Class 9 Social Science · Chapter 2

Samacheer Class 9 Social Science - Employment in India and Tamil Nadu

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Chapter-wise textbook exercise answers for Employment in India and Tamil Nadu with validation-aware solutions.

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Sections in this chapter
I. Choose the correct answer 8II. Fill in the blanks 11I. Choose the correct answer / Match the following 1I. Choose the correct answer (continued) 3IV. Give Short answers 3V. Answer in detail 4VI. Projects and Activities 2VII. HOTS 1VIII. Life Skill 1III. Match the following 1
Your Progress - Chapter 20% complete
1I. Choose the correct answer8 questions
Q.1We take age group _______ years for computation of the workforce.v
  1. a. 12-60
  2. b. 15-60
  3. c. 21-65
  4. d. 5-14
Solution

The usual working-age population used for workforce calculations is taken from 15 years upwards (commonly 15–60). Therefore option (b) 15-60 is correct.

Answer:

b

Q.2Which is the correct sequence of various sectors in GDP of India in the descending order?v
  1. a. Primary sector, Secondary sector, Tertiary sector
  2. b. Primary sector, Tertiary sector, Secondary sector
  3. c. Tertiary sector, Secondary sector, Primary sector
  4. d. Secondary sector, Tertiary sector, Primary sector
Solution

In India the largest contributor to GDP is the tertiary (service) sector, followed by the secondary (industry) sector and lastly the primary (agriculture) sector. So (c) is correct.

Answer:

c

Q.3Which one of the following sectors is the largest employer in India.v
  1. a. Primary Sector
  2. b. Secondary Sector
  3. c. Tertiary Sector
  4. d. Public sector
Solution

The primary sector (agriculture and allied activities) employs the largest share of the Indian workforce. So (a) Primary Sector is correct.

Answer:

a

Q.4Which one of the following is not in Primary Sectorv
  1. a. Agriculture
  2. b. Manufacturing
  3. c. Mining
  4. d. Fishery
Solution

Manufacturing is part of the secondary (industrial) sector, not the primary sector. Thus (b) is correct.

Answer:

b

Q.5Which one of the following is not in the Secondary Sector?v
  1. a. Construction
  2. b. Manufacturing
  3. c. Small Scale Industry
  4. d. Forestry
Solution

Forestry is part of the primary sector (natural resources), so it is not in the secondary sector. Option (d) is correct.

Answer:

d

Q.6Tertiary Sector include/sv
  1. a. Transport
  2. b. Insurance
  3. c. Banking
  4. d. All of these
Solution

Transport, insurance and banking are all service activities and belong to the tertiary sector. Therefore (d) All of these is correct.

Answer:

d

Q.7Which sector is not included in the occupational pattern?v
  1. a. Primary sector
  2. b. Secondary sector
  3. c. Tertiary sector
  4. d. Private sector
Solution

Occupational pattern classifies workers by economic activity: primary, secondary and tertiary sectors. 'Private sector' is not an occupational sector classification. So (d) is correct.

Answer:

d

Q.9Which Delhi Sultan of medieval India formed 'Employment Bureau' to solve the unemployment problem.v
  1. a. Muhamad Bin Tugluq
  2. b. Allauddin Khilji
  3. c. Feroz Shah Tugluq
  4. d. Balban
Solution

Firoz Shah Tughlaq is known for public welfare measures and is credited with establishing employment-generating public works (employment bureaus). So (c) is correct.

Answer:

c

2II. Fill in the blanks11 questions
Q.1In ______ sector, the employment terms are not fixed and regular.v
Solution

The unorganised (informal) sector typically has irregular employment, no fixed terms and limited social security.

Answer:

unorganised sector

Q.2Economic activities are classified into _______ and _______ sectors.v
Solution

Economic activities can be classified on the basis of registration and rules into the organised sector (registered, regulated) and unorganised sector (informal).

Answer:

organised and unorganised sectors

Q.3________ has always featured as an important element of development policy in India.v
Solution

Employment generation has been a central objective of India's development policies to reduce poverty and provide livelihoods.

Answer:

employment

Q.4Employment pattern changes due to_________________v
Solution

Industrialisation, technological change and urbanisation shift employment from primary to secondary and tertiary sectors, changing the employment pattern.

Answer:

industrialisation and urbanisation

Q.5The nature of employment in India is _______.v
Solution

A large share of employment in India is in the unorganised/informal sector with insecure, low-paid jobs.

Answer:

predominantly unorganised and informal

Q.6________ of the economy is the number of people in the country, who work and also capable of working.v
Solution

The workforce or labour force includes all persons who are able and willing to work — i.e., those employed plus those unemployed but seeking work.

Answer:

workforce (labour force)

Q.7Public sector means ______________v
Solution

The public sector consists of government-owned organisations and undertakings that are financed and managed by the state.

Answer:

enterprises owned and operated by the government

Q.10_________ sector is registered and follows government rules.v
  1. a. Agriculture
  2. b. Organised
  3. c. Unorganised
  4. d. Private
Solution

The organised sector is registered, regulated and follows government rules and labour laws. Hence (b) Organised is correct.

Answer:

b

Q.11__________ sector provides job security and higher wagesv
  1. a. Public sector
  2. b. Organised sector
  3. c. Unorganised sector
  4. d. Private sector
Solution

The organised sector (which includes many public and private formal enterprises) generally offers job security and better wages and benefits. So (b) Organised sector is the best choice.

Answer:

b

Q.12Find the odd onev
  1. a. Banking
  2. b. Railways
  3. c. Insurance
  4. d. Small Scale Industry
Solution

Banking, railways and insurance are service (tertiary) sector activities; small-scale industry is manufacturing (secondary sector). So (d) Small Scale Industry is the odd one.

Answer:

d

Q.13The sectors are classified into Public and Private sectors on the basis ofv
Solution

Classification into public and private sectors is based on ownership and control of enterprises — government ownership (public) versus individual/corporate ownership (private).

Answer:

ownership

3I. Choose the correct answer / Match the following1 questions
Q.8Match the List I with List II using the codes given below: I a. Agriculture, Forestry, Fishery and Mining b. Manufacturing, Electricity Gas and Water Supply c. Trade, Transport and Communication d. Unincorporated Enterprises and Household industries II 1. Unorganised sector 2. Service Sector 3. Secondary sector 4. Primary Sector Codes: a. 1 2 3 4 b. 4 3 2 1 c. 2 3 1 4 d. 3 2 4 1v
Solution

Correct matching: a → 4 (Primary sector), b → 3 (Secondary sector), c → 2 (Service/Tertiary sector), d → 1 (Unorganised sector). This corresponds to code option (b) 4 3 2 1.

Answer:

b

4I. Choose the correct answer (continued)3 questions
Q.14Assertion (A): The unorganised sector of the economy is characterised by household manufacturing activity and small-scale industry. Reason (R): Jobs here are low paid and often not regular.v
  1. a. Both (A) and (R) are true and (R) explains (A)
  2. b. Both (A) and (R) are true and (R) does not explain (A)
  3. c. (A) is correct and (R) is false
  4. d. (A) is false and (R) is true
Solution

Both statements are true. (A) defines the unorganised sector by its types of activities; (R) states typical characteristics of jobs in that sector (low pay, irregular). R describes attributes but does not explain why the sector is defined by household manufacturing and small-scale industry, so R does not explain A.

Answer:

b

Q.15People who employ workers and pay rewards for their work are termed as _______.v
  1. a. employee
  2. b. employer
  3. c. labour
  4. d. caretaker
Solution

An employer is a person or organization that employs workers and pays them wages or salaries.

Answer:

b

Q.16__________ continues to be the largest employer in Tamil Nadu.v
  1. a. Agriculture
  2. b. Manufacturing
  3. c. Banking
  4. d. Small Scale Industry
Solution

Agriculture continues to employ the largest share of the workforce in Tamil Nadu (as in many Indian states), especially in rural areas.

Answer:

a

5IV. Give Short answers3 questions
Q.IV.1What is the labour force of the economy?v
Solution

Labour force = persons capable of and available for work; it includes those currently working and those unemployed but actively looking for work.

Answer:

The labour force (workforce) comprises all persons of working age who are either employed or actively seeking employment — i.e., employed plus unemployed who are available for work.

Q.IV.2Why are children and old age (above 60 years) not considered for computation of workforce?v
Solution

Workforce calculation focuses on persons of working age who are able and available for employment; children and many elderly are excluded because they are typically economically inactive.

Answer:

Children are usually below working age and legally/biologically not expected to be part of the labour force; many are in school. People above 60 are often retired and not actively seeking work. Workforce counts include those of working age who are available and willing to work.

Q.IV.3What are the three sectors of an economy?v
Solution

Provide names and a one-line description for each sector with examples.

Answer:

The three sectors are: (1) Primary sector — extraction of natural resources (e.g., agriculture, fishing); (2) Secondary sector — manufacturing and construction; (3) Tertiary sector — services (e.g., trade, transport, education, health).

6V. Answer in detail4 questions
Q.V.1Explain: (a) primary sector; (b) secondary sector; (c) tertiary sector.v
Solution

Each sector defined with examples and role: primary supplies raw materials, secondary transforms them into goods, tertiary provides services that facilitate production and well-being.

Answer:

(a) Primary sector: Activities that extract or produce natural resources (e.g., agriculture, fishing, forestry, mining). It provides raw materials for other sectors.
(b) Secondary sector: Activities that process raw materials into goods (manufacturing, construction, small-scale industries, textile mills, factories).
(c) Tertiary sector: Service activities that support production and consumption (trade, transport, banking, education, healthcare, administration, IT services).

Q.V.2Explain the employment structure of India.v
Solution

Summarise: high share of workforce in agriculture; growing services sector; organised sector small compared to unorganised; need for job creation in manufacturing and formal services to absorb labour and raise incomes.

Answer:

India's employment structure has historically been dominated by the primary sector (agriculture) in terms of employment, while GDP share of agriculture has declined. Secondary (manufacturing, construction) employs fewer people than agriculture but is important for industrialisation. The tertiary (services) sector contributes the largest share of GDP and is growing fast in employment in urban areas. A large portion of employment is informal/unorganised, with low wages and little social security; there are regional and gender disparities and a gradual shift from agriculture to services and industry over time.

Q.V.3Compare the employment conditions prevailing in the organised and unorganised sectors.v
Solution

Compare under headings: job security, wages, benefits, working hours, legal protection, scale of units, examples; conclude that unorganised sector needs policies for social protection and formalisation.

Answer:

Organised sector: formal workplaces with written employment contracts, regular wages/salaries, fixed working hours, social security benefits (EPF, ESI), job security and regulated working conditions. Unorganised sector: informal, small-scale or household enterprises, irregular/casual work, low and uncertain wages, no social security, poor working conditions, and limited legal protection. The unorganised sector employs a large share of India's workforce but contributes less per worker to GDP and has higher vulnerability.

Q.V.4Distinguish between the Public sector and the Private sector.v
Solution

List key distinguishing features (ownership, objective, control, funding, examples) and give short examples for clarity.

Answer:

Public sector: enterprises owned and managed by the government (central or state), aimed at public service, welfare, strategic goals or infrastructure; funded by public money; examples: government railways, some banks, public hospitals. Private sector: enterprises owned by individuals or private companies, driven mainly by profit motive, funded by private capital; examples: private firms, factories, private banks and corporations. Differences: ownership (government vs private), objective (public service vs profit), funding source, accountability (public scrutiny vs shareholders), and employment terms (often different pay/benefits structures).

7VI. Projects and Activities2 questions
Q.VI.1Make a long list of all kinds of work that you find adults around you. In what way can you classify them?v
Solution

Instructions: (1) List occupations you observe. (2) For each, mark sector and whether organised/unorganised and skill level. (3) Count how many fall in each category and summarise patterns.

Answer:

Classify the listed adult occupations by sector (primary, secondary, tertiary), by formality (organised vs unorganised), by skill level (skilled, semi-skilled, unskilled) and by employment relation (self-employed, casual, salaried). Example classifications: farmer — primary/self-employed; shopkeeper — tertiary/self-employed; factory worker — secondary/organised or unorganised; teacher — tertiary/salaried/organised.

Q.VI.2A research scholar looked at the working people in the city of Chennai and found the following: Classify the following list of occupations under primary, secondary and tertiary sectors. Milk vendor, tailor, teacher, doctor, farmer, postman, engineer, potter, fisherman, artisans, policeman, banker, driver, carpenter.v
Solution

Classification (short, student‑ready):
- Primary sector (extractive/agriculture): Farmer (works in fields; typically self‑employed or family labour), Fisherman (works on sea/river; often self‑employed or small boats).
- Secondary sector (manufacturing/processing/artisan production): Tailor (garment manufacture/repair; small shop or home unit), Potter (ceramics workshop; small scale manufacturing), Artisans (various craft workshops), Carpenter (woodworking shop; production of goods).
- Tertiary sector (services/transport/trade): Milk vendor (retail dairy trader; marketplace/street selling), Teacher (schools/colleges; salaried or contractual), Doctor (clinics/hospitals; salaried or private practice), Postman (postal delivery; salaried public service), Policeman (public security services; salaried), Banker (bank branch; salaried), Driver (transport services; wage earner or owner‑driver), Engineer (professional services in offices/sites; salaried or consultant).
Notes for classroom use: fill in 'Place of work' (e.g., fields, workshops, shops, offices, clinics, streets), 'Nature of employment' (self‑employed, wage/salaried, contract), and 'Percentage' only if you have survey data; the textbook activity asks students to collect such local data themselves.

Answer:

Primary: Farmer; Fisherman. Secondary: Tailor; Potter; Artisans; Carpenter. Tertiary (Service): Milk vendor; Teacher; Doctor; Postman; Policeman; Banker; Driver; Engineer.

8VII. HOTS1 questions
Q.VII.1Discuss the sectors of your village economy.v
Solution

Use local data: list activities under each sector, give examples, describe employment share and recent trends (growth or decline), and suggest improvements (training, market access).

Answer:

Identify main activities in your village under: primary (e.g., farming, fishing, livestock), secondary (e.g., local artisans, small workshops, food processing), tertiary (e.g., shops, transport, schools, health centre). Describe relative importance (which employs most people), seasonal patterns, linkages (how primary supplies secondary), and any changes (migration, mechanisation).

9VIII. Life Skill1 questions
Q.VIII.1Tertiary sector is in top position in the world now. Justifyv
Solution

Key reasons: higher productivity and value addition in services, technological advances, urbanisation, increased demand for healthcare/education/finance, and global trade in services (IT/BPO).

Answer:

The tertiary (service) sector dominates many economies because services (IT, finance, education, health, tourism) add high value, require skilled labour, and expand with higher incomes and urbanisation. In most developed countries services contribute the largest share of GDP and employment; globalization and technology have increased demand for services worldwide.

10III. Match the following1 questions
Q.IIIMatch the following: 1. Public sector - a. Banking 2. Private sector - b. Poultry 3. Primary sector - c. Profit motive 4. Tertiary sector - d. Service motivev
Solution

Public sector often includes nationalised banking (1 → a). Private sector operates for profit (2 → c). Primary sector includes activities like poultry/farming (3 → b). Tertiary sector is service-oriented (4 → d).

Answer:

1-a, 2-c, 3-b, 4-d