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

  • 1Explain MNCs and how they spread production across countries
  • 2Define globalisation and the role of foreign trade
  • 3Identify the factors and technology enabling globalisation
  • 4Explain India's liberalisation since 1991
  • 5Analyse the impact of globalisation and the case for fair globalisation
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Why this chapter matters
A high-relevance economics chapter that reliably yields MNC/globalisation definitions, the 1991 liberalisation question, and a balanced impact (winners/losers) answer.

Before you start — revise these

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

Globalisation and the Indian Economy — RBSE Class 10 (Economics)

The phone in your hand may be designed in one country, its parts made in several others, and assembled in yet another — then sold worldwide. That web of cross-border production and trade is globalisation. This chapter explains how the world's economies became so tightly linked, and weighs who gains and who loses.


1. Production across countries — MNCs

A Multinational Corporation (MNC) owns or controls production in more than one country. MNCs set up production where it is cheapest — near markets, skilled/cheap labour and other resources — to maximise profit.

They spread production by:

  • Setting up factories/offices jointly with local companies (benefiting locals with capital and technology).
  • Buying up local companies.
  • Placing orders with small producers (garments, footwear) who make goods for the MNC to sell under its brand.

MNCs thus link distant markets and are the main drivers of globalisation.


2. What is globalisation?

Globalisation is the rapid integration of countries through greater foreign trade and foreign investment. Goods, services, capital, technology — and to a lesser extent people — move more freely across borders, making economies interdependent.

Foreign trade connects markets: it lets producers reach beyond home markets and gives buyers a wider choice; over time it tends to equalise prices of similar goods across countries.


3. Factors enabling globalisation

  • Technology — faster transport (containers, jet cargo) and especially information and communication technology (ICT) — telecom, internet, satellites — let firms coordinate production and services worldwide instantly.
  • Liberalisation of trade and investment policy — removing government barriers (see below).
  • Trade agreements / WTO — the World Trade Organisation aims to liberalise international trade (though rules often favour developed countries).

4. Liberalisation in India (since 1991)

Earlier, India protected its producers with trade barriers (taxes on imports, limits/quotas) to help them grow. From 1991, India liberalised: it removed many barriers so that goods could be imported/exported more freely and foreign investment could come in. This decision, part of wider economic reforms, integrated India far more deeply into the global economy.


5. Impact of globalisation — winners and losers

Benefits:

  • Greater choice and better-quality goods at lower prices for consumers.
  • New jobs, investment and technology; the rise of Indian MNCs and booming services (IT).
  • Some Indian companies gained by collaborating with foreign firms.

Costs:

  • Tough competition hurt small producers (toys, batteries, tyres) — many struggled or shut.
  • Workers face job insecurity, low wages and long hours as firms cut costs to compete.
  • Benefits have been uneven — skilled/educated and large firms gained more than small producers and workers.

6. The struggle for fair globalisation

Globalisation's gains have been unequal, so there is a demand for fair globalisation that spreads benefits widely. Government can help by:

  • Ensuring labour laws are enforced and small producers are supported.
  • Negotiating fairer WTO rules.
  • Aligning trade with the interests of all people, not just powerful firms.

Fair globalisation combines the benefits of integration with protection for the vulnerable.


7. Closing thought

Globalisation, driven by MNCs, technology and liberalisation (India from 1991), has integrated economies — bringing choice and jobs but also hurting small producers and workers, with uneven gains. Learn MNCs, the role of trade/technology, India's 1991 liberalisation, the impacts, and the case for fair globalisation. In the RBSE board this chapter reliably gives definition and impact questions worth 5–6 marks.

Key formulas & results

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

MNC
controls production in more than one country
Locates where costs are lowest.
Globalisation
integration through foreign trade and investment
Makes economies interdependent.
Foreign trade role
connects markets; tends to equalise prices
Wider choice for buyers.
Enablers
technology (ICT), liberalisation, WTO
Drivers of globalisation.
Liberalisation (India)
1991 — removal of trade barriers
Opened India to trade and FDI.
Fair globalisation
spread benefits + protect the vulnerable
Government support and fair rules.
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Common mistakes & fixes

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

WATCH OUT
Confusing globalisation with only trade
Globalisation is integration through BOTH foreign trade AND foreign investment (and technology/people flows).
WATCH OUT
Saying globalisation benefits everyone equally
Gains are uneven — consumers and large/skilled firms benefit more; small producers and workers often lose.
WATCH OUT
Wrong date for India's liberalisation
India began major liberalisation in 1991, removing many trade and investment barriers.
WATCH OUT
Thinking barriers are always bad
Before 1991 barriers protected infant Indian industries; liberalisation removed them to integrate globally — both have trade-offs.
WATCH OUT
Ignoring the WTO/technology role
ICT and the WTO (plus liberalisation) are key enablers of globalisation.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· Term
What is a multinational corporation (MNC)?
Show solution
A company that owns or controls production in more than one country. ✦ Answer: a firm producing in multiple countries.
Q2EASY· Fact
In which year did India begin major liberalisation of its economy?
Show solution
In 1991. ✦ Answer: 1991.
Q3EASY· Definition
Define globalisation.
Show solution
The rapid integration of countries through greater foreign trade and foreign investment. ✦ Answer: integration of economies via trade and investment.
Q4MEDIUM· MNC
In what ways do MNCs spread their production?
Show solution
Step 1 — By setting up joint production with local firms, or buying up local companies. Step 2 — By placing orders with small producers who make goods under the MNC's brand. ✦ Answer: joint ventures/acquisitions and outsourcing orders to local producers.
Q5MEDIUM· Technology
How has technology enabled globalisation?
Show solution
Step 1 — Faster, cheaper transport (containers, air cargo) moves goods quickly. Step 2 — Information technology (telecom, internet) lets firms coordinate production and services worldwide instantly. ✦ Answer: better transport and ICT connect global production and services.
Q6MEDIUM· Trade
How does foreign trade integrate markets?
Show solution
Step 1 — Producers can sell beyond their home market and buyers get more choice. Step 2 — Competition across countries tends to equalise the prices of similar goods. ✦ Answer: it links markets, widens choice and tends to equalise prices.
Q7HARD· Liberalisation
What is liberalisation, and why did India adopt it in 1991?
Show solution
Step 1 — Liberalisation means removing government-imposed barriers to trade and investment. Step 2 — Earlier barriers protected Indian industries; by 1991 the government decided Indian producers were ready to compete. Step 3 — So it opened the economy to imports and foreign investment, integrating India globally. ✦ Answer: removing trade barriers; adopted in 1991 to integrate India with the world economy.
Q8HARD· Impact
Discuss the positive and negative impacts of globalisation on India.
Show solution
Step 1 — Positive: more choice and cheaper, better goods; new jobs, investment and technology; growth of IT and Indian MNCs. Step 2 — Negative: small producers faced tough competition (many closed); workers face insecurity and low wages. Step 3 — Benefits have been uneven across groups. ✦ Answer: gains in choice/jobs/technology but losses for small producers and workers — uneven benefits.
Q9MEDIUM· Fair
What can the government do to make globalisation fairer?
Show solution
Step 1 — Enforce labour laws and support small producers to compete. Step 2 — Negotiate fairer WTO rules and align trade with the interests of all people. ✦ Answer: protect workers/small firms and press for fairer trade rules.

5-minute revision

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

  • MNCs control production in many countries and drive globalisation.
  • Globalisation = integration via foreign trade and investment.
  • Foreign trade links markets and tends to equalise prices.
  • Enablers: ICT/transport technology, liberalisation, the WTO.
  • India liberalised from 1991, removing trade barriers.
  • Impact: more choice/jobs but pressure on small producers/workers.
  • Fair globalisation needs worker protection and fairer rules.

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 short11–2MNC, globalisation, 1991
Short answer21How MNCs spread; technology; trade
Long answer31Liberalisation or impact of globalisation
Prep strategy
  • Define MNC, globalisation and liberalisation precisely
  • Learn the enablers (technology, liberalisation, WTO)
  • Prepare a balanced impact answer (winners and losers)
  • Remember 1991 as India's liberalisation year

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Understanding markets

Explains why products and brands are global.

Careers

Shows how ICT and MNCs create IT and service jobs.

Policy

Frames debates on trade, FDI and worker protection.

Consumer choice

Clarifies why choice and prices changed after liberalisation.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Define MNC, globalisation and liberalisation distinctly.
  2. Give a balanced impact answer with both gains and losses.
  3. Cite 1991 for India's liberalisation.
  4. Name enablers: technology, liberalisation, WTO.
  5. Suggest concrete steps for fair globalisation.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • Comparative advantage and gains from trade.
  • Global value chains and offshoring.
  • WTO disputes and developing-country concerns.
  • Capital flows, FDI vs FII, and financial globalisation.

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 — globalisation and liberalisation questions every year
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — economics MCQs
UPSC/State PSC FoundationHigh — globalisation and reforms are core
Social Science OlympiadMedium — economics

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 Economics chapters match the national syllabus while RBSE sets its own exam pattern.

Globalisation is the integration of economies through trade and investment; liberalisation is the government policy of removing barriers that helped make that integration possible (in India, from 1991).

Consumers, skilled workers and large firms often gain (choice, jobs, technology), while many small producers and low-skilled workers face tough competition and insecurity — the gains are uneven.

Globalisation whose benefits are spread more widely, with the government protecting workers and small producers and pushing for fairer international trade rules.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 2 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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