By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Distinguish the types of farming in India
  • 2Classify crops by cropping season (rabi, kharif, zaid)
  • 3State the growing conditions of major crops
  • 4Explain technological and institutional reforms in agriculture
  • 5Analyse the changing place of agriculture in the economy
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Why this chapter matters
A fact-rich geography chapter that reliably yields crop-condition questions, the rabi/kharif/zaid classification, and a reform question — all high-certainty marks with easy Rajasthan links.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Agriculture — RBSE Class 10 (Geography)

Around half of India's people still earn a living from the land. What they grow, and how, depends on soil, rainfall, technology and tradition. This chapter maps India's farming — its systems, seasons and crops — and asks how to make it more productive and fair, especially for the small farmer.


1. Types of farming

  • Primitive subsistence farming — small patches, family labour, simple tools; depends on monsoon and natural fertility. Includes slash-and-burn (jhumming), known by many local names.
  • Intensive subsistence farming — high labour on small plots, with fertilisers and irrigation for higher yield (dense-population regions).
  • Commercial farming — grown for market, using modern inputs (HYV seeds, fertilisers, machinery); commercial in one region may be subsistence in another (e.g. rice).
  • Plantation farming — a single crop grown on a large estate for market (tea, coffee, rubber, sugarcane), capital- and labour-intensive.

2. Cropping seasons

  • Rabi — sown in winter (Oct–Dec), harvested in summer (Apr–Jun): wheat, gram, mustard, peas (needs mild cold + some rain/irrigation).
  • Kharif — sown with the monsoon (Jun–Jul), harvested Sep–Oct: rice, maize, jowar, bajra, cotton, groundnut.
  • Zaid — short summer season between rabi and kharif: watermelon, cucumber, muskmelon, fodder crops.

3. Major crops

  • Rice — staple; needs high temperature and heavy rain/irrigation (kharif). Major growers: West Bengal, UP, Punjab, etc.
  • Wheat — main rabi cereal; needs cool growing season, bright sunshine at ripening. Punjab, Haryana, UP.
  • Millets (jowar, bajra, ragi) — "coarse cereals", nutritious, hardy in dry areas (bajra grows in Rajasthan's sandy soils).
  • Sugarcane — tropical/subtropical; source of sugar, gur, molasses.
  • Fibre cropscotton (needs black soil, e.g. Maharashtra, Gujarat), jute ("golden fibre", West Bengal).
  • Beverage cropstea (Assam, hills; needs warm, moist, well-drained slopes) and coffee (Karnataka).

4. Technological and institutional reforms

Farming needs both technology and fair institutions:

  • The Green Revolution (HYV seeds, fertilisers, irrigation) and White Revolution (Operation Flood — milk) raised output.
  • Institutional reforms: land reforms (abolition of zamindari, consolidation of holdings), Minimum Support Price (MSP), subsidised credit and inputs, Kisan Credit Card, crop insurance, and provision through the Grameen banks.

Yet challenges remain: dependence on the monsoon, small fragmented holdings, decline of the sector's GDP share while employment stays high, and competition from cheaper imports.


5. Agriculture and the economy

Agriculture's share of GDP has fallen over the decades, but it still employs a very large share of the workforce — a sign that productivity and diversification must improve. Government support (research, irrigation, fair prices) and sustainable practices are essential for food security and farmers' welfare.


6. Closing thought

India's agriculture is diverse — shaped by farming type, season and crop needs — and central to livelihoods and food security. Learn the farming types, the rabi/kharif/zaid seasons with crops, the geographic conditions for major crops, and the technological + institutional reforms. In the RBSE board this chapter reliably gives crop-condition and reform questions worth 5–6 marks, with easy Rajasthan links (bajra, mustard).

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Farming types
primitive subsistence, intensive subsistence, commercial, plantation
By scale, inputs and purpose.
Rabi
sown winter, harvested summer — wheat, gram, mustard
Needs mild cold + irrigation.
Kharif
sown monsoon, harvested autumn — rice, bajra, cotton
Monsoon-dependent.
Zaid
short summer season — watermelon, cucumber, fodder
Between rabi and kharif.
Green/White Revolution
HYV grains / Operation Flood milk
Technological reforms.
MSP
Minimum Support Price
Institutional support to farmers.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Mixing up rabi and kharif crops
Rabi = winter-sown (wheat, mustard); kharif = monsoon-sown (rice, bajra, cotton). Remember by season.
WATCH OUT
Confusing farming types
Subsistence = for own use with basic inputs; commercial = for market with modern inputs; plantation = single crop on large estates.
WATCH OUT
Wrong crop conditions
Rice needs high heat and heavy water; wheat needs a cool season and bright ripening sun; tea needs warm, moist, well-drained slopes.
WATCH OUT
Saying agriculture's GDP share is rising
Its GDP share has FALLEN while it still employs a large workforce — a productivity gap.
WATCH OUT
Ignoring institutional reforms
Reforms include land reforms, MSP, Kisan Credit Card and crop insurance, not just technology.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Season
Name two rabi crops.
Show solution
Wheat and mustard (also gram, peas). ✦ Answer: wheat and mustard.
Q2EASY· Crop
Which fibre crop is called the 'golden fibre'?
Show solution
Jute. ✦ Answer: jute.
Q3EASY· Type
What is plantation farming?
Show solution
Growing a single crop on a large estate for the market, using much capital and labour (e.g. tea, coffee). ✦ Answer: single-crop large-estate commercial farming.
Q4MEDIUM· Conditions
State the geographical conditions required for growing rice.
Show solution
Step 1 — High temperature (above 25°C) and high humidity. Step 2 — Heavy rainfall (or assured irrigation) and fertile alluvial soil. ✦ Answer: hot, humid climate with plentiful water and fertile soil.
Q5MEDIUM· Compare
Differentiate primitive subsistence and intensive subsistence farming.
Show solution
Step 1 — Primitive subsistence: small plots, family labour, simple tools, natural fertility/monsoon. Step 2 — Intensive subsistence: small plots but high labour, fertilisers and irrigation for higher yields. ✦ Answer: primitive relies on nature/simple tools; intensive uses high labour and inputs.
Q6MEDIUM· Reform
What was the Green Revolution?
Show solution
Step 1 — Adoption of high-yielding variety (HYV) seeds with fertilisers and irrigation. Step 2 — It sharply raised the output of wheat and rice, improving food security. ✦ Answer: HYV-based technology that boosted grain production.
Q7HARD· Institutional
Describe three institutional reforms undertaken to help Indian farmers.
Show solution
Step 1 — Land reforms: abolition of zamindari and consolidation of holdings. Step 2 — Minimum Support Price (MSP) and provision of subsidised credit/inputs. Step 3 — Kisan Credit Card and crop insurance to reduce risk. ✦ Answer: land reforms, MSP/credit and crop insurance.
Q8HARD· Economy
Why is the falling GDP share of agriculture alongside high employment a concern?
Show solution
Step 1 — Agriculture's share of GDP has declined over the decades. Step 2 — Yet it still employs a very large part of the workforce. Step 3 — This means low productivity per worker — a need for diversification and better livelihoods. ✦ Answer: it signals low productivity and the need to improve or diversify rural livelihoods.
Q9MEDIUM· Crop
State two conditions needed for tea cultivation.
Show solution
Step 1 — Warm, moist, frost-free climate with plentiful rainfall. Step 2 — Well-drained, humus-rich sloping land (so water does not stagnate). ✦ Answer: warm humid climate and well-drained sloping soil.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Farming types: primitive/intensive subsistence, commercial, plantation.
  • Rabi (winter): wheat, gram, mustard; Kharif (monsoon): rice, bajra, cotton; Zaid (summer): melons.
  • Rice needs heat + water; wheat needs cool season + bright ripening sun.
  • Cotton needs black soil; jute is the 'golden fibre'.
  • Green Revolution (HYV grains); White Revolution (milk).
  • Institutional reforms: land reforms, MSP, Kisan Credit Card, insurance.
  • Agriculture's GDP share fell but employment stays high.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5–6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / very short11–2Crops, seasons, farming types
Short answer21Crop conditions or comparison of farming types
Long answer31Reforms or agriculture in the economy
Prep strategy
  • Memorise rabi/kharif/zaid crops
  • Learn growing conditions for rice, wheat, tea, cotton
  • Separate technological and institutional reforms
  • Use Rajasthan crops (bajra, mustard) as examples

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Food security

Understanding cropping and reforms supports policy for feeding the nation.

Farm planning

Crop-season and soil knowledge guides what to grow where.

Rural development

Institutional reforms shape credit, prices and farmer welfare.

Agribusiness

Commercial and plantation farming underpin agro-industries.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. State crop conditions as climate + soil + water.
  2. Classify crops by their season correctly.
  3. Separate technological from institutional reforms in answers.
  4. Use Rajasthan crop examples where relevant.
  5. Explain the GDP-vs-employment gap for economy questions.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Cropping intensity and agricultural productivity measures.
  • Sustainable agriculture and water-use efficiency.
  • Agricultural marketing and value chains.
  • Climate change impacts on Indian farming.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

RBSE Class 10 Board (BSER Ajmer)High — crop and reform questions every year
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — geography MCQs
UPSC/State PSC FoundationMedium — agriculture and economy
Social Science OlympiadMedium — economic geography

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Yes — RBSE (BSER, Ajmer) prescribes the NCERT Social Science textbooks, so Geography chapters match the national syllabus while RBSE sets its own exam pattern.

Rabi crops are sown in winter and harvested in summer (wheat, mustard); kharif crops are sown with the monsoon and harvested in autumn (rice, bajra, cotton).

The use of high-yielding variety seeds with fertilisers and irrigation from the 1960s, which greatly increased wheat and rice output and improved food security.

It employs about half of India's workforce, so improving its productivity is vital for rural incomes, food security and reducing poverty.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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