Chapter 13
The Value of Work
Opening Quote & Big Questions
- What are the different types of activities that people engage in?
- What is their contribution to our everyday lives?
This chapter belongs to the section "Economic Life Around Us" in the NCERT book Exploring Society: India and Beyond. It introduces students to the distinction between economic and non-economic activities, and explains concepts like value addition, forms of payment, and the social importance of non-economic activities.
Two Categories of Activities
Different types of activities that people engage in are divided into two groups or categories:
| Category 1 | Economic Activities — activities that involve money or are performed in exchange for money or money's worth. |
| Category 2 | Non-Economic Activities — activities that do not generate income or wealth but are done out of feelings like gratitude, love, care and respect. |
- Economic activity = involves money / exchange for money or money's worth
- Non-economic activity = no income generation; driven by gratitude, love, care, respect
Key Definitions — NCERT Glossary (Exam Critical)
The NCERT provides specific definitions for key terms in the margin/sidebars. These are frequently asked in exams:
| Term | Who Receives It | Frequency | Nature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salary | Employee from employer | Fixed, generally monthly | Cash, regular |
| Wage | Worker from employer | For a specific period (daily/weekly) | Usually cash |
| Fee | Professional (doctor, lawyer) | Per service/advice | Cash |
| Payment in Kind | Worker | Per work done | Non-cash (goods of equal value) |
Economic Activities — Definition & Examples
Economic activities are those that involve money or are performed in exchange for money or money's worth for the parties involved.
| Business Person | A business person selling school bags in the market — earns money from the sale. |
| Farmer | A farmer selling produce in the market — earns money from the sale. |
| Lawyer | A lawyer arguing a case and earning a fee — earns a professional fee. |
| Truck Driver | A truck driver transporting goods from one place to another — earns for the service. |
| Factory Workers | Workers employed in a car manufacturing factory — earn wages/salary. |
| Geeta Aunty (IAF Pilot) | A pilot in the Indian Air Force — receives a salary; serves the country and performs an economic activity. |
| Rohan (Software Engineer) | Works for a software company and is given a salary — economic activity. |
| Uncle (Construction Technician) | A technician in a construction company, operates a bulldozer — receives a monthly salary. |
| Kavya's Aunt (Post Office) | Employed at the village post office — paid a monthly salary. |
| Kavya's Aunt (Online Classes) | Conducts online classes to help students prepare for school exams — charges a weekly fee. |
| Sahil (Farm Labourer) | Uses a tractor to till a farmer's land — earns a daily wage (partly in cash, partly in kind — mangoes of equal value = payment in kind). |
| Anu's Parents (Garment Shop) | Run a shop that sells uniforms and other ready-made garments — business/economic activity. |
| Rajesh (Carpenter) | Buys wood, makes furniture, sells chair for ₹1,000 — economic activity with value addition. |
Non-Economic Activities — Definition & Examples
Non-economic activities are those that do not generate income or wealth but are done out of feelings like gratitude, love, care and respect.
| Parents Cooking | Parents cooking food for the family — done out of love and care, no money involved. |
| Helping with Schoolwork | Parents or elders helping their children with schoolwork — out of love and care. |
| Youth Caring for Grandparents | Youth taking care of the grandparents — out of respect and love. |
| Family Home Renovation | Family members helping in the renovation of the house — out of love and care. |
| Kabir's Grandfather | Voluntarily teaches the neighbourhood kids Geography for free — non-economic (no payment). |
| Kabir's Grandfather | Tending to the vegetable garden — non-economic activity. |
| Kabir's Grandfather | Running errands for the home — non-economic activity. |
| Anu's Mother | Contributes to a voluntary group that teaches knitting to women in the community — non-economic (voluntary/no pay). |
| Rohan (Weekends) | Volunteers to teach computer skills to those in the youth development programme of the nearby college — non-economic activity (no pay). |
| Kavya's Aunt (Household Chores) | Woke up early to finish her share of the household chores — non-economic activity. |
The NCERT asks: "When Kabir's grandfather voluntarily teaches the neighbourhood kids for free, is that an economic activity or a non-economic activity? How is it different from your teachers teaching you at school?"
Answer: Kabir's grandfather teaches for free / voluntarily → Non-economic activity (no money involved; done out of care/love for the community).
School teachers teach students and receive a salary → Economic activity (involves payment in exchange for professional service).
Key distinction: The activity (teaching) is the same, but the presence or absence of monetary compensation determines whether it is economic or non-economic.
Forms of Payment for Economic Activities
People engaged in economic activities are compensated in various ways:
| Salary | A fixed, regular payment generally paid monthly by an employer to an employee. Examples from chapter: IAF pilot Geeta Aunty, software engineer Rohan, construction technician uncle, post office worker aunt. |
| Fee | A payment made to a person or organisation in exchange for professional advice or services. Examples: Doctor, Lawyer, Kavya's aunt charging a weekly fee for online tuition classes. |
| Wage | A payment made by the employer to the worker for a specific period of time. Example: Sahil the farm labourer earns a daily wage for tilling the land. |
| Payment in Kind | A non-cash payment received for work performed — goods of equal value given instead of money. Example: Sahil receives part of his payment in mangoes (equal in value to the remaining cash amount owed). |
| Profit / Revenue from Business | Business persons earn money from the sale of goods and services. Examples: Anu's parents' garment shop; farmer selling produce; business person selling school bags. |
Sahil, a farm labourer, uses a tractor to till a farmer's land nearby. He earns a daily wage. He gets some payment in cash, and the remaining part of the payment in the form of mangoes of equal value. The mangoes received as part of his work are called payment in kind.
This is a very common exam question — distinguishing cash payment from payment in kind.
Value Addition — Concept & Numerical Example
Economic activities also add value at each stage of the process of transforming something into another form. This is called value addition.
Economic activities have value in terms of money. Economic activities also add value at each stage of the process of transforming something into another form. This is called value addition.
The NCERT uses the example of Rajesh the Carpenter (Kavya's father) to explain value addition:
| Cost of Wood (Input) | ₹600 |
| Selling Price of Chair (Output) | ₹1,000 |
| Value Added | ₹400 (₹1,000 − ₹600) |
| What ₹400 Represents | The monetary value of Rajesh's skill, time and effort which went into making the chair. |
| Conclusion | Rajesh has added value to the wood by turning it into furniture. From buying the wood to selling the chair, all activities involve payment → part of economic activities. |
Value addition = the difference between the value of output (finished good) and the value of input (raw material). It represents the contribution of labour, skill, time, and effort at each stage of production.
Every step from raw material → finished product → market involves payment and is an economic activity.
Activities That Do / Do Not Create Monetary Value
The NCERT provides a table (LET'S EXPLORE) asking students to identify which activities create monetary value. Here are the answers with explanations:
| Activity / Profession | Creates Monetary Value? | Economic / Non-Economic |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Baker | ✅ Yes — bakes and sells bread/cakes for money | Economic |
| 2. Tailor | ✅ Yes — stitches clothes and charges a fee | Economic |
| 3. Farmers repairing their tractor | ✅ Yes — tractor repair maintains a productive asset; enables farming for income | Economic |
| 4. Doctor | ✅ Yes — provides medical services and charges a fee | Economic |
| 5. Parents cooking dinner for their family | ❌ No monetary value created — done out of love/care | Non-Economic |
| 6. Scientist | ✅ Yes — receives salary/grant; research creates value | Economic |
| 7. Person taking care of a sick grandparent | ❌ No — done out of love and care, no payment involved | Non-Economic |
The Importance of Non-Economic Activities
The NCERT dedicates an entire section to explaining why non-economic activities matter:
"While non-economic activities may not involve money, the value they generate is important in our lives."
| Social Welfare | Non-economic activities contribute to social welfare — community service, volunteering, helping neighbours. |
| Personal Wellbeing | They contribute to personal wellbeing — caring for family members, emotional support, relationships. |
| Quality of Life | They enhance the overall quality of life for individuals and communities. |
| Community Bonds | Foster a sense of satisfaction and gratitude for what we have; a way of contributing to society without expecting anything in return. |
Sevā — Selfless Service
Sevā means selfless service. It is a form of non-economic activity rooted in Indian tradition and community life.
| Meaning | Sevā = Selfless service |
| Where Found | We see sevā in many places such as temples, gurudwaras, mosques and churches. |
| Example — Langar | Langars (community kitchens) at gurudwaras serve food to every visitor for free — a prime example of sevā. |
| Example — Temple | Temples distributing prasād to devotees — a form of sevā. |
| Value Created | These practices foster a sense of satisfaction and gratitude for what we have, and they are also a way of contributing to society without expecting anything in return. |
The NCERT specifically mentions Langar at the Golden Temple (Amritsar) as an example of community kitchen / sevā. A langar serves food to every visitor regardless of religion, caste, or background — a perfect example of selfless service (non-economic activity).
Community Participation — Swachh Bharat Abhiyan & Van Mahotsav
The NCERT discusses collective community participation as another form of non-economic activity that generates social value:
| Swachh Bharat Abhiyan | Based on the collective efforts of all Indian citizens to keep surroundings clean. Individually, people keep homes and surroundings clean. People also come together to clean streets, roads, parks and other public places or community areas. Together, these efforts lead to a clean home, neighbourhood, society and nation. |
| Van Mahotsav | The festival of forests in India — celebrated to promote awareness about the value of trees and the conservation of forests. The initiative brings together members of the community for tree plantation drives. |
Van Mahotsav literally means the 'festival of forests'. It is celebrated in India to promote:
- Awareness about the value of trees
- The conservation of forests
- It brings together community members for tree plantation drives
This is a non-economic activity — no monetary exchange; done for environmental and social benefit.
The NCERT asks: "We celebrate many festivals in India. During these festivals, people gather to organise all the various activities. They decorate the place together and share the food that they cook. Are these non-economic activities? Why do you think they still hold value?"
Answer Pointer: Yes, these are non-economic activities — they do not involve monetary exchange. But they hold immense value because they strengthen community bonds, foster a sense of belonging, preserve culture and traditions, and contribute to personal and social wellbeing.
All Characters from the Chapter & Activity Classification
The NCERT uses stories of specific characters. All their activities are listed below with classification — this is the complete LET'S EXPLORE table answer:
| Character | Activity | Economic / Non-Economic | Form of Payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Geeta Aunty (IAF Pilot) | Flying for the Indian Air Force | Economic | Salary (monthly) |
| Kabir's Grandfather (Retired BSF) | Freely teaching Geography to neighbourhood kids | Non-Economic | None (voluntary) |
| Kabir's Grandfather | Tending to the vegetable garden | Non-Economic | None |
| Kabir's Grandfather | Running errands for the home | Non-Economic | None |
| Anu's Parents | Running a garment shop (uniforms and ready-made clothes) | Economic | Profit / Business revenue |
| Anu's Mother | Contributes to voluntary group teaching knitting to women | Non-Economic | None (voluntary) |
| Anu's Brother Rohan | Works as software engineer in a company | Economic | Salary (monthly) |
| Anu's Brother Rohan | Volunteers to teach computer skills (youth development programme) | Non-Economic | None (voluntary) |
| Kavya's Uncle | Technician in construction company, operates bulldozer | Economic | Monthly salary |
| Kavya's Aunt | Household chores (before going to work) | Non-Economic | None |
| Kavya's Aunt | Works at village post office | Economic | Monthly salary |
| Kavya's Aunt | Conducts online tuition classes for school exam prep | Economic | Weekly fee |
| Sahil (Farm Labourer) | Tills farmer's land using tractor | Economic | Daily wage (partly cash + partly in kind = mangoes) |
| Rajesh (Carpenter, Kavya's Father) | Buys wood → makes furniture → sells chairs | Economic (with value addition) | Profit from sales (₹400 value added per chair) |
| School Teachers | Teaching students at school | Economic | Salary |
| Volunteers (Swachh Bharat) | Cleaning streets, roads, parks, public areas | Non-Economic | None (community service) |
| Community (Van Mahotsav) | Tree plantation drives | Non-Economic | None |
| Gurudwara Volunteers | Serving food in Langar (community kitchen) | Non-Economic (Sevā) | None (selfless service) |
Key Takeaways — "Before We Move On"
- In this chapter, we learnt about economic and non-economic activities.
- We also learnt about the value addition that economic activities create.
- We understood how non-economic activities contribute to social welfare, personal wellbeing and enhance the overall quality of life.
End-Chapter Questions with Answer Pointers
| Q1 — Economic vs Non-Economic | How are economic activities different from non-economic activities? Pointer: Economic = involves money/money's worth; examples: selling, professional services, manufacturing. Non-economic = no income; driven by love, care, gratitude, respect; examples: cooking for family, volunteering, caring for grandparents. |
| Q2 — Types of Economic Activities | What kind of economic activities do people engage in? Illustrate with examples. Pointer: Primary (farming, fishing), secondary (manufacturing — Rajesh making furniture), tertiary (services — doctor, lawyer, truck driver, software engineer). All involve payment. |
| Q3 — Value of Community Service | There is great value attached to people who are engaged in community service activities. Comment. Pointer: Community service (sevā, langar, Swachh Bharat, Van Mahotsav, voluntary teaching) contributes to social welfare, strengthens bonds, enhances quality of life — valuable even without monetary reward. |
| Q4 — Ways of Compensation | What are the various ways in which people are compensated for economic activities? Pointer: Salary (monthly, fixed — Rohan, pilot, post office worker); Wage (specific period, daily — Sahil); Fee (professional services — doctor, lawyer, tuition); Payment in Kind (non-cash — mangoes to Sahil); Profit (business revenue — Anu's parents, Rajesh). |
MCQ Practice — Chapter 13
40 Questions · The Value of Work · UPSC / State PCS Standard


