Lifelines of National Economy

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CLASS X Social Science ~4 marks/year Ch 12 of 22
Lifelines of National Economy

Class 10 · Social Science · NCERT chapter notes · Akanksha Classes

Snapshot
  • Transport, communication and trade are the lifelines of the economy — goods and services must move from supply to demand locations, and that needs an efficient network.
  • Transport works over three domains — land (roadways, railways, pipelines), water (inland waterways, seaports) and air (airways).
  • India has the second largest road network in the world; roads are classified into six classes — Golden Quadrilateral, National Highways, State Highways, District Roads, Other Roads, Border Roads.
  • Railways are the principal mode for freight and passengers, run on three gauges (Broad, Metre, Narrow) and are organised into 17 zones.
  • Communication is personal and mass (radio, TV, press, films); international trade = exports + imports, and the balance of trade can be favourable or unfavourable. Tourism is treated as a trade.
  • Board weightage: ~4 marks/year — usually one MCQ/short answer on road or port classification plus a value/long-answer on "why lifelines" or balance of trade.
Detailed notes

1. Why transport, communication and trade matter

We use many materials and services daily. Some are found nearby; many are brought from far. Goods and services do not move from supply locations to demand locations on their own — they need transport, and the people who arrange this movement are traders. So the pace of a country's development depends not just on producing goods and services but on moving them over space.

Three things work together and are complementary:

  • Transport — physically carries goods and people over land, water and air.
  • Communication — moves information and ideas without moving the sender or receiver.
  • Trade — the exchange of goods, locally and internationally, that all this movement makes possible.

With advances in science and technology, the area of influence of trade and transport has expanded "far and wide" — the world has become a "large village" (global village). A dense, efficient network of transport and communication is therefore a prerequisite for local, national and global trade. This is why they are called the lifelines of the nation and its economy.

2. Roadways — India's flexible network

India has the second largest road network in the world, about 62.16 lakh km (2020–21). In India roadways actually came before railways, and they still have an edge. The growing importance of road transport over rail is rooted in:

Key point — merits of roadways (very high-yield)
  • (a) Construction cost of roads is much lower than railway lines.
  • (b) Roads can cross more dissected and undulating terrain.
  • (c) Roads can negotiate higher gradients — so they can climb mountains like the Himalayas.
  • (d) Economical for carrying few persons and small amounts of goods over short distances.
  • (e) They provide door-to-door service, so loading and unloading costs are much lower.
  • (f) They act as a feeder to other modes — linking railway stations, airports and seaports.

Roads can also be classified by the material used: metalled roads (cement, concrete or bitumen — all-weather) and unmetalled roads (which go out of use in the rainy season).

3. The six classes of roads

By capacity, Indian roads fall into six classes. Learn them in order, with the authority that manages each.

Class of roadKey facts
Golden Quadrilateral Super HighwaysSix-lane super highways linking Delhi–Kolkata–Chennai–Mumbai. Includes the North–South corridor (Srinagar to Kanniyakumari) and the East–West corridor (Silchar to Porbandar). Aim: reduce time & distance between mega-cities. Built by NHAI (National Highway Authority of India).
National HighwaysLink extreme parts of the country — the primary road system. Many run North–South and East–West. (Sher-Shah Suri Marg = Delhi–Amritsar.)
State HighwaysLink a state capital with the different district headquarters of that state.
District RoadsConnect the district headquarters with other places within the district.
Other RoadsRural roads linking villages with towns. Given a boost under the Pradhan Mantri Grameen Sadak Yojana (every village linked to a town by an all-season motorable road).
Border RoadsBuilt and maintained by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO), set up in 1960, for roads of strategic importance in the northern and north-eastern border areas. They improve accessibility in difficult terrain.
Key point — Atal Tunnel

The world's longest highway tunnel, the Atal Tunnel (9.02 km), was built by the BRO. It connects Manali to Lahaul-Spiti valley all year (earlier the valley was cut off for ~6 months by snow). It lies in the Pir Panjal range of the Himalayas at ~3000 m above mean sea level.

4. Railways — the principal mode

Railways are the principal mode of transport for freight and passengers in India and have been a great integrating force for more than 150 years. The first train ran from Mumbai to Thane in 1853, covering 34 km. Indian Railways is the largest public sector undertaking in the country and is now organised into 17 zones.

The Indian Railway network runs on multiple gauges, extending over 67,956 km:

Gauge (in metres)Route length (km)
Broad Gauge (1.676)63,950
Metre Gauge (1.000)2,402
Narrow Gauge (0.762 and 0.610)1,604
Total67,956
Key point — what shapes the railway pattern

The distribution of railways is influenced by physiographic, economic and administrative factors. The northern plains (level land, dense population, rich agriculture) were most favourable, though many rivers needed bridges. Construction was difficult in: hilly peninsular tracts (laid through low hills, gaps or tunnels), the Himalayas (high relief, sparse population), the sandy plain of western Rajasthan, the swamps of Gujarat, and the forested tracts of Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and Jharkhand. The Sahyadri could only be crossed through gaps/passes (Ghats); the Konkan Railway later eased movement along the west coast.

Problems of railways: many travel without tickets; thefts and damage to railway property continue; people stop trains and pull the chain unnecessarily, causing heavy damage and delays.

5. Pipelines — quiet but efficient

Pipeline transport is a new arrival on India's transport map. Earlier used only to carry water; now they carry crude oil, petroleum products and natural gas from oil/gas fields to refineries, fertilizer factories and thermal power plants. Even solids can move as slurry. Inland refineries like Barauni, Mathura, Panipat were possible only because of pipelines.

Key point — economics & the three networks

Initial cost of laying pipelines is high, but running costs are minimal, and they rule out trans-shipment losses or delays. The three major networks:

  • Upper Assam oilfield to Kanpur (UP) via Guwahati, Barauni and Prayagraj (branches to Haldia, Maurigram, Siliguri).
  • Salaya (Gujarat) to Jalandhar (Punjab) via Viramgam, Mathura, Delhi and Sonipat (branch to Koyali).
  • The Hazira–Vijaipur–Jagdishpur (HVJ) gas pipeline (first 1,700 km long) — linking Mumbai High and Bassein gas fields to fertilizer, power and industrial complexes in western and northern India. India's gas pipeline network has grown from 1,700 km to about 18,500 km.

6. Waterways — the cheapest mode

India was historically a great seafaring country. Waterways are the cheapest means of transport, ideal for heavy and bulky goods, and are fuel-efficient and environment-friendly. India has about 14,500 km of navigable inland waterways. Under the National Waterways Act, 2016, 111 inland waterways (including 5 declared earlier) were declared as National Waterways.

National WaterwayStretch
N.W. No.1The Ganga between Prayagraj and Haldia (1620 km)
N.W. No.2The Brahmaputra between Sadiya and Dhubri (891 km)
N.W. No.3The West-Coast Canal in Kerala (Kottapuram–Kollam etc., 205 km)
N.W. No.4Stretches of Godavari and Krishna rivers with Kakinada–Puducherry canals (1078 km)
N.W. No.5Stretches of Brahmani river, Mahanadi delta and East Coast Canal (588 km)

About 95 per cent of the country's trade volume (68 per cent by value) is moved by sea.

7. Major sea ports

India has a coastline of 11098.81 km with 12 major and about 200 notified non-major ports. The 12 major ports handle 95 per cent of India's foreign trade.

PortSpeciality
Deendayal (Kandla), GujaratFirst port after Independence; a tidal port, built to ease the Mumbai port after loss of Karachi at Partition.
MumbaiThe biggest port, with a spacious natural well-sheltered harbour.
Jawaharlal NehruPlanned to decongest Mumbai port and act as a hub port.
Mormugao (Goa)Premier iron ore exporting port (~50% of India's iron ore export).
New Mangalore (Karnataka)Exports iron ore concentrates from Kudremukh mines.
CochinExtreme south-western port; natural harbour at the entrance of a lagoon.
V.O. Chidambaranar (Tuticorin), TNExtreme south-eastern port; natural harbour, rich hinterland.
ChennaiOne of the oldest artificial ports; ranks next to Mumbai in trade.
VishakhapatnamDeepest land-locked and well-protected port; outlet for iron ore.
Paradwip (Odisha)Specialises in the export of iron ore.
Shyama Prasad Mookerjee, KolkataInland riverine tidal port; serves the Ganga–Brahmaputra hinterland; needs dredging of the Hooghly.
HaldiaSubsidiary port built to relieve pressure on Kolkata port.

8. Airways — the fastest mode

Air travel is the fastest, most comfortable and prestigious mode of transport. It can cover very difficult terrain — high mountains, dreary deserts, dense forests and long oceanic stretches — with ease. This is why it is so valuable in the north-eastern states, marked by big rivers, dissected relief, dense forests and frequent floods.

Key point — helicopters & UDAN

Pawanhans Helicopters Ltd. provides helicopter services to ONGC for off-shore operations and to inaccessible terrain like the north-eastern states and interior Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand. UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik) — the Regional Connectivity Scheme by the Ministry of Civil Aviation — makes flying affordable for the common citizen and connects regional/remote routes.

9. Communication — personal and mass

Communication moves information without moving people. It is of two kinds:

  • Personal communication — letters, telephone, internet. The Indian postal network is the largest in the world. First-class mail (cards, envelopes) is airlifted; second-class mail (book packets, registered newspapers, periodicals) goes by surface mail. Six mail channels speed up delivery: Rajdhani, Metro, Green, Business, Bulk Mail and Periodical channels. India has one of the largest telecom networks in Asia, with uniform STD rates and 24-hour STD reaching villages, possible by combining space technology with communication technology.
  • Mass communication — radio, television, newspapers, magazines, books and films. All India Radio (Akashvani) broadcasts in national, regional and local languages; Doordarshan is one of the largest terrestrial networks. Newspapers appear in about 100 languages (most in Hindi, then English and Urdu). India is the largest producer of feature films; the Central Board of Film Certification certifies films.
Key point — Digital India

Digital India is an umbrella programme to make India ready for a knowledge-based transformation, with the idea: IT (Indian Talent) + IT (Information Technology) = IT (India Tomorrow).

10. International trade and balance of trade

Trade is the exchange of goods among people, states and countries; the market is where exchange happens. Trade between two countries is international trade (by sea, air or land). Local trade happens in cities/towns/villages, state-level trade between states. Advancement of international trade is an economic barometer of a country's prosperity. No country can survive without it, because resources are space bound.

Key point — balance of trade

Export and import are the two components of trade. The balance of trade = value of exports − value of imports.

  • Favourable balance of trade: value of exports exceeds value of imports.
  • Unfavourable balance of trade: value of imports exceeds value of exports.

Exports from India: gems & jewellery, chemicals and related products, agriculture and allied products, and IT/software (a big foreign-exchange earner). Imports to India: petroleum crude & products, gems & jewellery, chemicals, base metals, electronic items, machinery, agriculture & allied products.

11. Tourism as a trade

Tourism in India has grown remarkably over the past two decades. Schemes like Swadesh Darshan 2.0, Vibrant Village Programme, PRASHAD (Pilgrimage Rejuvenation and Spiritual Heritage Augmentation Drive) and Paryatan Mitra boost it. Tourism promotes national integration, supports local handicrafts and cultural pursuits, helps international understanding of culture and heritage, and earns foreign exchange.

Foreign tourists visit India for heritage tourism, eco tourism, adventure tourism, cultural tourism, medical tourism and business tourism. There is vast potential for tourism in all parts of the country.

12. NCERT Exercises — fully answered

Q1. Multiple choice questions.

  • (i) East-west corridor connects — (b) Silchar and Porbandar.
  • (ii) Mode that reduces trans-shipment losses and delays — (c) Pipeline.
  • (iii) State not connected with the H.V.J. pipeline — (b) Maharashtra (HVJ serves western and northern India: Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh).
  • (iv) Deepest land-locked, well-protected port on the east coast — (d) Vishakhapatnam.
  • (v) Most important mode of transport in India — (b) Railways.
  • (vi) Trade between two or more countries — (b) International trade.

Q2. Answer in about 30 words.

(i) Three merits of roadways. (1) Construction cost is much lower than railways; (2) roads can cross dissected, undulating land and steep mountains; (3) they give door-to-door service, so loading/unloading costs are low and they act as feeders to rail, air and sea.

(ii) Where and why is rail transport the most convenient? Rail is most convenient on the level northern plains — vast flat land, dense population and rich agriculture make track-laying easy and traffic high, allowing fast carriage of bulky goods and large numbers of passengers over long distances.

(iii) Significance of border roads. Built by the BRO (1960), they are of strategic importance in the northern and north-eastern border areas, improving accessibility in difficult terrain, aiding defence and the economic development of remote regions.

(iv) What is trade? Difference between international and local trade. Trade is the exchange of goods and services among people, states and countries. Local trade is carried within cities, towns and villages; international trade is carried between two countries through sea, air or land routes.

Q3. Answer in about 120 words.

(i) Why are transport and communication called the lifelines of a nation and its economy? Goods and services do not move from supply to demand locations on their own — they need transport. A country's development depends on producing goods and moving them efficiently over space, so efficient transport is a prerequisite for fast development. Roadways, railways, pipelines, waterways and airways carry people and freight; communication (post, telecom, radio, TV, press, internet) carries information and ideas without physical movement. Together they make local, national and global trade possible, link distant parts of a diverse country, integrate its economic life, and accelerate industry, agriculture and tourism. Because the entire economy depends on this dense, efficient network — just as a body depends on its arteries — they are rightly called the lifelines of the nation.

(ii) Changing nature of international trade in the last fifteen years. India's international trade has shifted from traditional goods to knowledge-based products and services. India has emerged as a software giant, earning large foreign exchange through the export of information technology. The basket of exports now includes gems & jewellery, chemicals, agricultural and allied products, while imports are led by petroleum crude, electronic items, machinery and base metals. India trades with all major trading blocks and geographical regions. Tourism has grown into an important invisible trade, supported by schemes like Swadesh Darshan 2.0 and PRASHAD. Overall, trade in services and IT, along with tourism, has become a key driver — making international trade an even sharper economic barometer of the country's prosperity.

Quiz Drive (answers). 1. Northern terminal of the North-South corridor — Srinagar. 2. Headquarter of the Southern Railway zone — Chennai. 3. Rail gauge of width 1.676 m — Broad Gauge. 4. A riverine port — Shyama Prasad Mookerjee (Kolkata). 5. Busiest railway junction in northern India — Mughal Sarai / Prayagraj.

13. Common confusions cleared

  • National Highway vs State Highway: NH links extreme parts of the country; SH links a state capital with its district headquarters.
  • District Roads vs Other Roads: District roads connect the district HQ to places in the district; Other (rural) roads link villages with towns (PMGSY).
  • Favourable vs unfavourable balance of trade: favourable = exports more than imports; unfavourable = imports more than exports. (Don't confuse with balance of payments.)
  • Cheapest vs fastest: waterways are the cheapest; airways are the fastest; railways are the principal/most important overall.
  • East-West corridor = Silchar–Porbandar; North-South corridor = Srinagar–Kanniyakumari. Don't swap them.
  • Mormugao = iron-ore export; Vishakhapatnam = deepest land-locked; Kandla (Deendayal) = first port after Independence, tidal.

14. Quick revision checklist

  • Lifelines = transport + communication + trade (complementary to each other).
  • Six road classes: Golden Quadrilateral, National, State, District, Other, Border.
  • Railways: first train Mumbai–Thane (1853), 17 zones, gauges = Broad/Metre/Narrow.
  • Pipelines carry crude oil, petroleum and gas; high initial cost, low running cost, no trans-shipment loss.
  • Waterways cheapest; NW-1 Ganga (Prayagraj–Haldia), NW-2 Brahmaputra (Sadiya–Dhubri).
  • 12 major ports; sea carries 95% of trade volume.
  • Communication = personal + mass; Indian postal network largest in the world.
  • Balance of trade = exports − imports (favourable / unfavourable). Tourism is a trade.
Practice MCQs
1. India has which rank in the size of its road network in the world?
  1. First
  2. Second
  3. Third
  4. Fourth
Answer: (B) Second largest, about 62.16 lakh km (2020–21).
2. The North–South corridor connects:
  1. Silchar and Porbandar
  2. Delhi and Mumbai
  3. Srinagar and Kanniyakumari
  4. Kolkata and Chennai
Answer: (C) Srinagar (J&K) to Kanniyakumari (Tamil Nadu).
3. The Border Roads Organisation was established in:
  1. 1947
  2. 1953
  3. 1960
  4. 1971
Answer: (C) 1960, for strategic roads in northern and north-eastern border areas.
4. The first train in India ran in 1853 between:
  1. Mumbai and Thane
  2. Delhi and Agra
  3. Kolkata and Howrah
  4. Chennai and Bangalore
Answer: (A) Mumbai to Thane, a distance of 34 km.
5. The broad gauge of Indian Railways has a track width of:
  1. 1.000 m
  2. 0.762 m
  3. 1.676 m
  4. 0.610 m
Answer: (C) 1.676 m — it carries the largest route length (63,950 km).
6. Which mode of transport rules out trans-shipment losses and delays?
  1. Railways
  2. Roadways
  3. Pipeline
  4. Waterways
Answer: (C) Pipelines — high initial cost but minimal running cost and no trans-shipment loss.
7. National Waterway No.1 lies on which river?
  1. Brahmaputra
  2. Ganga
  3. Godavari
  4. Krishna
Answer: (B) The Ganga between Prayagraj and Haldia (1620 km).
8. Which port is the premier iron-ore exporting port of India?
  1. Kandla
  2. Mormugao
  3. Cochin
  4. Chennai
Answer: (B) Mormugao (Goa) — about 50% of India's iron ore export.
9. When the value of exports exceeds the value of imports, it is called:
  1. Unfavourable balance of trade
  2. Favourable balance of trade
  3. Balance of payments
  4. Free trade
Answer: (B) Favourable balance of trade.
10. The Indian postal network is:
  1. The smallest in Asia
  2. The largest in the world
  3. Second largest in the world
  4. Limited to cities only
Answer: (B) The largest postal network in the world.
11. Which is the deepest land-locked and well-protected port on the east coast?
  1. Chennai
  2. Paradwip
  3. Vishakhapatnam
  4. Tuticorin
Answer: (C) Vishakhapatnam — originally an outlet for iron-ore exports.
12. UDAN scheme is associated with:
  1. Railways
  2. Regional air connectivity
  3. Rural roads
  4. Inland waterways
Answer: (B) Regional Connectivity Scheme to make flying affordable for the common citizen.
Assertion–Reason
A: Waterways are an environment-friendly mode of transport.   R: They are fuel-efficient and most suitable for carrying heavy and bulky goods.
Answer: Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A — being fuel-efficient and carrying bulk by water makes the mode cheap and environment-friendly.
A: Roads can climb mountains like the Himalayas while railways struggle there.   R: Roads can negotiate higher gradients and cross dissected, undulating terrain.
Answer: Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A — the ability to take higher gradients is exactly why roads reach mountainous areas.
Previous-year questions
Q1. Why are means of transport and communication called the lifelines of a nation and its economy? Explain. (CBSE, 5 marks)
Outline: goods do not move on their own; development needs production + movement; transport (road, rail, pipeline, water, air) carries goods/people; communication carries information; together they enable trade, integrate a diverse country and accelerate industry, agriculture and tourism — hence "lifelines".
Q2. Distinguish between favourable and unfavourable balance of trade with examples. (CBSE, 3 marks)
Answer: Balance of trade = exports − imports. Favourable: exports more than imports. Unfavourable: imports more than exports. India exports IT, gems & jewellery, chemicals; imports petroleum crude, electronics, machinery.
Q3. Explain any three merits of road transport over rail transport. (CBSE, 3 marks)
Answer: Lower construction cost; can cross undulating terrain and steep mountains; provides door-to-door service with low loading/unloading cost and acts as a feeder to rail, air and sea ports.
Q4. Describe the role of pipelines as a means of transport in India. (CBSE, 4 marks)
Answer: Pipelines carry crude oil, petroleum products and natural gas (solids as slurry) from fields to refineries, fertilizer plants and thermal plants; made inland refineries like Barauni and Mathura possible; high initial cost but minimal running cost; rule out trans-shipment losses/delays. Three networks: Upper Assam–Kanpur, Salaya–Jalandhar, and HVJ gas pipeline.
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