryana ahead of Kerala in literacy etc.? — No. Despite higher per capita income, Haryana has IMR of 28 vs Kerala’s 6, and lower literacy and attendance ratios. Kerala leads significantly in human development indicators.
  • Is collective provision cheaper? — Yes. Examples: collective water supply, public schools, public hospitals, community sanitation. Collective provision achieves economies of scale and serves those who cannot individually afford services.
  • Tamil Nadu vs West Bengal PDS: Tamil Nadu (90% rural using PDS) — people are better off because assured food security at subsidised prices prevents hunger and malnutrition.

13. Chapter Summary — Quick Revision

⭐ One-Page Summary
  1. Development = aspirations of people + ways to achieve them. Multidimensional concept.
  2. Different people have different (and sometimes conflicting) developmental goals based on their life situations.
  3. People seek income AND non-material goals (freedom, security, dignity, equal treatment).
  4. National development = thinking about what benefits the largest number, what is fair and just.
  5. For comparison, per capita income (average income) is the most common measure; used by World Bank.
  6. Per capita income hides disparities — distribution of income matters too.
  7. UNDP’s HDI uses income + education + health (life expectancy). Better than income alone.
  8. Kerala paradox: lower income, much better human development (better public facilities).
  9. Money cannot buy everything — public facilities (health, education, clean environment) need collective provision by the state.
  10. Sustainability of development: we must not deplete resources needed by future generations. Renewable resources can be overused; non-renewable resources will exhaust.
  11. Environmental degradation crosses national borders — global issue requiring global cooperation.
Practice MCQs
UPSC-Standard | Chapter 1: Development | 10 Questions
1 According to NCERT, which of the following correctly distinguishes between the World Bank and UNDP approaches to measuring development?
  • A. World Bank uses HDI; UNDP uses per capita GNI
  • B. World Bank uses per capita income; UNDP uses a composite index of income, health, and education
  • C. Both use per capita income but at different PPP rates
  • D. World Bank uses IMR and literacy; UNDP uses GNI alone
Answer: B — The World Bank classifies countries primarily by per capita GNI. UNDP’s Human Development Report uses the HDI — a composite of per capita income (PPP), life expectancy, and educational attainment.
2 As per the World Bank’s World Development Report, countries with a per capita income of US$ 66,500 per annum and above in 2024 are classified as:
  • A. Middle Income Countries
  • B. Emerging Market Economies
  • C. High Income or Rich Countries
  • D. Developed Industrial Nations
Answer: C — Countries with per capita income of US$ 66,500 per annum and above in 2024 are called high income or rich countries. India, with ~US$ 11,000, is in the low middle income category.
3 Consider the following statements about Kerala and Haryana from the NCERT chapter:
1. Haryana has higher per capita income than Kerala.
2. Kerala has a lower Infant Mortality Rate than Haryana.
3. Haryana has a higher literacy rate than Kerala.
Which of the statements above is/are correct?
  • A. 1 and 3 only
  • B. 1 and 2 only
  • C. 2 and 3 only
  • D. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: B — Haryana’s per capita income (₹3,25,759) is higher than Kerala’s (₹2,81,001). Kerala’s IMR (6) is far lower than Haryana’s (28). However, Statement 3 is WRONG — Kerala’s literacy rate (94%) is higher than Haryana’s (82%).
4 The concept of Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) used in the Human Development Report ensures that:
  • A. Every country uses the same currency for calculation
  • B. Richer countries get proportionally higher HDI scores
  • C. Every dollar buys the same amount of goods and services in any country
  • D. Inflation rates are standardised across all countries
Answer: C — PPP adjusts income figures so that a dollar represents the same purchasing power across all countries, enabling meaningful international comparisons of living standards.
5 According to Table 1.6 in NCERT (Human Development Report 2025, data for 2023), which of India’s neighbours has the LOWEST HDI rank among those listed?
  • A. Nepal
  • B. Bangladesh
  • C. Myanmar
  • D. Pakistan
Answer: D — Pakistan’s HDI rank is 168, the lowest among India’s neighbours listed. Myanmar is 150, Nepal 145, Bangladesh and India both 130, and Sri Lanka is 89.
6 The chapter cites the example of Country A and Country B with identical average incomes of ₹10,000 per month but very different income distributions. What is the primary lesson drawn?
  • A. Average income is a useless indicator and should be abandoned
  • B. Country B is better because it has one very wealthy citizen
  • C. Average income is useful for comparison but hides inequalities in distribution
  • D. Per capita income should be replaced by median income in all cases
Answer: C — While averages enable comparison, they conceal how income is distributed. Country A (equitable) is preferred over Country B (one extremely rich, rest very poor) even though both have the same average income.
7 In the context of groundwater sustainability discussed in the NCERT chapter, which of the following is CORRECT?
  • A. Groundwater is a non-renewable resource and cannot be replenished
  • B. About 300 districts have reported water level decline of over 4 metres in the past 20 years
  • C. Groundwater overuse is mainly found in coastal areas only
  • D. The problem of groundwater depletion is limited to urban areas
Answer: B — Groundwater IS a renewable resource (replenished by rain) but can be overused. About 300 districts have reported a decline of over 4 metres in 20 years. Overuse is found in Punjab, Western UP, central/south India plateaus, coastal areas, AND urban settlements.
8 Why does Kerala, despite having lower per capita income than Haryana, have a much lower Infant Mortality Rate? The NCERT chapter attributes this primarily to:
  • A. Higher foreign direct investment in healthcare
  • B. Greater number of private hospitals
  • C. Adequate provision of basic health and educational facilities, including a well-functioning Public Distribution System
  • D. Lower population density leading to better resource availability
Answer: C — The chapter explicitly states: “Kerala has a low Infant Mortality Rate because it has adequate provision of basic health and educational facilities.” The functioning PDS also contributes to better health and nutritional status.
9 Which of the following best explains why development goals of different groups are sometimes described as “conflicting” rather than just “different”?
  • A. People have different income levels and aspirations
  • B. Rural and urban populations have different lifestyles
  • C. The fulfilment of one group’s goal may actively harm or destroy what another group values
  • D. Governments cannot satisfy all groups simultaneously due to budget constraints
Answer: C — Conflicting goals (as opposed to just different goals) arise when one group’s development actively harms another. Example: industrialists wanting dams for electricity leads to displacement and submergence of tribal lands — destructive for tribals. Merely different goals don’t necessarily harm each other.
10 As per the Energy Institute’s Statistical Review of World Energy 2024 (cited in NCERT), at the current rate of extraction, global crude oil reserves (as estimated in 2017) would last approximately:
  • A. 25 years
  • B. 35 years
  • C. 47 years
  • D. 70 years
Answer: C — Global reserves of 1,732 thousand million barrels would last approximately 47 years. Middle East reserves (836 thousand million barrels) would last 70 years; USA’s reserves (69 thousand million barrels) only 10.5 years.
📝 Sources Cited in the NCERT Chapter
  • Economic Survey 2024–25, Government of India
  • National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO), Report No. 585
  • National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5), 2019–21, IIPS Mumbai
  • Human Development Report 2025, UNDP, New York
  • Energy Institute’s Statistical Review of World Energy, 2024
  • World Development Indicators, World Bank
  • Useful websites: www.budgetindia.nic.in | www.undp.org | www.worldbank.org | www.rbi.org | http://rchiips.org

Legacy IAS, Bengaluru — UPSC Civil Services Coaching

Content based on NCERT Class X Understanding Economic Development (Reprint 2026–27). All data and conceptual content credited to NCERT/Government of India. Compiled for educational use only.

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