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Production Across Countries & Interlinking Production

🎓 Class 10 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 4 — Globalisation and the Indian Economy ⏱ ~15 min
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This MCQ module is based on: Production Across Countries & Interlinking Production

[myaischool_lt_sst_assessment grade_level="class_10" subject="economics" difficulty="intermediate"]

Production Across Countries & Interlinking Production

NCERT Understanding Economic Development | Chapter 4: Globalisation and the Indian Economy

A World of Choices — How Globalisation Connects Markets

Look around your home and you will likely spot goods manufactured by companies headquartered thousands of kilometres away. The newest smartphones, digital cameras, and automobiles from leading global brands are easily available in Indian markets today. Gone are the days when consumers had only a handful of domestic brands to choose from. Within just a few decades, Indian markets have undergone a remarkable transformation, offering an extraordinary variety of products from across the globe.

How did this change happen? What forces are driving this transformation? And how are these shifts affecting the lives of ordinary people? These are the central questions that this chapter on globalisation? sets out to explore.

How Do MNCs Spread Production Across Countries?

Until the middle of the twentieth century, the production of goods was largely confined within national boundaries. What moved across borders were mostly raw materials, foodstuffs, and finished products. Colonial territories like India exported raw materials and food items while importing manufactured goods from their colonial rulers. International trade served as the primary channel connecting distant countries.

This pattern changed dramatically with the emergence of large companies called multinational corporations (MNCs)?. An MNC is a company that owns or controls production operations in more than one country. These corporations establish their offices and factories in regions where they can access cheap labour and resources, thereby reducing their production costs and maximising profits.

Definition
Multinational Corporation (MNC): A company that owns or controls production activities in more than one nation. MNCs seek locations offering low-cost labour, access to raw materials, proximity to markets, and favourable government policies.

How MNCs Spread Production Globally

Consider the example of a large MNC manufacturing industrial equipment. It designs its products at research centres in the United States, manufactures components in China (where manufacturing costs are low), ships them to Mexico and Eastern Europe for assembly (locations close to the US and European markets), and sells the finished products worldwide. Meanwhile, the customer service operations are handled through call centres based in India, where skilled, English-speaking workers are available at comparatively lower wages.

In this arrangement, the MNC is not merely selling its products globally but is also producing them globally. The production process is broken down into smaller tasks and distributed across the globe based on each location's comparative advantage. This can result in cost savings of 50 to 60 per cent for the corporation.

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Design & R&D
Carried out in developed nations (e.g., USA) where research infrastructure and skilled engineers are concentrated.
Component Manufacturing
Located in countries like China where factories offer cost-effective mass production.
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Assembly
Done in Mexico or Eastern Europe, which provide proximity to major consumer markets.
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Customer Care
Handled from India, which offers a large pool of educated, English-speaking youth at lower wages.
LET'S EXPLORE — Garment Industry Supply Chain
L3 Apply

A garment company's brand tag says 'Made in Thailand,' but the product is not entirely Thai. The company sources cotton fibre from Korea, gets it spun into yarn in another country, sends it to Thailand for cutting and stitching, and finally exports the finished garments worldwide.

Task: Can you identify the different countries involved in making a single garment? Discuss why a company chooses to break its production across multiple nations rather than doing everything in one place.

Guidance
Each stage of production is moved to the country that offers the lowest cost or highest efficiency for that particular task. Cotton might be cheapest from Korea, spinning most efficient in India, stitching most cost-effective in Thailand, and the final products sold in wealthy consumer markets in Europe and the US. This fragmentation of production across borders is a defining feature of globalisation.

What Is Interlinking of Production — Global Supply Chains

Joint Ventures and Local Partnerships

MNCs do not always set up production entirely on their own. In many cases, they form partnerships or joint ventures with local companies in the host country. Such collaborations offer two key advantages to the local firm: first, the MNC brings in additional capital for investment in new machinery and infrastructure; second, the MNC often introduces cutting-edge production technologies that enhance efficiency and output quality.

Factors Influencing MNC Location Decisions

When deciding where to establish production, MNCs typically consider several factors:

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Cheap Labour
Availability of skilled and unskilled workers at low wages is a primary factor.
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Market Proximity
Being close to large consumer markets reduces transportation costs and delivery times.
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Favourable Policies
Governments offering tax incentives, special zones, or relaxed regulations attract MNC investments.
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Resources & Infrastructure
Access to raw materials, reliable power supply, and transport networks is essential.
Definition
Foreign Investment: The money spent by an MNC to acquire productive assets such as land, buildings, machinery, and equipment in another country. Investment is always made with the expectation of earning future profits.

Ways MNCs Control Production

Beyond joint ventures, MNCs use several strategies to establish control over production in other countries:

Strategy How It Works Example
Buying local companies MNCs acquire established local firms, gaining control of their brands, distribution networks, and production facilities Cargill Foods (US) acquired Parakh Foods in India, gaining control of four oil refineries and becoming the largest edible oil producer in India
Placing orders with small producers Large MNCs from developed countries place production orders with small manufacturers worldwide, then sell the goods under their own brand names Garments, footwear, and sports items produced by small units and sold under MNC brands globally
Close competition MNCs compete directly with local firms, often forcing them to either upgrade or shut down Global automobile brands entering India led local firms to either collaborate or improve standards
Key Point
Many top MNCs possess wealth that exceeds the entire budgets of developing country governments. This gives them enormous power and influence over local economies, workers, and small producers. When MNCs place orders with small suppliers, they effectively control the price, quality, delivery schedule, and even labour conditions at these distant production sites.

Through all these strategies — partnerships with local firms, buying up existing companies, using small producers as suppliers, and direct competition — MNCs are linking production across widely dispersed geographical locations. This interlinking of production is a fundamental feature of the modern global economy.

Case Study — Ford Motors Investment in India and Its Impact

Ford Motors, an American automobile giant, operates production facilities in 26 countries worldwide. The company entered India in 1995, investing approximately Rs 1,700 crore to establish a large manufacturing plant near Chennai in collaboration with Mahindra and Mahindra, a major Indian manufacturer of jeeps and trucks.

By 2017, Ford was selling around 88,000 cars annually in the Indian domestic market while simultaneously exporting over 1,81,000 vehicles from India to countries like South Africa, Mexico, Brazil, and the United States. In more recent years, Ford stopped selling cars directly in the Indian market but continues to export cars and car engines on a smaller scale to other countries, using India as a manufacturing base.

Ford Motors India — Production & Sales (2017)

L4 Analyse
THINK ABOUT IT — Why India as a Manufacturing Base?
L4 Analyse

Ford Motors chose India not just as a market but as a production hub for its global operations. Consider the following and discuss:

  • How does the cost of labour and resources in India benefit Ford?
  • Why is the presence of local auto-parts manufacturers (who supply components to Ford) an advantage?
  • How does proximity to large buyer populations in India and neighbouring countries help?
  • In what ways does Ford's production in India interlink production across countries?
Guidance
India offers relatively cheap yet skilled labour, a well-established network of auto-component suppliers (reducing procurement costs), a large and growing domestic car market, and reasonable proximity to markets in South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. When Ford manufactures components in India that are shipped to factories in other countries for assembly, or when it exports finished cars from India, production across multiple nations becomes closely interlinked.
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Competency-Based Questions

Case Study: Company Z, a large electronics manufacturer based in South Korea, designs its smartphones in Seoul. It sources display screens from Japan, processors from Taiwan, and assembles the final product in Vietnam where labour costs are significantly lower. The assembled phones are then exported globally, while after-sales support is managed through service centres in India and the Philippines.
Q1. Based on the case study, which of the following best describes Company Z?
L3 Apply
  • (A) A domestic company operating only in South Korea
  • (B) A multinational corporation with production spread across several countries
  • (C) A small producer supplying components to larger brands
  • (D) An import-export firm that only trades finished goods
Q2. Analyse why Company Z chooses Vietnam for assembly rather than performing all production stages in South Korea.
L4 Analyse
Q3. Evaluate the impact of Company Z's operations on the economies of Vietnam and India.
L5 Evaluate
HOT Q. Design a strategy for an Indian electronics company to compete with Company Z, taking into account India's strengths in technology and human resources.
L6 Create
⚖ Assertion–Reason Questions
Assertion (A): MNCs set up production facilities in countries where cheap labour and resources are available.
Reason (R): Producing goods at lower costs allows MNCs to earn higher profits.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R does not correctly explain A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Assertion (A): Cargill Foods became the largest producer of edible oil in India by building its own refineries from scratch.
Reason (R): The most common route for MNC investment is to buy up existing local companies and then expand production.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R does not correctly explain A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Assertion (A): Small producers manufacturing garments, footwear, and sports items often have their prices, quality standards, and delivery schedules controlled by large MNCs.
Reason (R): These small producers sell directly to consumers under their own brand names.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R does not correctly explain A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true

Reference: NCERT Official Textbook — Economics Class 10 | CBSE Curriculum 2025

Frequently Asked Questions — Production Across Countries and MNCs

What is a multinational corporation (MNC)?

A multinational corporation owns or controls production in more than one country. MNCs set up factories, offices, or production units close to markets with cheap labour, resources, and favourable policies. Examples include Ford, Samsung, Coca-Cola, and Tata. MNCs play a key role in globalisation by connecting production processes and markets across nations.

How do MNCs interlink production across countries?

MNCs interlink production by spreading different manufacturing stages across countries. For example, a garment MNC may source cotton from India, process it in China, design in Italy, and sell in Europe. They set up joint ventures with local companies, buy local firms, or place orders with small producers. This creates global supply chains where each country specialises.

What is foreign investment in Class 10 Economics?

Foreign investment is money invested by MNCs in another country. When an MNC sets up a factory in India, the money spent on land, machinery, and equipment is foreign investment. Governments attract it through Special Economic Zones (SEZs) with tax benefits. Foreign investment brings capital, technology, and employment opportunities to the host country.

What was the Ford Motors case study about?

The Ford Motors case study shows how MNCs invest in developing countries. Ford, an American automobile company, invested in a manufacturing plant near Chennai in collaboration with Mahindra & Mahindra. The company brought advanced technology and production methods to India, illustrating how MNCs establish production in developing countries for lower costs and expanding markets.

What are Special Economic Zones (SEZs)?

Special Economic Zones are designated areas where business and trade laws differ from the rest of the country. Governments set up SEZs to attract foreign investment by offering tax holidays, simpler regulations, lower land costs, and flexible labour laws. MNCs in SEZs face fewer bureaucratic hurdles. India has established many SEZs to boost industrial development.

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