Class 11 Economics Notes
Chapter 8: Comparative Development Experiences of India and Its Neighbours
1. Introduction
In today’s globalised world, countries compare their development with neighbouring nations to understand their strengths and weaknesses.
This chapter compares:
- India
- China
- Pakistan
These countries share similar historical backgrounds but adopted different development strategies.
2. Why Compare India, China and Pakistan?
Reasons
- All started development around the same time.
- All adopted planning for economic growth.
- All are developing countries.
- All face population and employment challenges.
3. Developmental Path of the Three Countries
| Country | Important Year |
|---|---|
| India | Independence in 1947 |
| Pakistan | Independence in 1947 |
| China | People’s Republic established in 1949 |
First Five-Year Plans
| Country | First Plan |
|---|---|
| India | 1951 |
| China | 1953 |
| Pakistan | 1956 |
4. Development Strategy of China
Before Reforms
China followed a socialist economy.
Main Features
- One-party rule
- Government ownership of industries
- Government control over land
- Central planning
Great Leap Forward (1958)
Objective
Rapid industrialisation.
Features
- Small industries in villages
- Backyard steel production
- Communes established
Problems
- Poor quality production
- Severe drought
- Food shortages
- Millions of deaths
Cultural Revolution (1966–76)
Started by Mao Zedong.
Objectives
- Remove capitalist thinking
- Promote socialist values
Effects
- Students and professionals sent to villages
- Education system disturbed
Economic Reforms (1978)
China introduced reforms voluntarily.
Agricultural Reforms
- Communes dissolved
- Land distributed to families for use
- Farmers could sell surplus output
Industrial Reforms
- Private enterprises allowed
- Competition introduced
Foreign Trade Reforms
- Special Economic Zones (SEZs) established
- Foreign investment encouraged
5. Development Strategy of Pakistan
Pakistan adopted a Mixed Economy.
Main Features
- Public and private sectors coexisted
- Import substitution industrialisation
Green Revolution
Effects
- Mechanisation increased
- Foodgrain production increased
- Agricultural productivity improved
1970s
Nationalisation
Government took control of major industries.
1980s
Policy Changes
- Denationalisation
- Promotion of private sector
- Foreign aid received
- Remittances from Middle East increased
Reforms in Pakistan
Introduced in:
1988
6. Development Strategy of India
Features
- Mixed Economy
- Democratic system
- Public sector expansion
- Planned development
Economic Reforms
Introduced in:
1991
Due to Balance of Payments Crisis.
7. Demographic Indicators (2021–23)
Population
| Country | Population (Million) |
|---|---|
| India | 1428 |
| China | 1411 |
| Pakistan | 240 |
Largest Population
✅ India
Population Growth Rate
| Country | Growth Rate |
|---|---|
| Pakistan | 1.96% |
| India | 0.81% |
| China | -0.10% |
Highest Growth
✅ Pakistan
Lowest Growth
✅ China
Population Density
| Country | Density |
|---|---|
| India | 473 |
| Pakistan | 300 |
| China | 150 |
Highest Density
✅ India
Sex Ratio
| Country | Sex Ratio |
|---|---|
| India | 930 |
| China | 898 |
| Pakistan | 948 |
Highest Sex Ratio
✅ Pakistan
Fertility Rate
| Country | Fertility Rate |
|---|---|
| China | 1.2 |
| India | 2.0 |
| Pakistan | 3.4 |
Highest
✅ Pakistan
Lowest
✅ China
8. One Child Policy of China
Introduced in:
Late 1970s
Objectives
- Control population growth
Results
Positive:
- Population growth reduced
Negative:
- Low sex ratio
- Ageing population
Later China allowed two children.
9. GDP Comparison (PPP)
| Country | GDP (PPP) |
|---|---|
| China | $35 Trillion |
| India | $15 Trillion |
| Pakistan | $1.5 Trillion |
Highest GDP
✅ China
10. Sectoral Contribution to GVA (2022)
Agriculture
| Country | Contribution |
|---|---|
| India | 18% |
| China | 8% |
| Pakistan | 24% |
Industry
| Country | Contribution |
|---|---|
| India | 28% |
| China | 38% |
| Pakistan | 21% |
Highest
✅ China
Services
| Country | Contribution |
|---|---|
| India | 54% |
| China | 54% |
| Pakistan | 55% |
Highest
✅ Pakistan
11. Workforce Distribution (2022)
Agriculture
| Country | Workforce |
|---|---|
| India | 43% |
| China | 23% |
| Pakistan | 36% |
Highest Dependence
✅ India
Industry
| Country | Workforce |
|---|---|
| India | 26% |
| China | 32% |
| Pakistan | 26% |
Highest
✅ China
Services
| Country | Workforce |
|---|---|
| India | 31% |
| China | 45% |
| Pakistan | 38% |
Highest
✅ China
12. Human Development Indicators
HDI Ranking
| Country | Rank |
|---|---|
| China | 78 |
| India | 130 |
| Pakistan | 168 |
Best Rank
✅ China
Life Expectancy
| Country | Years |
|---|---|
| China | 78 |
| India | 72 |
| Pakistan | 67.6 |
Highest
✅ China
Literacy (Mean Years of Schooling)
| Country | Years |
|---|---|
| China | 8.0 |
| India | 6.9 |
| Pakistan | 4.3 |
Highest
✅ China
Poverty (%)
| Country | Poverty |
|---|---|
| India | 21.9 |
| China | 0.0 |
| Pakistan | 21.9 |
Lowest Poverty
✅ China
Infant Mortality Rate
| Country | IMR |
|---|---|
| China | 4.8 |
| India | 25.5 |
| Pakistan | 51 |
Best Performance
✅ China
Maternal Mortality Rate
| Country | MMR |
|---|---|
| China | 23 |
| India | 103 |
| Pakistan | 154 |
Lowest
✅ China
13. Liberty Indicators
Indicators measuring freedom and democratic rights.
Examples
- Right to vote
- Freedom of speech
- Rule of law
- Independent judiciary
- Constitutional rights
14. Why China Succeeded?
Major Reasons
- Land reforms
- Better education
- Better healthcare
- Decentralised planning
- Industrial growth
- SEZs
- Export promotion
- Manufacturing expansion
15. Problems of Pakistan
Reasons for Slow Growth
- Political instability
- Dependence on foreign aid
- Dependence on remittances
- Slow industrial growth
- Agricultural fluctuations
- Foreign debt burden
16. Comparative Analysis
India
Strengths
- Democracy
- Strong service sector
- Growing economy
Weaknesses
- High dependence on agriculture
- Poverty
- Human development challenges
China
Strengths
- High industrial growth
- Strong exports
- Better HDI
- Lower poverty
Weaknesses
- Limited political freedom
- Ageing population
Pakistan
Strengths
- Moderate urbanisation
- Growing service sector
Weaknesses
- Political instability
- High poverty
- Low human development
Important Dates
| Event | Year |
|---|---|
| India Independence | 1947 |
| Pakistan Independence | 1947 |
| People’s Republic of China | 1949 |
| China’s First Plan | 1953 |
| Pakistan’s First Plan | 1956 |
| Great Leap Forward | 1958 |
| Cultural Revolution | 1966–76 |
| China Reforms | 1978 |
| Pakistan Reforms | 1988 |
| India Reforms | 1991 |
Exam Quick Revision
China
- One Child Policy
- Great Leap Forward
- Cultural Revolution
- Reforms in 1978
- SEZs
- Manufacturing-led growth
Pakistan
- Mixed economy
- Reforms in 1988
- Foreign aid
- Remittances
- Political instability
India
- Mixed economy
- Reforms in 1991
- Service sector-led growth
- Democracy
Most Important Fact
China follows the traditional development pattern:
Agriculture → Industry → Services
India and Pakistan mostly shifted:
Agriculture → Services
Questions
VERY SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS (1 MARK)
1. Which countries are compared in this chapter?
Answer: India, China and Pakistan.
2. When did India become independent?
Answer: 1947.
3. When was the People’s Republic of China established?
Answer: 1949.
4. When did India launch its First Five-Year Plan?
Answer: 1951.
5. When did China launch its First Five-Year Plan?
Answer: 1953.
6. When did Pakistan launch its First Five-Year Plan?
Answer: 1956.
7. What is the Great Leap Forward?
Answer: A campaign launched by China in 1958 to rapidly industrialise the economy.
8. When was the Great Leap Forward launched?
Answer: 1958.
9. What were Communes?
Answer: Collective farming units in China.
10. What was the Cultural Revolution?
Answer: A movement launched by Mao in 1966 to promote socialist values.
11. When did China introduce economic reforms?
Answer: 1978.
12. When did Pakistan introduce economic reforms?
Answer: 1988.
13. When did India introduce economic reforms?
Answer: 1991.
14. What are SEZs?
Answer: Special Economic Zones.
15. Why were SEZs established in China?
Answer: To attract foreign investment.
16. Which country introduced the One Child Policy?
Answer: China.
17. What was the purpose of the One Child Policy?
Answer: To control population growth.
18. Which country has the highest population?
Answer: India.
19. Which country has the highest population growth rate?
Answer: Pakistan.
20. Which country has the lowest population growth rate?
Answer: China.
21. Which country has the highest population density?
Answer: India.
22. Which country has the lowest fertility rate?
Answer: China.
23. Which country has the highest fertility rate?
Answer: Pakistan.
24. Which country has the largest GDP?
Answer: China.
25. Which sector contributes most to China’s GDP?
Answer: Services.
26. Which sector contributes most to India’s GDP?
Answer: Services.
27. Which sector contributes most to Pakistan’s GDP?
Answer: Services.
28. Which country has the best HDI rank?
Answer: China.
29. What is HDI?
Answer: Human Development Index.
30. Which country has the highest life expectancy?
Answer: China.
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS (3 MARKS)
1. Why are regional economic groupings formed?
Answer:
Regional economic groupings are formed:
- To strengthen economies.
- To increase trade.
- To promote cooperation.
- To face global competition.
2. Mention similarities among India, China and Pakistan.
Answer:
- Developing countries.
- Started planning around the same period.
- Large populations.
- Agricultural economies initially.
3. Explain the Great Leap Forward.
Answer:
- Started in 1958.
- Aimed at rapid industrialisation.
- Village industries were promoted.
- Communes were established.
- Ultimately failed due to poor planning and drought.
4. Explain the Cultural Revolution.
Answer:
- Started in 1966.
- Led by Mao Zedong.
- Students and professionals were sent to villages.
- Promoted socialist ideology.
5. Explain China’s agricultural reforms.
Answer:
- Communes were abolished.
- Land was allocated to households.
- Farmers could keep surplus production.
- Agricultural productivity increased.
6. Explain China’s industrial reforms.
Answer:
- Private enterprises allowed.
- Competition introduced.
- State enterprises restructured.
- SEZs established.
7. Explain Pakistan’s development strategy.
Answer:
- Mixed economy.
- Import substitution.
- Green Revolution.
- Nationalisation in the 1970s.
- Denationalisation in the 1980s.
8. What is the One Child Policy?
Answer:
A population control measure introduced in China in the late 1970s limiting most families to one child.
9. What are the advantages of China’s reforms?
Answer:
- Higher GDP growth.
- Better industrialisation.
- Increased exports.
- Reduced poverty.
10. What are Liberty Indicators?
Answer:
Indicators measuring freedom and democratic rights such as:
- Voting rights
- Freedom of speech
- Rule of law
- Independent judiciary
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS (5–6 MARKS)
1. Compare India’s, China’s and Pakistan’s development strategies.
India
- Mixed economy
- Democratic system
- Five-Year Plans
- Reforms in 1991
China
- Socialist economy
- One-party system
- Reforms in 1978
- Manufacturing-led growth
Pakistan
- Mixed economy
- Reforms in 1988
- Foreign aid dependent
- Private sector promotion
2. Explain China’s reform programme.
Answer:
China introduced reforms in 1978.
Agricultural Reforms
- End of communes
- Family farming system
Industrial Reforms
- Private sector allowed
- Competition introduced
Foreign Trade Reforms
- SEZs established
- Foreign investment encouraged
Results
- Rapid economic growth
- Industrial expansion
- Poverty reduction
3. Explain major reasons for China’s success.
Answer:
- Land reforms
- Better education
- Better healthcare
- Decentralised planning
- Industrial growth
- Export promotion
- SEZs
- Infrastructure development
4. Explain the reasons for Pakistan’s slow growth.
Answer:
- Political instability
- Foreign debt
- Dependence on aid
- Agricultural fluctuations
- Weak industrial growth
- Heavy dependence on remittances
5. Compare human development indicators of India, China and Pakistan.
| Indicator | India | China | Pakistan |
|---|---|---|---|
| HDI Rank | 130 | 78 | 168 |
| Life Expectancy | 72 | 78 | 67.6 |
| Schooling | 6.9 | 8.0 | 4.3 |
| Poverty | 21.9% | 0% | 21.9% |
Conclusion
China performs better on most indicators.
IMPORTANT DIFFERENCES
India vs China
| India | China |
|---|---|
| Democracy | One-party system |
| Reforms in 1991 | Reforms in 1978 |
| Service-led growth | Manufacturing-led growth |
| Higher dependence on agriculture | Lower dependence on agriculture |
India vs Pakistan
| India | Pakistan |
|---|---|
| Reforms in 1991 | Reforms in 1988 |
| Strong service sector | Dependence on remittances |
| Better HDI | Lower HDI |
China vs Pakistan
| China | Pakistan |
|---|---|
| Strong industry | Weak industry |
| Low fertility | High fertility |
| High HDI | Low HDI |
| Low poverty | Higher poverty |
IMPORTANT FILL IN THE BLANKS
- China’s reforms were introduced in ______.
✅ 1978 - Pakistan’s reforms were introduced in ______.
✅ 1988 - India’s reforms were introduced in ______.
✅ 1991 - Great Leap Forward started in ______.
✅ 1958 - Cultural Revolution started in ______.
✅ 1966 - SEZ stands for ______.
✅ Special Economic Zone - China follows a ______ party system.
✅ One - HDI stands for ______.
✅ Human Development Index - Pakistan follows a ______ economy.
✅ Mixed - India’s growth is mainly driven by the ______ sector.
✅ Service
TRUE/FALSE
- China introduced reforms before India. ✅ True
- Pakistan introduced reforms in 1991. ❌ False
- India has the highest population density. ✅ True
- China has the highest GDP. ✅ True
- Pakistan has the highest fertility rate. ✅ True
- China has the best HDI rank. ✅ True
- India’s economy is service-sector driven. ✅ True
- China’s growth is manufacturing-led. ✅ True
- Pakistan has the lowest poverty level. ❌ False
- India became independent in 1947. ✅ True
NCERT EXERCISE ANSWERS (EXAM IMPORTANT)
Q. Why are regional and economic groupings formed?
Ans: To strengthen economies, increase trade, improve cooperation and compete globally.
Q. Explain Great Leap Forward.
Ans: China’s 1958 programme aimed at rapid industrialisation through communes and village industries.
Q. What is the implication of One Child Policy?
Ans: Population growth reduced but ageing population increased.
Q. Mention human development indicators.
Ans: HDI, life expectancy, literacy, income, sanitation, infant mortality and poverty.
Q. Why is China ahead in development?
Ans: Better education, healthcare, land reforms, industrial growth and effective reforms.