CH 13 The Value of Work

CHAPTER 13

The Value of Work

Exploring Society: India and Beyond | Economic Life Around Us

Class Notes + Worksheet with Answers

When you are doing any work, do not think of anything beyond. Do it as worship, as the highest worship, and devote your whole life to it for the time being.

— Swami Vivekananda

  📖  CHAPTER NOTES 

  1. Introduction — The Story of Anu & Kabir

Anu and Kabir observe the people around them and realise that everyone does many different activities every day. Some earn money from their work; others do work purely out of love, duty or community spirit.

◆ Activities of People in the Story

Character

Activity

Type

Payment

Geeta Aunty

Pilot in Indian Air Force

Economic

Salary

Kabir’s Grandfather

(1) Teaching neighbourhood kids free Geography classes

Non-Economic

No pay — voluntary

Kabir’s Grandfather

(2) Tending vegetable garden

Non-Economic

No pay — for family

Kabir’s Grandfather

(3) Running errands for home

Non-Economic

No pay — for family

Anu’s Father (Appa)

Running garment/uniform shop

Economic

Profit from sales

Anu’s Mother (Maa)

(1) Running garment shop (part time)

Economic

Profit from sales

Anu’s Mother (Maa)

(2) Teaching knitting to women (voluntary group)

Non-Economic

No pay — voluntary

Rohan (Anu’s brother)

(1) Software engineer — computer applications company

Economic

Salary

Rohan (Anu’s brother)

(2) Weekend volunteer — teaching computer skills at youth programme

Non-Economic

No pay — voluntary

Key Learning

The same person can do BOTH economic activities (for money) AND non-economic activities (for love/community). Rohan earns salary + volunteers; Maa runs shop + teaches knitting free.

  1. Economic Activities vs Non-Economic Activities

Aspect

Economic Activity 💰

Non-Economic Activity 💚

Definition

Activities that involve money or are done in exchange for money or money’s worth

Activities done out of love, care, gratitude or respect — NOT for money

Main purpose

To earn income / profit / livelihood

Social welfare, personal joy, family love, community spirit

Payment

Yes — salary, wage, fee, profit, or payment in kind

No payment — done voluntarily and freely

Examples from textbook

Air Force pilot (salary), software engineer (salary), carpenter (profit), farmer selling harvest, truck driver

Teaching neighbours free, cooking for family, tending vegetable garden, volunteering at youth programme

Value created

Monetary value — adds to income, GDP and national wealth

Social, emotional, moral value — builds bonds and society

Can one person do both?

Yes! Geeta Aunty earns salary as pilot (economic) AND Kabir’s grandfather teaches free (non-economic)

Yes! Rohan earns salary on weekdays (economic) AND volunteers on weekends (non-economic)

  1. Types of Economic Activities — Kavya’s Story

Kavya visits her aunt in village Kamlapur. She observes various economic activities around her — a highway construction site, her uncle’s job, her aunt’s job, and a farm labourer.

◆ People and Their Economic Activities

Person

Job / Activity

Payment Type

Amount / Detail

Kavya’s Uncle

Technician in construction company; operates bulldozer on highway

Salary

Monthly salary

Kavya’s Aunt

(1) Post office employee

Salary

Monthly salary from govt

Kavya’s Aunt

(2) Online coaching classes for school exam students

Fee

Weekly fee from students

Sahil (farm labourer)

Tilling farmer’s land with tractor at mango orchard

Wage + Payment in Kind

Part cash (daily wage) + part mangoes of equal value

Highway construction site

Excavators, bulldozers operated by technicians

Salary/Wage

Various — daily or monthly

  1. Value Addition — Rajesh the Carpenter

Value Addition — Rajesh the Carpenter Example 🪑

VALUE ADDITION = The extra value added to a raw material at each stage of turning it into a finished product.

Step 1: Rajesh BUYS wood from market → Cost = ₹600 (raw material)

Step 2: Rajesh uses tools + skill + time + effort to MAKE a chair (value-adding process)

Step 3: Rajesh SELLS the chair for ₹1,000 in the market (finished product)

Value Added = ₹1,000 − ₹600 = ₹400  ← This is the monetary value of Rajesh’s skill, time and effort

Key point: ALL steps — buying wood, making chair, selling — involve payment and are ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES.

  1. Ways of Being Paid — Types of Compensation

Type of Payment

Definition

Example from Textbook

Salary

Fixed regular payment given monthly by employer to employee

Geeta Aunty (Air Force pilot), Rohan (software engineer), Kavya’s aunt (post office), Kavya’s uncle (construction company)

Wage

Payment for a specific period of work (daily/weekly) by employer to worker

Sahil the farm labourer — earns a daily wage for tilling fields with tractor

Fee

Payment made to a person in exchange for professional advice or services

Lawyer arguing a case, Doctor’s consultation, Kavya’s aunt charging weekly fee for online exam coaching classes

Profit

Money earned by a business owner after deducting all costs and expenses

Anu’s parents earn profit from their uniform/garments shop; Rajesh the carpenter earns profit (₹1,000 − ₹600 = ₹400 value added)

Payment in Kind

Non-cash payment received for work — goods/products instead of money

Sahil receives part of his wages as mangoes (equal in value to the cash part)

  1. The Importance of Non-Economic Activities

While non-economic activities do not generate money, they generate immense SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL and MORAL VALUE. They build relationships, communities and nations.

Non-Economic Activities — Community Examples 🌿

Sevā (Selfless Service) 🙏

•      Langar at Gurudwaras — community kitchen serves free food to every visitor, rich or poor, of any religion

•      Prasad distribution at temples — food/sweets given free to devotees

•      These foster gratitude and a spirit of giving — contributing to society without expecting anything in return

Community Participation Examples 🌍

•      Swachh Bharat Abhiyan: Collective effort of citizens to keep streets, parks, roads and public spaces clean. Individual clean homes + community cleanups = clean nation.

•      Van Mahotsav (Festival of Forests): Community tree plantation drives to promote awareness about value of forests and conservation

•      Festival celebrations: Decorating together, cooking together, sharing food — non-economic but hold enormous cultural, emotional and social value

◆ Why Non-Economic Activities Are Valuable

  • Build strong family bonds — parents cooking, helping with homework, caring for grandparents
  • Create community spirit — festivals, tree planting drives, cleanliness campaigns
  • Foster gratitude and satisfaction — sevā at places of worship
  • Support social welfare — volunteers fill gaps that money alone cannot fill
  • Improve quality of life — a loving family, clean neighbourhood and green environment have no price tag

Think About It

Kabir’s grandfather teaches free (non-economic). School teacher teaches for salary (economic). Same activity — teaching — but the purpose and payment are different. That is how we classify them!

  1. Which Activities Create Monetary Value? (Let’s Explore Table)

Activity / Profession

Creates Monetary Value?

Explanation

Baker

✅ YES

✅ YES

Tailor

✅ YES

✅ YES

Farmer repairing tractor

✅ YES

✅ YES

Doctor

✅ YES

✅ YES

Parents cooking for family

❌ NO

❌ NO

Scientist

✅ YES

✅ YES

Person caring for sick grandparent

❌ NO

❌ NO

Teacher at school

✅ YES

✅ YES

Street food vendor

✅ YES

✅ YES

  1. Key Terms Glossary

Key Term

Meaning

Economic Activity

Any activity that involves money or is done in exchange for money/money’s worth

Non-Economic Activity

Activity done out of love, care, gratitude or respect — no monetary exchange involved

Market

A place where people exchange goods and services, usually for money

Money’s Worth

The monetary value a person places on an object based on the benefit they get from it

Fee

Payment to a person for professional advice or services (e.g. doctor, lawyer, tutor)

Salary

Fixed regular payment, generally monthly, from employer to employee

Wage

Payment from employer to worker for a specific period (e.g. daily, weekly)

Payment in Kind

Non-cash payment for work — goods or products of equivalent value (e.g. mangoes instead of cash)

Value Addition

Extra value added to raw material at each stage of transforming it into a finished product

Profit

Money earned by a business owner after all costs are deducted

Sevā

Selfless service done for others without expecting anything in return

Langar

Free community kitchen at gurudwaras that serves food to all visitors regardless of religion or status

Van Mahotsav

Festival of Forests — community tree plantation drives to promote forest conservation

Swachh Bharat Abhiyan

Government scheme for collective citizen effort to keep India clean

  📝  WORKSHEET WITH ANSWERS 

  1. In-Chapter Questions (Let’s Explore & Think About It)

◆ Let’s Explore — Activities of People in the Story

Q1. What activities did the people in Anu’s and Kabir’s story engage in? Classify as Economic or Non-Economic.

✅ Character → Activity → Type: 

Geeta Aunty → Pilot in Indian Air Force → ECONOMIC (earns salary) 

Kabir’s Grandfather → (1) Teaching Geography free to neighbourhood kids → NON-ECONOMIC (voluntary, no pay) (2) Tending vegetable garden → NON-ECONOMIC (for family, no pay) (3) Running errands for home → NON-ECONOMIC (for family, no pay) 

Anu’s Father (Appa) → Running garment/uniform shop → ECONOMIC (earns profit) 

Anu’s Mother (Maa) → (1) Running garment shop → ECONOMIC (earns profit) (2) Teaching knitting to women in voluntary group → NON-ECONOMIC (voluntary, no pay)

Rohan (Anu’s brother) → (1) Software engineer at computer applications company → ECONOMIC (earns salary) (2) Volunteering to teach computer skills on weekends → NON-ECONOMIC (voluntary, no pay) 

Key insight: Many people do BOTH types — showing that human contribution goes beyond just earning money.

◆ Think About It — Grandfather teaching vs School Teacher

Q2. When Kabir’s grandfather voluntarily teaches neighbourhood kids for free — is that economic or non-economic? How is it different from your teacher teaching you?

✅ Kabir’s Grandfather: NON-ECONOMIC activity. He teaches FREE of charge, out of love for the community and to share his knowledge.

Your School Teacher: ECONOMIC activity. The school teacher receives a SALARY every month from the school in exchange for their teaching services.

KEY DIFFERENCE — Same activity (teaching), but: – Grandfather: no payment → NON-ECONOMIC – School teacher: receives salary → ECONOMIC 

Additional insight: Both types of teaching have great value. The grandfather’s free teaching benefits the neighbourhood (social value), while the school teacher’s paid teaching is part of a formal education system (economic value).

◆ Think About It — On the Way to School (Economic Activities)

Q3. On your way from home to school, what economic activities do people engage in? How are they paid?

✅ Economic activities seen on the way to school and how people are paid:  Do by yourself

◆ Think About It — Community Participation & Festivals

Q4. Are festival celebrations (cooking, decorating, sharing food) non-economic activities? Why do they still hold value?

✅ Yes, festival celebrations are NON-ECONOMIC activities. No one pays the other for cooking, decorating or sharing food during a festival — it is all done out of joy, love, tradition and community spirit. 

Why they still hold great value:

1. Cultural value: Festivals preserve traditions, art forms, music, food — passing them from generation to generation

2. Social bonding: People come together, strengthen relationships and feel a sense of belonging

3. Community unity: Neighbours who may not talk daily cooperate during festivals — building community spirit

4. Emotional well-being: The joy, laughter and togetherness during festivals reduce stress and build happiness

5. Moral and spiritual value: Many festivals have religious or moral lessons that teach values like gratitude, sharing and charity  Examples: Diwali (lighting + sharing sweets), Eid (cooking biryani + giving to neighbours), Pongal (cooking together in the fields), Holi (playing colours together) — all non-economic but priceless in value. 

Conclusion: Value is NOT only measured in money. Non-economic activities create the social glue that holds families, communities and nations together.

  1. Exercise Questions and Answers

Q1. How are economic activities different from non-economic activities?

✅ ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES: –

Definition: Activities that involve money or are done in exchange for money or money’s worth –

Purpose: To earn income, profit or livelihood –

Payment: Always involves some form of compensation — salary, wage, fee, profit or payment in kind –

Examples: Pilot receiving salary, farmer selling harvest, lawyer charging fee, carpenter selling furniture, truck driver charging for transport –

Value created: Monetary (adds to personal income and national GDP) 

NON-ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES: –

Definition: Activities done out of feelings like love, care, gratitude and respect — NOT for money –

Purpose: Family welfare, community service, personal satisfaction, social good –

Payment: No monetary payment — done voluntarily –

Examples: Parents cooking for family, grandfather teaching kids free, volunteers at NGOs, seva at gurudwaras, festival celebrations –

Value created: Social, emotional, moral value 

KEY DIFFERENCE IN ONE LINE: If you get paid → Economic Activity. If you do it for love/community → Non-Economic Activity.

Q2. What kind of economic activities do people engage in? Illustrate with examples.

✅ Economic activities can be grouped into 3 main types: 

1.     PRIMARY ACTIVITIES (directly using natural resources): – Farming / Agriculture: Farmer sells wheat/rice/mangoes in market; earns profit – Mining: Coal/iron ore mined and sold – Fishing: Fisher sells fish in market – Forestry: Timber harvesting 

2.     SECONDARY ACTIVITIES (manufacturing / processing): – Manufacturing: Factory workers making cars, clothes, medicines; earn wages/salary – Construction: Kavya’s uncle operates bulldozer on highway construction site; earns salary – Crafts: Rajesh the carpenter buys wood (₹600) → makes chair → sells for ₹1,000 (value addition = ₹400) –

3.     TERTIARY ACTIVITIES (services): – Transportation: Truck driver transporting goods; earns wage/salary – Education: School teacher, Kavya’s aunt charging weekly fee for online coaching – Healthcare: Doctor charging consultation fee – Communication: Post office staff (Kavya’s aunt) earning monthly salary – Trade: Anu’s parents running garment shop; earning profit – Technology: Rohan as software engineer earning salary 

Q3. There is great value attached to people engaged in community service activities. Comment on this statement.

✅ This statement is absolutely TRUE. People engaged in community service perform NON-ECONOMIC activities, but their contribution to society is IMMEASURABLE. 

1. They fill the gaps money cannot fill: For example, teach slum children who cannot afford schools. 

2. They build social cohesion: Anu’s mother teaching knitting to women; Rohan volunteering at the youth programme — all of these build stronger, more capable communities.

3. They inspire others: When people see others serving selflessly, they are inspired to give back too. This creates a ripple effect of goodness. 

4. Sevā and tradition: India has a rich tradition of sevā — langars at gurudwaras, prasad at temples, Swachh Bharat volunteers.

Q4. What are the various ways in which people are compensated for economic activities? Give examples.

✅ People are compensated (paid) for economic activities in these ways: 

1.     SALARY: –

Definition: Fixed regular payment, generally monthly, Examples: Geeta Aunty (Air Force pilot), Rohan (software engineer)

2.     WAGE: –

Definition: Payment for a specific period of work (daily/weekly) — usually for labour/manual work –  Example: Sahil the farm labourer earns a daily wage for tilling the farmer’s land with a tractor 

3.     FEE: –

Definition: Payment for professional advice or services (not a regular job) –

Examples: Lawyer arguing a case; doctor’s consultation; Kavya’s aunt charges a weekly fee for online exam coaching classes 

4.     PROFIT: –

Definition: Money earned by a business owner after all costs are deducted –

 Examples: Rajesh the carpenter sells chair for ₹1,000 (cost ₹600) → profit/value added = ₹400 

5.     PAYMENT IN KIND: – Definition: Non-cash payment — goods or products instead of money – Example: Sahil receives part of his daily wage as MANGOES of equal value (instead of full cash payment) 

Summary: Salary (regular job) → Wage (daily/specific period) → Fee (professional service) → Profit (business) → Payment in Kind (goods instead of cash)

  1. The Big Questions

Q1. What are the different types of activities that people engage in?

✅ People engage in two broad types of activities: 

TYPE 1 — ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES: Activities that involve money or are done in exchange for money or money’s worth

Three sub-types: (a) Primary activities: (b) Secondary activities: (c) Tertiary activities:

TYPE 2 — NON-ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES:

Definition: Activities done out of love, care, gratitude or respect — no monetary exchange. Examples: Parents cooking for family,

Q2. What is the contribution of different activities to our everyday lives?

✅ CONTRIBUTION OF ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES: 

1. Food on our table: Farmers grow crops, truck drivers transport them to cities, vendors sell them in markets — without these economic activities, there would be no food. 

2. Goods and services: Factory workers make our clothes, cars, mobile phones. All economic activities that directly serve our daily needs. 

3. Livelihoods: Every economic activity creates jobs —

4. National development: Highway construction (Kavya’s uncle’s job) reduces travel time.

5. Value addition: Every step of transforming raw material into a finished product adds value.

CONTRIBUTION OF NON-ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES: 

1. Family wellbeing 

2. Social harmony: uplift the community without expecting payment. 

3. Environmental care: Van Mahotsav tree planting, Swachh Bharat cleanups

4. Cultural continuity: preserve India’s rich cultural heritage. 

5. Moral foundation: Sevā, gratitude, love, care — these non-economic values are the foundation of a just and compassionate society. 

Conclusion: Economic activities generate wealth; non-economic activities generate wellbeing. A fulfilling life needs BOTH.

— END OF CHAPTER 13 NOTES AND WORKSHEET —

Prepared for classroom use | Reprint 2025-26

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