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Impact of Globalisation & The Struggle for Fair Globalisation

🎓 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: Impact of Globalisation & The Struggle for Fair Globalisation

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

Impact of Globalisation in India & The Struggle for Fair Globalisation

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

How Has Globalisation Impacted Indian Consumers?

Over the past two decades, globalisation of the Indian economy has progressed significantly. The increased competition between local and foreign producers has been particularly advantageous for consumers, especially the well-off sections in urban areas. These consumers now enjoy greater choice, improved product quality, and lower prices for a wide range of goods. As a result, their standard of living has risen compared to what was possible earlier.

However, the impact among producers and workers has been far from uniform. While some have prospered, others have suffered severe hardship.

Which Indian Producers Have Benefited from Globalisation?

MNC Investments in India

MNCs have substantially increased their investments in India over the past twenty years, particularly in sectors like cell phones, automobiles, electronics, soft drinks, fast food, and banking services in urban areas. These are industries with a large number of well-off buyers. New jobs have been created in these sectors, and local companies supplying raw materials and components to MNCs have also prospered.

Top Indian Companies Going Global

Several leading Indian companies have benefited from the competitive pressure of globalisation. They invested in newer technologies, improved their production standards, and formed successful collaborations with foreign firms. Some large Indian companies have even emerged as multinational corporations? in their own right, expanding operations worldwide.

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Tata Motors
Indian automobile major that expanded globally, acquiring Jaguar Land Rover and operating in multiple countries.
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Infosys
IT services giant that became a globally recognised brand, providing technology services across continents.
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Ranbaxy
Indian pharmaceutical company that expanded its operations to markets worldwide.
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Asian Paints
Became a multinational with presence in over 15 countries across Asia, Middle East, and Africa.

IT and Service Sector Boom

Globalisation has created significant new opportunities for Indian companies providing services, particularly in the IT sector. Call centres, data entry, accounting, administrative tasks, and engineering services are now performed cheaply in India and exported to developed countries. This has generated millions of new jobs for educated Indian workers.

Steps to Attract Foreign Investment

Central and state governments in India have been actively working to attract foreign companies. One major initiative has been the establishment of Special Economic Zones (SEZs)? — designated industrial areas equipped with world-class infrastructure including reliable electricity, water supply, good roads, transport networks, storage facilities, and recreational and educational amenities. Companies operating within SEZs enjoy tax exemptions for an initial period of five years.

Additionally, the government has introduced greater flexibility in labour laws to attract foreign investment. Companies are increasingly permitted to hire workers on temporary or contractual terms rather than on a permanent basis, thereby reducing their labour costs.

Impact of Globalisation — Winners vs Losers

L4 Analyse

Small Producers — Compete or Perish

For a large number of small producers and workers, globalisation has posed severe challenges. Industries manufacturing batteries, capacitors, plastics, toys, tyres, dairy products, and vegetable oil have been particularly affected by foreign competition. Several manufacturing units have been forced to shut down, leaving many workers without employment. This is significant because small and medium industries in India employ the largest number of workers (approximately 11 crore) after agriculture.

Case Study: Ravi’s Capacitor Factory

Ravi took a bank loan and started manufacturing capacitors in 1992 in Hosur, an industrial town in Tamil Nadu. Capacitors are components used in many electronic appliances including tube lights and televisions. Within three years, his business expanded and he employed 20 workers.

His troubles began when the government removed import restrictions on capacitors in 2001, following India’s commitments at the WTO. His main clients — television manufacturing companies — shifted from buying domestically to importing capacitors at half the price. Some of these TV companies themselves moved from manufacturing to merely assembling products for MNCs. Ravi’s production fell by more than half, and his workforce shrank from 20 to just 7. Many of his fellow manufacturers in Hyderabad and Chennai were forced to close entirely.

Key Finding
Small producers in India need three critical things to compete effectively: (1) better infrastructure — roads, power supply, water, raw materials, marketing networks, and information systems; (2) modernisation and improvement of technology; (3) timely availability of credit at reasonable interest rates. Without these, they cannot withstand the pressure of global competition.
THINK ABOUT IT — Should Small Producers Give Up?
L5 Evaluate

Ravi’s story shows how rising competition affected a small producer. Consider these questions:

  • Should producers like Ravi stop production simply because their costs are higher than foreign competitors?
  • Would MNCs be interested in investing in improving infrastructure for small producers? Why or why not?
  • What role should the government play in supporting small producers during the transition to a globalised economy?
  • Could cooperative models or industry clusters help small producers compete better?
Guidance
Small producers should not simply be left to perish. They form the backbone of India’s industrial employment (11 crore workers). MNCs are unlikely to invest in small-producer infrastructure since it does not directly benefit their operations. The government must step in with targeted support: subsidised credit, technology upgradation schemes, better roads and power supply, marketing support, and where necessary, temporary trade protections to allow adjustment time.

How Has Globalisation Affected Competition and Employment?

Globalisation and competitive pressures have substantially changed the lives of workers across India. Faced with rising competition, most employers now prefer to hire workers on a ‘flexible’ basis rather than offering permanent employment. This means that job security has diminished significantly.

Case Study: Sushila — A Garment Worker

Sushila, a 35-year-old garment worker in Delhi, was once employed as a permanent worker entitled to health insurance, provident fund, and overtime pay at double rates. When her factory closed in the late 1990s, she spent six months searching for new work. She eventually found a job at a factory 30 kilometres from her home, but even after years of service, she remains a temporary worker earning less than half her previous salary.

Sushila leaves home at 7:30 a.m. every day, seven days a week, and returns at 10 p.m. A day off means no wages. She has lost all the benefits she previously enjoyed. Factories closer to her home offer even less pay due to fluctuating orders.

How Competition Hurts Workers
Large MNCs in Europe and America place orders with Indian garment exporters, constantly seeking the cheapest products to maximise their own profits. To win these orders, Indian exporters try to cut costs. Since raw material prices cannot easily be reduced, the burden falls on labour: permanent positions are replaced with temporary contracts, working hours are stretched, night shifts become routine during peak seasons, and wages remain low. While MNCs earn large profits, workers are denied their fair share of the benefits of globalisation.

This pattern of insecure, poorly paid employment has become common across many industries and services in India. Most workers today are employed in the unorganised sector, and even conditions in the organised sector have started to resemble the unorganised sector as protections and benefits erode.

What Is the Struggle for Fair Globalisation and Why Does It Matter?

The evidence clearly shows that the benefits of globalisation have not been shared equally. People with education, skills, and wealth have capitalised on new opportunities. But many small producers, factory workers, and those in the unorganised sector have suffered. The critical question, therefore, is: how can we make globalisation more fair??

Definition
Fair Globalisation: A form of globalisation that creates opportunities for all people — not just the wealthy and skilled — and ensures that the benefits of global integration are shared more equitably across society.

What Can the Government Do?

Enforce Labour Laws
Ensure proper implementation of labour protections so that workers receive fair wages, job security, and safe conditions.
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Support Small Producers
Help small manufacturers upgrade technology, access credit, and improve quality until they can compete effectively.
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Use Trade Barriers Wisely
If necessary, deploy strategic tariffs and quotas to protect vulnerable domestic sectors during adjustment periods.
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Negotiate at WTO
Push for fairer rules at the WTO and align with other developing countries to counter the domination of wealthy nations.

In recent years, massive campaigns and representations by people’s organisations have influenced important decisions relating to trade and investments at the WTO. This demonstrates that ordinary citizens and their organisations can play a meaningful role in the struggle for a more equitable form of globalisation.

LET’S DISCUSS — Flexible Employment: Employer vs Worker Perspectives
L5 Evaluate

One of the ongoing debates in India is whether companies should have flexible employment policies. Based on the chapter content, summarise and evaluate both perspectives:

  • Employers argue: Flexibility reduces costs, makes businesses competitive, and attracts foreign investment.
  • Workers argue: Flexibility means insecurity, loss of benefits, low wages, and exploitation.

What role should the government, employers, MNCs, and workers themselves play in ensuring that workers receive a fair share of globalisation’s benefits?

Guidance
The government should enforce minimum wage laws, ensure social security for temporary workers, and make labour inspections effective. Employers should balance profit-seeking with responsibility towards workers by providing basic benefits and safe working conditions. MNCs should adopt fair procurement practices that do not squeeze suppliers on labour costs. Workers should organise collectively through unions and cooperatives to negotiate better terms. A balance must be struck between economic competitiveness and social justice.
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Competency-Based Questions

Case Study: Town M is a small industrial hub where 200 families depend on a shoe-manufacturing cluster. A large MNC enters the market, offering branded shoes at lower prices through efficient mass production overseas. Within two years, 60% of local manufacturers shut down. The MNC then offers temporary assembly jobs at lower wages. Meanwhile, a nearby town with an IT services firm sees rising employment and incomes. The state government announces a new SEZ to attract more foreign investment.
Q1. Which group in Town M benefited most from the MNC’s entry?
L3 Apply
  • (A) Local shoe manufacturers
  • (B) Workers in the shoe manufacturing cluster
  • (C) Consumers who buy shoes in Town M
  • (D) The state government
Q2. Analyse why globalisation produced opposite outcomes in Town M (shoe manufacturing) and the nearby IT services town.
L4 Analyse
Q3. Evaluate whether the SEZ announced by the state government will solve the problems of displaced workers in Town M.
L5 Evaluate
HOT Q. Design a ‘Fair Globalisation Action Plan’ for Town M that addresses the needs of displaced workers, remaining small producers, consumers, and the incoming MNC.
L6 Create
⚖ Assertion–Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Globalisation has benefited urban, well-off consumers in India with greater choice, better quality, and lower prices.
Reason (R): Increased competition between local and foreign producers forces both to improve quality and reduce prices.
(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 and medium industries in India employ more workers than any other sector including agriculture.
Reason (R): Small and medium industries employ approximately 11 crore workers, making them the largest employer in the country.
(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): Companies in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) are required to pay higher taxes to compensate for the infrastructure they receive.
Reason (R): SEZs are designed to attract foreign investment by offering world-class facilities and tax exemptions.
(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 — Impact of Globalisation in India

How has globalisation affected Indian consumers?

Globalisation has benefited Indian consumers by providing greater choice, improved quality, and lower prices for many products. Consumers now access global brands in electronics, clothing, and food. Competition from foreign products has forced Indian producers to improve quality and reduce prices. However, benefits are not evenly distributed — urban and higher-income groups have gained more.

Which producers have benefited from globalisation?

Large Indian companies in IT services (TCS, Infosys, Wipro), automobiles (Tata Motors, Mahindra), pharmaceuticals, and textiles have benefited significantly. They invested in technology, expanded globally, and competed in international markets. Some acquired foreign companies. The IT outsourcing industry thrived due to India's English-speaking skilled workforce and lower labour costs.

Why are small producers struggling under globalisation?

Small producers cannot compete with lower prices and better technology of MNCs and large companies. When markets opened, many small manufacturers of toys, batteries, plastics, and dairy faced falling demand from cheaper imports. They lack resources to upgrade technology or reduce costs. Many have shut down, leading to job losses for their workers.

What is fair globalisation and who struggles for it?

Fair globalisation means ensuring benefits are shared equitably among all sections of society. Trade unions, NGOs, and worker organisations campaign for better labour laws, protection for small industries, and equitable trade rules. Governments must play an active role through policies that protect workers, support small producers, and ensure globalisation does not increase inequality.

What role should the government play in globalisation?

The government should maintain strong labour laws, support small industries through subsidies and technology assistance, negotiate fair trade agreements at WTO, ensure food security and agricultural protection, and invest in education and skill development. It must balance attracting foreign investment with protecting domestic producers and workers' interests.

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