Economic Development - India 🇮🇳 (+ Types Of Aid) Flashcards

1
Q

What is India’s population?

A

~1.3 billion

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2
Q

What political development is happening in India?

A

India was a British colony until 1947 but now has a democratic government

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3
Q

What social developments are happening in India?

A

Medium level of development (HDI=0.64)
Large inequalities - some people are very wealthy, but others are extremely poor (20% population live in poverty)
Education is improving - adult literacy rate is 75%

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4
Q

What cultural developments are happening in India?

A

India has a rich and diverse culture
22 languages (recognised)
Many religions (Hinduism, Islam)
Renowned for ‘Bollywood’ which are exported worldwide
Distinctive music and dancing too

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5
Q

What environmental developments are happening in India?

A

Varied landscape, Himalayas in north, Thar desert in north west, and large forests
Floodplains of several rivers (Ganges) provide fertile land
Long coastline, attractive tourist destination - development of ports, Mumbai, increasing trade

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6
Q

What is the primary industry like in India?

A

Employs 42% of working population
Only makes up 15% of GDP (gross domestic product)

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7
Q

What is the secondary industry like in India?

A

2018 - employs 24% of workforce
Growth of manufacturing industries has stimulated economic development by creating reliable jobs
Employment leads to positive cycle of economic growth, workers spend income in local shops, these shops pay taxes, government can spend more on development (education) which attracts more industry into area

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8
Q

What are the tertiary and quaternary industries like in India?

A

Employ 34% of workforce (combined)
Due to growth in IT firms and supplying customer service centres
Contribute to 62% of India’s GDP

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9
Q

What is a TNC?

A

Transnational corporation that operates in more than one country

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10
Q

Where are TNCs located?

A

Factories located in LICs - cheaper, less regulations, more profit
Offices/HQ located in HICs - people have more administrative skills (better education)

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11
Q

Advantages of TNCs in India

A
  • provide employment - Unilever employs 16,000 people
  • pay tax of about 40% of their income (large profit for government)
  • some TNCs run programmes to increase development in India (Project Shakti helps poor women become entrepreneurs by providing loans - 75,000 women in scheme)
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12
Q

Disadvantages of TNCs in India:

A
  • some profits from TNCs leave India
  • if operations close, jobs are lost (or relocation makes jobs unreliable)
  • cause environmental problems (air and water pollution)
  • employees get low pay and poor working conditions
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13
Q

How have India’s political relationships changed?

A
  • tension between China, Pakistan and India over land around a border - risk of conflict
  • built relationships with other nations in region (Act East Policy) provides security
  • India working with bordering countries to build the TAPI pipeline to carry gas from Turkmenistan, through Afghanistan and Pakistan to India
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14
Q

How have India’s trading relationships changed?

A
  • since 1991, reduced barriers to trade by reducing tariffs and forming free trade agreements with Bangladesh, China, South Korea and Sri Lanka - trade in more important and easy
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15
Q

What are the different types of aid?

A

Short-term
Long-term
Top-down
Bottom-up

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16
Q

What is short-term aid?

A

Money and supplies given to help countries cope with emergencies

17
Q

Impacts of short-term aid

A

Helps people survive disasters, doesn’t help long-term recovery

18
Q

What is long-term aid?

A

Money is invested into longer-term projects to help countries become more developed

19
Q

Impacts of long-term aid?

A

Help country’s development, improving education/infrastructure
Corrupt government could spend the aid on non-important investments

20
Q

What is top-down aid?

A

Aid is sent to an organisation or government who then decides how aid should be used

21
Q

Impacts of top-down aid?

A

Projects can improve country’s economy, but may not help the poorest people or be supported by locals

22
Q

What is bottom-up aid?

A

Money/supplies given directly to local communities so they decide how to spend the money themselves

23
Q

Impacts of bottom-up aid?

A

Provide help where it’s needed most, improves health, skills and income in poorer communities

24
Q

Examples of each type of Aid sent to India:

A

Short-term: 2010 floods, UNICEF provided emergency supplies (mosquito nets)
Long-term: until 2015, UK sent £200 million a year to India to improve development
Top-down: Sadat Sarovar Dam provides water and generates hydroelectric power
Bottom-Up: Self-Employed Women’s Association trained local women to maintain and repair water pumps (increasing skills and water supply)

25
Q

Effects on quality of life as India has developed:

A
  • more jobs, daily wages increased by 42 rupees since 2010 (people have more disposable income)
  • 1990-2008: access to clean water improve from 68% —> 88% of population
  • BUT some jobs (coal mining) can be dangerous or have poor working conditions which can reduce workers quality of life
26
Q

Effects on the environment as India has developed:

A
  • energy consumption increased with economic development, fossil fuels release lots of pollution and greenhouse gases
  • demand for resources destroys habitats (coal mining led to decline of Bengal tigers)
  • increased income from development means people can afford to protect environment rather than exploiting it