Lifelines of National Economy — RBSE Class 10 (Geography)
A factory can make goods and a farm can grow food, but neither is useful until it reaches people. Transport, communication and trade are the arteries that carry goods, services and ideas across the country and the world — the "lifelines" that keep the economy alive. This chapter maps them.
1. Transport
Transport links areas of production and consumption. India has one of the largest transport networks in the world.
- Roadways — the most used; flexible, door-to-door, cheaper to build than rail. Classified as National Highways (link states/major cities, e.g. the Golden Quadrilateral), State Highways, district and rural roads, and border roads. Roads carry the bulk of passenger and goods traffic.
- Railways — the principal mode for long-distance freight and passengers; unifies the country economically and socially. Gauges: broad, metre, narrow.
- Pipelines — transport crude oil, natural gas and even solids (slurry) over long distances cheaply and continuously.
- Waterways — the cheapest for heavy, bulky goods; inland (rivers/canals — National Waterways) and overseas (major ports handle most of India's foreign trade).
- Airways — the fastest, vital for long distances and difficult terrain, but the most expensive.
2. Communication
- Personal communication — post (mail) and telephones/mobiles.
- Mass communication — radio, television, newspapers, films and the internet — inform, educate and entertain, and are vital for a democracy.
India has a vast and rapidly growing telecom and internet network, connecting even remote villages.
3. International trade
Trade is the exchange of goods; between countries it is international trade — "the economic barometer of a country."
- Exports — goods sold abroad (e.g. petroleum products, gems & jewellery, engineering goods, textiles, agricultural products).
- Imports — goods bought from abroad (e.g. crude petroleum, machinery, electronics, gold).
- Balance of trade = value of exports − value of imports (favourable if exports exceed imports).
Growing sectors include IT/software services exports. Trade connects India to the global economy.
4. Tourism
Tourism is a fast-growing service industry and a lifeline of the economy: it earns foreign exchange, creates jobs (guides, hotels, transport, handicrafts), and promotes cultural understanding. India offers heritage, eco, adventure, medical and cultural tourism — Rajasthan (forts, deserts, palaces) is a major destination.
5. Closing thought
Transport, communication and trade are the lifelines that turn production into prosperity. Learn the modes of transport with their advantages (roads flexible, rail principal, waterways cheapest, airways fastest), the role of communication and mass media, and international trade (exports/imports, balance of trade) plus tourism. In the RBSE board this chapter reliably gives short and long-answer questions worth 5–6 marks, with Rajasthan tourism as a ready example.
