This MCQ module is based on: Foreign Trade, Market Integration & Factors Enabling Globalisation
Foreign Trade, Market Integration & Factors Enabling Globalisation
Foreign Trade, Market Integration & Factors Enabling Globalisation
NCERT Understanding Economic Development | Chapter 4: Globalisation and the Indian Economy
How Does Foreign Trade Lead to Integration of Markets?
For centuries, foreign trade? has been the main channel linking countries across the globe. Historical trade routes connected the Indian subcontinent and South Asia to markets in the East and West, and it was commercial interests that brought trading companies like the East India Company to Indian shores.
At its core, foreign trade performs two essential functions. For producers, it opens up markets beyond national borders, allowing them to sell their goods to buyers in other countries. For consumers, imports expand the range of available goods beyond what is manufactured domestically. When trade between two countries opens up, goods flow from one market to another, consumer choice expands, prices of similar goods across both markets tend to equalise, and producers in different countries find themselves competing directly against each other despite being separated by thousands of kilometres.
Example: Chinese Toys in India
Chinese toy manufacturers discovered that toys were being sold at high prices in the Indian market. Sensing an opportunity, they began exporting plastic toys to India. Because Chinese toys were cheaper and offered newer designs, Indian consumers preferred them. Within a year, 70 to 80 per cent of toy shops had replaced Indian-made toys with Chinese alternatives. As a consequence, Indian toy makers suffered heavy losses while Indian consumers benefited from lower prices and greater variety.
This example illustrates a key outcome of foreign trade: the integration of markets?. Chinese and Indian toy markets, once separate, became interconnected through trade. Prices, quality, and competition in both markets began to influence each other directly.
How Foreign Trade Integrates Markets
L4 AnalyseWhat Is Globalisation — Definition, Process and Impact on India
Over the past two to three decades, MNCs have been actively seeking low-cost production locations around the world. Foreign investment by MNCs in developing countries has been rising steadily, and foreign trade between nations has expanded rapidly. A significant portion of this trade is controlled by MNCs themselves — for instance, Ford Motors in India both sells cars domestically and exports vehicles and components to factories across the globe.
The combined result of increasing foreign investment and expanding foreign trade has been a deeper integration of production and markets across countries?. This process of rapid integration or interconnection between countries is what we call globalisation.
Besides the movement of goods, services, investments, and technology, countries are also connected through the movement of people. Individuals migrate between nations in search of better income, jobs, or education. However, unlike trade and investment, the movement of people across borders has not increased as significantly in recent decades due to various immigration restrictions.
What Factors Have Enabled Globalisation — Technology, WTO and Liberalisation
1. Technology
Rapid improvements in technology have been a major catalyst for globalisation. Over the past fifty years, dramatic advances in transportation technology have enabled faster delivery of goods over long distances at much lower costs. The development of standardised shipping containers, for example, has massively reduced port-handling costs and accelerated the speed at which exports reach markets. Similarly, declining costs of air transport have enabled far greater volumes of goods to be moved by airlines.
Even more transformative has been the revolution in information and communication technology (ICT)?. Advances in telecommunications, computers, and the internet have fundamentally changed how businesses operate. Satellite communication enables instant contact across the world. Email and voice-over-internet services allow communication at negligible costs. The internet provides access to virtually unlimited information.
Key Technologies Driving Globalisation
L4 AnalyseInformation technology has played a central role in enabling the spread of production and services across countries. Consider the magazine example above:
- Identify all the technologies used in the production of the magazine.
- Could this kind of cross-border production have happened without the internet and telecommunication?
- Can you think of other services that are produced in one country but consumed in another, made possible by IT?
2. Liberalisation of Trade and Investment Policies
Governments play a crucial role in shaping the pace of globalisation through their trade and investment policies. Consider the Chinese toys example again: if the Indian government imposed a heavy tax on imported toys, buyers would have to pay higher prices for Chinese toys, making them less competitive and reducing imports. Such a tax on imports is an example of a trade barrier?.
After Independence, the Indian government maintained significant barriers to foreign trade and investment. This was a deliberate policy to protect nascent Indian industries from foreign competition during the critical early stages of development. Only essential items such as machinery, fertilisers, and petroleum were permitted to be imported freely.
Starting around 1991, a major policy shift occurred. The Indian government decided that it was time for domestic producers to compete globally, believing that competition would push Indian firms to improve quality and efficiency. This decision was also encouraged by powerful international organisations. As a result, barriers on foreign trade and foreign investment were substantially reduced.
We know that taxes on imports (tariffs) are one type of trade barrier. Another type is quotas — placing a limit on the number of goods that can be imported.
Discuss: Using the Chinese toys example, explain how quotas could be used as a trade barrier. Would you recommend their use? What are the advantages and disadvantages for consumers and producers?
3. World Trade Organisation (WTO)
The World Trade Organisation (WTO)? is a major international body whose stated aim is to liberalise international trade. Established at the initiative of developed countries, the WTO formulates rules governing international trade and ensures compliance among its approximately 160 member nations.
| Aspect | Developed Countries | Developing Countries |
|---|---|---|
| Trade Barriers | Many have retained subsidies and protections for domestic producers (especially in agriculture) | Have been required by WTO rules to remove most trade barriers |
| Agricultural Subsidies | Provide massive subsidies (e.g., US farm subsidies) enabling exports at very low prices | Have been asked to reduce government support for their own farmers |
| Share of Agriculture in GDP | Very small (e.g., ~1% in the US) | Very large (significant portion of GDP and employment in India) |
| Negotiating Power at WTO | Stronger influence in setting WTO rules | Often have to accept rules that may not be in their best interest |
Competency-Based Questions
Reason (R): When trade opens between two countries, prices of similar goods in both markets tend to become equal as producers compete directly.
Reason (R): Indian industries were in their early stages of development during the 1950s and 1960s and needed protection from foreign competition.
Reason (R): Developed countries have continued to provide subsidies and protection to their domestic producers while insisting that developing countries remove trade barriers.
Continue Learning — Chapter 4: Globalisation and the Indian Economy
Reference: NCERT Official Textbook — Economics Class 10 | CBSE Curriculum 2025
Frequently Asked Questions — Foreign Trade and Globalisation
What is globalisation in simple words for Class 10?
Globalisation is the process by which countries become more interconnected through increased foreign trade, investment, and technology transfer. Goods produced in one country are available worldwide, MNCs operate across borders, and economies are linked through trade flows. In India, globalisation accelerated after 1991 when the government adopted liberalisation policies and reduced trade barriers.
How does foreign trade integrate markets?
Foreign trade integrates markets by connecting producers and consumers across countries. When Indian producers export goods, they access new markets. When foreign goods are imported, Indian consumers get more choices at competitive prices. For example, Chinese electronics in Indian markets connect Chinese producers with Indian buyers, creating an interconnected global market.
What is the role of WTO in globalisation?
The World Trade Organisation (WTO) sets rules for international trade and promotes free trade by pressuring countries to remove tariffs and quotas. However, developed countries have sometimes retained protections while pushing developing countries to open their markets, creating unfair conditions for poorer nations. WTO aims for smooth and free trade flow across borders.
What are trade barriers and why did India remove them?
Trade barriers are restrictions like tariffs, quotas, and regulations that governments use to control foreign trade. India had high barriers after independence to protect domestic industries. Starting in 1991, India began removing them through liberalisation to attract foreign investment, increase competition, improve product quality, and integrate with the global economy.
How has technology enabled globalisation?
Technology has driven globalisation through three developments: rapid improvements in transportation (container shipping, air freight) making goods movement cheaper; telecommunications revolution enabling instant communication across countries; and the IT revolution transforming business through internet and digital systems. These technologies dramatically reduced the cost and time of connecting markets.