CHAPTER 14
Economic Activities Around Us
Exploring Society: India and Beyond | Class 6
“The root of prosperity is economic activity, the lack of it brings material distress.” — Kautilya’s Arthashastra |
THE BIG QUESTIONS 1. How are economic activities classified? 2. What differentiates these activities to be grouped into sectors? 3. How are the three sectors interconnected? |
PART A: NOTES
1. Key Terms to Remember
Term | Meaning |
Monetary Value | Value of something that can be measured in terms of money |
Economic Activity | Any activity that creates monetary value |
Economic Sector | A broad group of similar economic activities |
Primary Sector | Activities that extract raw materials directly from nature |
Secondary Sector | Activities that process primary sector outputs into goods |
Tertiary Sector | Activities that provide services to primary and secondary sectors |
Cooperative | A group of people who voluntarily work together to meet economic/social needs |
Middlemen | Persons who buy goods from producers and sell them to consumers |
Pasteurisation | Heating milk to kill harmful bacteria and preserve it |
Dairy | A place where milk is collected and stored |
Export | Goods produced in one country and sold to buyers in another country |
Retail | Sale of goods in small quantities directly to the end consumer |
Warehouse | Large building for storing products before they are sold |
2. Three Sectors of Economic Activity
Economic activities are classified into three sectors based on their characteristics:
PRIMARY SECTOR | SECONDARY SECTOR | TERTIARY SECTOR |
Directly from nature | Processing raw materials | Services to support others |
Agriculture, Mining, Fishing, Forestry, Livestock | Manufacturing, Construction, Electricity, Water supply | Banking, Transport, Healthcare, Trade, Software |
🌾 Raw materials | 🏭 Finished goods | 🛎️ Services |
- Primary Sector
Definition: Activities directly dependent on nature to produce goods. Key word: EXTRACTION from nature Examples: Agriculture, Mining, Fishing, Forestry, Raising Livestock Easy Trick: If you get the product DIRECTLY from nature = Primary |
- Secondary Sector
Definition: Activities that transform primary sector outputs into finished goods. Key word: PROCESSING/MANUFACTURING Examples: Automobile factories, textile mills, flour mills, furniture making, electricity production Easy Trick: If you TRANSFORM a raw material into a product = Secondary |
- Tertiary Sector (Service Sector)
Definition: Activities that provide services to support primary and secondary sectors. Key word: SERVICES Examples: Banking, Transport, Healthcare, Education, Hotels, Software development, Trade & retail Easy Trick: If you PROVIDE A SERVICE (not a physical product) = Tertiary |
3. Interdependence Among Sectors
All three sectors are interconnected and depend on each other. No sector can work alone.
CASE STUDY: AMUL — A Story of All Three Sectors AMUL (Anand Milk Union Limited) was set up in 1946 in Gujarat. Here is how all three sectors work together: PRIMARY: Farmers raise cows/buffaloes and collect milk (directly from nature) SECONDARY: Milk is processed in factories into butter, ghee, cheese, milk powder TERTIARY: Products are transported, stored, and sold in retail shops across India and exported worldwide Key people: Tribhuvandas Patel (lawyer & freedom fighter) and Dr. Varghese Kurien (engineer). Inspired by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. |
AMUL Flow Diagram (Primary → Secondary → Tertiary)
🐄 PRIMARY Cows give milk | → | 🏭 SECONDARY Milk → Butter, Cheese, Ghee | → | 🚚 TERTIARY Transport & sold in shops |
EXAMPLE 2: How a Textbook is Made PRIMARY: Trees are cut in the forest (forestry) TERTIARY: Logs are transported to paper mill by trucks SECONDARY: Wood pulp is converted into paper in factory SECONDARY: Paper is printed and bound into textbooks TERTIARY: Books are stored in warehouses and sold in bookshops Bonus Fact: Recycling 1 tonne of paper saves 17 trees and takes 70% less energy than making new paper! |
PART B: ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS
Section I: In-Chapter Activity Answers
Think About It — Primary Activities
Q: Name two primary activities you may have seen and the natural resources used. 1. Agriculture — natural resource: soil, sunlight, water. (e.g., growing rice or wheat) 2. Fishing — natural resource: water bodies like rivers, ponds, or the sea. |
Let’s Explore — Secondary Sector
Q: Name two more economic activities in the secondary sector. 1. Construction of roads and bridges 2. Production of medicines in pharmaceutical factories |
Let’s Explore — Labelling Fig. 14.1 (Textbook Production)
Label each step in the textbook-making diagram: 1. Cutting trees in forest → PRIMARY SECTOR 2. Loading & stacking logs → PRIMARY SECTOR 3. Transporting logs by truck → TERTIARY SECTOR 4. Transporting logs on highway → TERTIARY SECTOR 5. Converting pulp into paper rolls (factory) → SECONDARY SECTOR 6. Storing paper in warehouse → TERTIARY SECTOR 7. Printing textbooks → SECONDARY SECTOR 8. Selling books in a shop → TERTIARY SECTOR |
Let’s Explore — Neighbourhood Activities
Sample Answer (students may vary based on their neighbourhood): PRIMARY: Vegetable farming → supplies raw vegetables SECONDARY: Flour mill → converts wheat (primary) into flour (product) TERTIARY: Vegetable vendor / grocery shop → sells flour and vegetables to consumers Connection: If the vegetable farming stopped, the shop would have nothing to sell, and the flour mill would have no wheat to process. All three are dependent on each other. |
Section II: End-of-Chapter Exercise Answers
Q1. What is the primary sector? How is it different from the secondary sector? Give two examples.
Primary Sector: Activities where people directly depend on nature to produce goods. The product comes straight from a natural source. Secondary Sector: Activities where raw materials from the primary sector are processed or transformed into new products.
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Q2. How does the secondary sector depend on the tertiary sector? Illustrate with examples.
The secondary sector cannot work alone — it needs tertiary sector services to function: 1. Transportation: Factories need trucks, trains, and ships to bring raw materials and deliver finished goods. Example: Cotton bales are transported from farms (primary) to textile factories (secondary) by trucks (tertiary). 2. Banking & Finance: Factories need loans from banks (tertiary) to buy machines, pay workers, and run operations. 3. Trade & Retail: Once goods are made, they need to reach consumers through shops, dealers, and trading companies (all tertiary). 4. Communication & Software: Factories use IT/software (tertiary) to manage orders, inventory, and production. Conclusion: Without tertiary services, secondary industries cannot get raw materials, sell their products, or manage their businesses. |
Q3. Give an example of interdependence between primary, secondary and tertiary sectors. Show it using a flow diagram.
Example: Cotton Cloth Production All three sectors work together step by step:
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PART C: WORKSHEET
Name: _______________________________ Class: _____________ Date: _______________
Section A: Multiple Choice Questions (1 mark each)
Circle the correct answer:
- Which of the following is a PRIMARY sector activity?
- a) Making furniture
- b) Fishing
- c) Banking
- d) Software development
Answer: ___________ (Correct: b)
- Processing of milk into butter is an example of which sector?
- a) Primary
- b) Tertiary
- c) Secondary
- d) None of the above
Answer: ___________ (Correct: c)
- AMUL was set up in the year:
- a) 1940
- b) 1942
- c) 1946
- d) 1950
Answer: ___________ (Correct: c)
- The tertiary sector is also called the:
- a) Service sector
- b) Manufacturing sector
- c) Extraction sector
- d) None
Answer: ___________ (Correct: a)
- Which leader advised farmers to form a cooperative?
- a) Dr. Varghese Kurien
- b) Tribhuvandas Patel
- c) Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
- d) Jawaharlal Nehru
Answer: ___________ (Correct: c)
Section B: Fill in the Blanks (1 mark each)
Word Box: [ middlemen | tertiary | AMUL | pasteurisation | monetary | secondary | cooperative | primary ]
- Activities that create ______________ value are called economic activities.
- Mining of coal is a ______________ sector activity.
- The process of heating milk to kill bacteria is called ______________.
- A ______________ is a group of people who come together to meet economic needs collectively.
- Transportation, banking, and healthcare belong to the ______________ sector.
- Farmers in Anand district depended on ______________ to sell their milk before forming the cooperative.
- ______________ is a famous milk cooperative from Gujarat.
- A flour mill converting wheat into flour is an example of the ______________ sector.
Section C: Match the Following (1 mark each)
Column A | Column B |
1. Agriculture | a. Tertiary sector |
2. Furniture making | b. Primary sector |
3. Banking | c. Service sector (another name for tertiary) |
4. Mining | d. Secondary sector |
5. Transportation | e. Processing raw material into goods |
Answers: 1-b | 2-d | 3-a | 4-b | 5-a
Section D: Classify the Activities (2 marks each)
Write P (Primary), S (Secondary), or T (Tertiary) in the blank:
Activity | Answer | Key |
Working as a nurse in a hospital | ___ | T |
Growing vegetables in a farm | ___ | P |
Making paper in a factory | ___ | S |
Driving a truck to deliver goods | ___ | T |
Extracting oil from groundnut | ___ | S |
Collecting honey from forests | ___ | P |
Repairing a washing machine | ___ | T |
Constructing a building | ___ | S |
Section E: Short Answer Questions (2–3 marks each)
- What is a cooperative? How did AMUL help farmers?
- Why are economic activities classified into sectors? What is the benefit?
- Explain with an example how the three sectors are interdependent.
Quick Revision Summary ✦
Remember with this simple formula: 🌿 PRIMARY = Nature → Raw Material (Grows, Mines, Catches) 🏭 SECONDARY = Factory → Makes a Product (Processes, Manufactures, Constructs) 🛎️ TERTIARY = Service → Helps Others (Transports, Teaches, Banks, Heals) All three sectors are interconnected — if one stops, the others are affected too! |
