According to the previous 3 years’ examinations, the following concepts are most important from this chapter and should be focussed upon.
- Various Aspects of Human Resource Development
- The Role of Education
- Unemployment and Forms of Unemployment in India.
Human beings perform many activities which can be grouped into economic and non-economic.
Economic Activities: Economic activities refer to those activities of humans which are undertaken for monetary gain or to satisfy/her wants. The activities of workers, farmers, shopkeepers, manufacturers, doctors, lawyers, taxi drivers, etc. fall under this category.
Non-Economic Activities: Non-economic activities are ones that are not undertaken for any monetary gain. These are also called unpaid activities, e.g., Puja-path, housekeeping, helping the poor or disabled, etc.
Classification of Economic Activities: Various economic activities can be classified into three main sectors, that is, primary sector, secondary sector, and tertiary sector. The primary sector includes activities like agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry, fishing, poultry, farming, and mining. In this sector, goods are produced by exploiting nature. In the secondary sector, manufacturing (small and large) and construction activities are included. The tertiary sector (also called the service sector) provides various types of services like transport, education, banking, insurance, health, tourism, etc.
Market Activities and Non-Market Activities: Economic activities, i.e., the production of goods and services can be classified into market activities and non-market activities. Market activities are performed for remuneration. Non-market activities are the activities carried out for self¬consumption.
Activities of Women: Women generally look after domestic affairs like cooking of food, washing of clothes, cleaning utensils, housekeeping, and looking after children.
Human Capital: Human capital is the stock of skill and productive knowledge embodied in human beings. Population (human beings) become human capital when it is provided with better education, training, and health care facilities.
People as a Resource: People as a resource is a way of referring to a country’s workforce in terms of their existing skills and abilities.
Human Capital Formation: When the existing human resource is further developed by spending on making the workforce more educated and healthy, it is called Human Capital Formation.
Quality of Population: The quality of population depends upon the literacy rate, life expectancy and skills formation acquired by the people of the country.
Role of Education: Education is the most important component of Human Resource Development. In view of its contribution to the growth of society, government expenditure on education as a percentage of GDP rose from 0.64% in 1951-52 to 3.98% in 2002-03. However, our national goal is 6% of GDP
Health: Health is another very important component of Human Resource Development. The efficiency of workers largely depends on their health.
There has been a considerable improvement in the country’s health standards. For instance, the life expectancy at the time of birth in India rose from 37.2 years in 1951 to 63.9 years in 2001. Similarly, the infant mortality rate has come down from 147 to 70 during the same time period.
Unemployment: Unemployment is said to exist when people who are willing to work at the prevailing wage rates cannot find jobs. When we talk of unemployed people, we refer to those in the age group of 15-59 years. Children below 15 years of age and old people above 60 are not considered while counting the number of unemployed.
Nature of Unemployment in India: Seasonal unemployment occurs when people fail to get work during some months of the year (that is, during the off-season). Farm laborers usually face this kind of problem, i Disguised unemployment is another kind of unemployment found in rural areas. Such kind of problem arises due to the excessive pressure of the population on agriculture. Disguised unemployment refers to a situation wherein the number of workers in a job is more than actually required to do the job. The extra number of workers are disguisedly unemployed.
Consequences of Unemployment:
- Unemployment leads to the wastage of manpower resources.
- Unemployment tends to increase the economic overload that is the dependence of the unemployed on the working population.
- Unemployment may lead to an increase in social unrest and tension.