What do you understand by the drain of Indian wealth during the colonial
period?
Answer:
Drain of wealth means that British policies in India were to
snatch maximum from India and serve the interests of the British. The surplus
did not bring any wealth to India. The surplus was used to pay for the expenditure
incurred on the offices in Britain. The surplus was used to pay the expenses of
war.
The surplus was paid to the import of services of British
officers in India.
Which is regarded as the defining year to mark the demographic transition from its first to the second
decisive stage?
Answer:
1921 is the defining year. It is called “ Year of Great Divide”.
Give a quantitative appraisal of India’s demographic profile
during the colonial period.
Answer:
High Birth Rate (48)and High Death Rate (40)
High infant Mortality Rate(18 per thousand live birth)
Low Life Expectancy- 32 Years
Mass illiteracy –Literacy Rate as per 1941 Census was 17%
Low standard of Living- Income was being spent only on Basic
necessities.
Highlight the salient features of India’s pre-independence
occupational structure.
Answer:
The occupational structure means the distribution of work force
among different sectors of an economy. The state of occupational structure at
the time of independence was as follows:
Pre-dominance of Agriculture sector: nearly 72% of the work
force was engaged in agriculture.
Growing Regional variations:
TN Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra the agricultural declined but in North it
remained high.
10. Underscore some of India’s most crucial economic challenges at
the time of independence.
Answer:
Little industrialisation and decline of handicraft
Low ag. Output and high imports of grain
Low national Income
Very sluggish economic progress
Unemployment and underemployment
Very high infant mortality rate low standard of living
When was India’s first official census operation undertaken?
Answer:
First official census was under taken in the year 1881
Indicate the volume and direction of trade at the time of independence.
Answer: India has been an
important trading nation since ancient times. But restrictive policy was in
favour of British. The state of India’s Foreign at the eve of independence was
as follows.
• Net exporter of raw material and importer of finished goods. Exporter of primary Products- such as raw silk, cotton, wool,
sugar, indigo, jute, etc. Importer of finished goods such as cotton, silk and
woollen clothes, machinery.
• Monopoly control over India’s Foreign Trade
•
India had large export
surplus which was used by British to finance their expenditure on office, war,
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