This MCQ module is based on: Manufacturing Concept, Location & Classification
Manufacturing Concept, Location & Classification
This assessment will be based on: Manufacturing Concept, Location & Classification
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Secondary Activities: Manufacturing and Classification of Industries
A boll of cotton is barely useful by itself. Spin it into yarn and its value multiplies; weave that yarn into cloth and the value multiplies again. This step-wise enrichment of raw materials is the heart of secondary activities — manufacturing, processing and construction — the second great layer of the human economy. This part of Chapter 5 unpacks why the loom outperforms the field, who the new blue-collar workers are, why some industries hug their raw materials while others (we call them footloose) drift wherever the road network reaches, and how every industry on Earth can be sorted by size, inputs, outputs and ownership.
5.1 What Are Secondary Activities?
Secondary activities? are the economic activities that transform raw materials extracted by primary activities into more valuable, finished products. Where the primary sector pulls cotton from a field, iron from an ore-body or wood from a forest, the secondary sector takes those raw materials and reshapes them — by hand, by power-tool or by automated assembly line — into yarn, cloth, garments, beams, girders, machines, tools, furniture and the millions of other items that fill our homes, hospitals, offices and roads. The sector is therefore made up of three families of activity: manufacturing, processing, and construction (the building of infrastructure).
Workers in these activities are nick-named blue-collar workers? — a label that points to the indoor, factory-floor character of the work, in contrast with the outdoor red-collar primary worker, the desk-bound white-collar office worker and the lab-coat grey-collar technician. The dye-blue overall, the welder's apron and the shop-floor uniform are all visual reminders of where the wealth of an industrial society is shaped.
SVG — The Cotton Value-Addition Chain
Figure 5.1: Value addition along the cotton chain. The same step-wise multiplication of value happens in every secondary activity, from milk → butter → cheese to iron ore → steel → machines.
5.2 The Concept of Manufacturing
Manufacturing literally means "to make by hand", but in modern usage it includes goods made by machines as well. It is essentially a process that involves transforming raw materials into finished goods of higher value for sale in local or distant markets. The full array of manufacturing stretches from delicate handicrafts at one end to moulding iron and steel, stamping out plastic toys, assembling computer components and putting together space vehicles at the other. In every one of these processes, four common characteristics keep returning: the application of power, mass production of identical products, specialised labour, and the use of factory settings for the production of standardised commodities.
Manufacturing may be carried out with modern power and machinery or it may still be very primitive. Most countries of the developing world still "manufacture" in the literal hand-made sense of the term — and a complete picture of every household-level manufacturer is therefore difficult to draw. Geography textbooks, including NCERT, deliberately give more emphasis to the kind of industrial activity that involves less complicated systems of production at a recognisable scale.
5.3 Characteristics of Modern Large-Scale Manufacturing
Five features set modern large-scale manufacturing apart from artisan or cottage production. Together they explain why a few belts of the world account for the bulk of the world's factory output.
NCERT poses the question explicitly: industries maximise profits by reducing costs, so they should be located at points where production costs are minimum. What four broad categories of factor decide that location? Try to write them before you peek.
5.4 Factors of Industrial Location
Industries maximise profits by reducing costs, so they prefer locations where total production costs are minimum. NCERT lists the following major factors influencing industrial location.
Access to Market
The existence of a market for manufactured goods is the single most important locational factor. "Market" means people who have a demand for the goods and the purchasing power to buy them. Remote regions with few people offer small markets. The developed regions of Europe, North America, Japan and Australia offer large global markets because of high purchasing power; the densely populated South and South-east Asia also offer big markets. Some industries — aircraft and arms manufacturing — have a fully global market.
Access to Raw Material
Raw materials should be cheap and easy to transport. Industries based on weight-losing materials (ores) are located close to the source — steel, sugar and cement industries are classic examples. Perishability is also vital: agro-processing units locate near farms; dairy plants near milk-sheds.
Access to Labour Supply
Labour is an important factor in location. Some industries still need skilled labour. Increasing mechanisation, automation and process flexibility have, however, reduced industrial dependence on labour — robots can replace many factory hands.
Access to Energy
Power-hungry industries — the aluminium industry being the textbook example — locate next to their energy supply. Coal was once the great pull-factor; today hydroelectricity and petroleum have joined it as equally important sources, and a wider geographic spread of factories has become possible.
Transport & Communication Facilities
Speedy and efficient transport carries raw materials in and finished goods out. The cost of transport plays an enormous role: Western Europe and eastern North America have such highly developed transport systems that industries clustered there for centuries. Communication networks are also crucial for the exchange and management of information.
Government Policy
Governments adopt regional policies to promote balanced economic development, deliberately setting up industries in particular areas through subsidies, tax holidays, special economic zones, and protected industrial estates.
Access to Agglomeration Economies
Many industries benefit from the nearness of a leader-industry and other industries that share supply chains. These agglomeration economies are savings derived from the linkages between different industries — a steel plant attracts auto-parts plants, which attract sub-assembly units, which attract paint and rubber factories, and so on.
SVG — Footloose vs Resource-Based Industries
Figure 5.2: Two locational logics. A steel mill must sit on its ore-body; a software firm can sit anywhere with broadband and an airport.
Open Google Maps and locate the nearest industrial estate to your home. List five factories you can identify by name. For each one, place a tick in the right column: resource-based or footloose. What does the local mix tell you about your region's industrial logic?
5.5 Classification of Manufacturing Industries
Manufacturing industries are classified on the basis of four axes: their size, their inputs / raw materials, their outputs / products, and their ownership. The same factory, say a sugar mill, can therefore be described from four angles at once — large-scale (size), agro-based (input), consumer-goods (output), private-sector (ownership).
SVG — Classification of Industries (4-Axis Tree)
Figure 5.3: NCERT's four-axis classification scheme. Industries can be sliced and re-sliced along these dimensions to compare them, regulate them and plan them.
A. Industries Based on Size
The amount of capital invested, the number of workers employed and the volume of production together determine the size of an industry. On this basis, industries are classified into household / cottage, small-scale, and large-scale.
| Type | Place of Work | Tools & Power | Labour | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Household / Cottage | The artisan's home | Local raw material; simple, locally-devised tools; little or no power | Family members; part-time labour | Pottery, baskets, handloom mats, gold/silver jewellery, bamboo crafts, leather thongs |
| Small-scale | A workshop outside the home | Local raw material; simple power-driven machines | Semi-skilled labour | Small textile units, food-canning, cycle parts, plastic moulding, cottage food brands |
| Large-scale | Big factory complex | Various raw materials; enormous energy; advanced technology; assembly-line mass production | Specialised workers, large capital | Iron and steel, automobile, petrochemicals, electronics, aircraft, ships |
Cottage / Household Industries
This is the smallest manufacturing unit. Artisans use local raw materials and simple tools to produce everyday goods in their homes with the help of family members or part-time labour. Finished products may be consumed in the same household, sold in local (village) markets, or bartered. Capital and transportation do not wield much influence because the activity has low commercial significance and the tools are devised locally. Common cottage products include foodstuffs, fabrics, mats, containers, tools, furniture, shoes and figurines from wood, leather articles, pottery and bricks from clay and stone. Goldsmiths make jewellery from gold, silver and bronze; bamboo and wood from local forests are turned into baskets and crafts.
Small-Scale Manufacturing
Small-scale manufacturing is distinguished from cottage industries by its production techniques and the place of manufacture — a workshop outside the home of the producer. It uses local raw material, simple power-driven machines and semi-skilled labour. Because it provides employment and raises local purchasing power, countries like India, China, Indonesia and Brazil have deliberately developed labour-intensive small-scale manufacturing as an employment-creation strategy.
Large-Scale Manufacturing
Large-scale manufacturing involves a large market, various raw materials, enormous energy, specialised workers, advanced technology, assembly-line mass production, and large capital. This kind of manufacturing developed over the last 200 years — first in the United Kingdom, then in north-eastern U.S.A. and Europe, and now diffused to almost every part of the world. On the basis of the system of large-scale manufacturing, the world's major industrial regions can be grouped under two broad types — (i) traditional large-scale industrial regions thickly clustered in a few more developed countries, and (ii) high-technology large-scale industrial regions that have diffused to less developed countries.
B. Industries Based on Inputs / Raw Materials
On the basis of the raw material used, NCERT classifies industries into five sub-types: agro-based, mineral-based, chemical-based, forest-based, and animal-based.
C. Industries Based on Output / Product
Some industries make goods that other industries use as raw materials. These are called basic industries?. Iron and steel is the textbook example — its output (steel beams, sheets, rods) becomes the input for the textile-machinery industry, which makes machines for the textile industry, which makes clothes for the consumer. Trace the chain: iron / steel → machines for textile industry → clothes for use by consumers.
Consumer goods industries? produce goods that consumers use directly. Examples include factories making breads and biscuits, tea, soaps and toiletries, paper for writing, televisions. They are also called non-basic industries because their products do not feed back into the manufacturing chain.
| Feature | Basic (Producer-Goods) Industry | Consumer-Goods (Non-Basic) Industry |
|---|---|---|
| Customer | Other industries | The end consumer |
| Examples | Iron & steel, copper smelting, aluminium, basic chemicals, machine tools | Bread, biscuits, tea, soap, TV, paper, cosmetics |
| Capital intensity | Very high | Moderate |
| Position in chain | Upstream — at the base of every factory chain | Downstream — at the end of every factory chain |
D. Industries Based on Ownership
Chart — Share of Manufacturing in GDP, Selected Economies
Figure 5.4: Approximate share of manufacturing in GDP for selected economies. China and several Asian economies retain a large manufacturing base; Western economies have moved towards services and high-tech.
Find a name like Pravara Sahakari Sakhar Karkhana or Vasantdada Patil S.S.K. in any list of Indian sugar mills. Why is the cooperative form so well-suited to a sugar mill but rarely used for a steel plant?
📝 Competency-Based Questions — Part 1
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are secondary activities in geography?
Secondary activities transform raw materials from primary sectors into more valuable finished products through manufacturing, processing and construction. They cover everything from cottage industries to large-scale heavy manufacturing.
What are the characteristics of modern large-scale manufacturing?
Six characteristics: specialisation of skills, mechanisation, technological innovation, organisational structure and stratification, uneven geographic distribution, and huge capital investment with mass production.
What factors influence the location of industries?
Access to market, raw materials, labour supply, sources of energy, transport and communication, and government policy. Agglomeration economies (industry clustering) also strongly influence location.
What is footloose industry?
Footloose industries can locate in many places without economic penalty — not strongly tied to raw materials, energy or markets. Examples: diamond cutting, computer chips, electronics. They depend on small skilled workforce and high-value low-bulk products.
How are industries classified by size?
Cottage industries (household, family labour, local materials), small-scale industries (small workshops with limited capital and machinery), and large-scale industries (modern factories with massive capital and labour).
How are industries classified by raw material used?
Agro-based (cotton textiles, food processing), mineral-based (iron and steel), chemical-based (petrochemicals, fertilisers), forest-based (paper, furniture) and animal-based (leather, woollen textiles).
How are industries classified by output and ownership?
By output: basic industries (steel — raw material for others) and consumer goods industries (final products). By ownership: public, private, joint and cooperative sector.