CHAPTER 3 POLITICS OF PLANNED DEVELOPMENT MCQs

CHAPTER 3 POLITICS OF PLANNED DEVELOPMENT MCQs

1. What is the primary reason for Orissa being considered an important investment destination?
  • (a) Large tribal population
  • (b) Abundance of untapped iron ore reserves
  • (c) Government initiatives for tourism
  • (d) Presence of established industries
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Abundance of untapped iron ore reserves

    2. What is the government’s expectation from signing Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with steel makers?
  • (a) Increase in tribal population
  • (b) Capital investment and employment opportunities
  • (c) Decline in iron ore demand
  • (d) Environmental conservation
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Capital investment and employment opportunities

    3. What is the main concern of the tribal population regarding the setting up of industries?
  • (a) Economic downturn
  • (b) Pollution of the environment
  • (c) Fear of displacement
  • (d) Lack of government support
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Fear of displacement

    4. What is the environmentalists’ primary concern regarding mining and industry?
  • (a) Lack of technological advancements
  • (b) Economic instability
  • (c) Pollution of the environment
  • (d) Loss of cultural heritage
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Pollution of the environment

    5. Why does the central government think allowing the industry is essential?
  • (a) To set a bad example
  • (b) To encourage investments in the country
  • (c) To discourage economic growth
  • (d) To promote environmental conservation
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) To encourage investments in the country

    6. What do environmentalists fear about the consequences of mining and industry?
  • (a) Loss of cultural heritage
  • (b) Positive impact on the environment
  • (c) Economic stability
  • (d) Pollution of the environment
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Pollution of the environment

    7. What is the central government’s concern if the industry is not allowed?
  • (a) Positive impact on the environment
  • (b) Economic stability
  • (c) Set a bad example and discourage investments
  • (d) Encouragement of environmental conservation
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Set a bad example and discourage investments

    8. What larger questions are raised concerning the development of Orissa?
  • (a) Cultural heritage preservation
  • (b) Whose need can be called Orissa’s need?
  • (c) Positive environmental impact
  • (d) Government support for tribal populations
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Whose need can be called Orissa’s need?

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    1. According to the passage, why are decisions of this kind difficult to answer by experts alone?
  • (a) Experts lack knowledge
  • (b) Involves weighing social interests
  • (c) Lack of expertise in history
  • (d) Experts disagree on major decisions
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Involves weighing social interests

    2. In a democracy, what is emphasized regarding major decisions like those mentioned in the passage?
  • (a) Decision-making by businessmen
  • (b) Decision-making by experts alone
  • (c) Decision-making by the people themselves
  • (d) Decision-making by foreign nations
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Decision-making by the people themselves

    3. According to the passage, whose approval is necessary for major decisions in a democracy?
  • (a) Approval of foreign experts
  • (b) Approval of environmentalists
  • (c) Approval of people’s representatives
  • (d) Approval of businessmen
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Approval of people’s representatives

    4. What role is expected of the government in the shared vision of economic development after Independence?
  • (a) Minimal role in economic growth
  • (b) No role in ensuring justice
  • (c) Key role in economic growth and justice
  • (d) Key role only in industrial development
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Key role in economic growth and justice

    5. What was the major point of disagreement after Independence regarding the government’s role in economic development?
  • (a) Government should have no role
  • (b) Centralized institution for planning
  • (c) Foreign countries should plan for India
  • (d) Businessmen should handle economic development
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Centralized institution for planning

    6. What aspect of economic development raised questions about the government’s involvement?
  • (a) Technological advancements
  • (b) Cultural preservation
  • (c) Needs of justice conflicting with economic growth
  • (d) Lack of expert advice
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Needs of justice conflicting with economic growth

    7. According to the passage, what are these major decisions bound together by?
  • (a) Shared vision of political parties
  • (b) Shared vision of economic development
  • (c) Shared vision of foreign nations
  • (d) Shared vision of industrialists
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Shared vision of economic development

    8. What does the passage suggest about the process of development in India?
  • (a) It is entirely handled by businessmen
  • (b) It involves political judgment and consultations
  • (c) It requires no public approval
  • (d) It is solely the responsibility of environmentalists
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) It involves political judgment and consultations

    9. What is highlighted as a crucial element in the history of politics in India?
  • (a) Business decisions
  • (b) Environmental conservation
  • (c) Process of development
  • (d) Role of foreign nations
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Process of development

    10. What is the primary reason for studying the process of development as mentioned in the passage?
  • (a) To criticize the government
  • (b) To understand economic growth
  • (c) As a part of the history of politics in India
  • (d) To promote the interests of businessmen
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) As a part of the history of politics in India

    1. What does the passage suggest about the contestation surrounding the idea of development?
  • (a) It leads to unanimous agreement
  • (b) It generates contradictions, conflicts, and debates
  • (c) It promotes harmonious discussions
  • (d) It has no impact on the development process
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) It generates contradictions, conflicts, and debates

    2. According to the passage, what does ‘development’ mean to different sections of the people in the context of Orissa?
  • (a) Uniform progress
  • (b) Industrialization
  • (c) Different meanings
  • (d) Traditional social structures
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Different meanings

    3. Who might view development as the planning to set up a steel plant?
  • (a) Urban consumer
  • (b) Adivasi
  • (c) Industrialist
  • (d) Environmentalist
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Industrialist

    4. What was common during the first decade after Independence in terms of measuring development?
  • (a) Using a global standard
  • (b) Referring to the ‘East’
  • (c) Ignoring the West
  • (d) No standard for measuring development
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Using a global standard

    5. What did the idea of ‘modern’ development during the first decade after Independence associate with?
  • (a) Breakdown of traditional social structures
  • (b) Preservation of traditional values
  • (c) Adivasi empowerment
  • (d) Agricultural growth
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Breakdown of traditional social structures

    6. What did the common idea of ‘development’ involve during the first decade after Independence?
  • (a) Becoming more like the industrialized countries of the West
  • (b) Rejecting the West’s progress
  • (c) Staying rooted in traditional practices
  • (d) Ignoring economic progress
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Becoming more like the industrialized countries of the West

    1. What were the two models of modern development that India faced on the eve of Independence?
  • (a) Capitalist and Communist
  • (b) Liberal-capitalist and socialist
  • (c) Democratic and autocratic
  • (d) Industrialist and agrarian
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Liberal-capitalist and socialist

    2. Who were some of the leaders in India impressed by the Soviet model of development?
  • (a) Only leaders of the Communist Party of India
  • (b) Leaders of the Socialist Party and Nehru within the Congress
  • (c) Only leaders of the Congress party
  • (d) Leaders of the Liberal Party
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Leaders of the Socialist Party and Nehru within the Congress

    3. What was the broad consensus among nationalist leaders during the national movement regarding economic concerns?
  • (a) Government’s role should be similar to the colonial government
  • (b) Poverty alleviation and economic redistribution were government responsibilities
  • (c) Economic concerns should be left to private actors
  • (d) Development should be solely driven by private investors
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Poverty alleviation and economic redistribution were government responsibilities

    4. Despite various differences, what was the consensus point among leaders regarding development?
  • (a) Private actors should drive development
  • (b) The government should have no role in development
  • (c) The government needed to plan for development
  • (d) Development should be solely market-driven
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) The government needed to plan for development

    5. What contributed to the consensus for the idea of planning as a process of rebuilding the economy?
  • (a) Lack of economic growth in the Soviet Union
  • (b) Great Depression in Europe
  • (c) Strong economic growth in the US
  • (d) Inter-war reconstruction of China
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Great Depression in Europe

    6. What was the Bombay Plan, and who proposed it?
  • (a) A plan for industrialization proposed by the government
  • (b) A plan for a market-driven economy proposed by private investors
  • (c) A plan for agricultural development proposed by farmers
  • (d) A plan for socialist development proposed by the Congress party
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) A plan for a market-driven economy proposed by private investors

    7. When did the Planning Commission come into existence in India?
  • (a) Before Independence
  • (b) During the British colonial rule
  • (c) Immediately after Independence
  • (d) In the 1960s
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Immediately after Independence

    8. Who was the Chairperson of the Planning Commission?
  • (a) The President
  • (b) The Prime Minister
  • (c) The Finance Minister
  • (d) The Chief Justice
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) The Prime Minister

    9. What did the Planning Commission become in terms of its influence?
  • (a) A minor advisory body
  • (b) The most influential and central machinery for deciding India’s development path
  • (c) A market-driven organization
  • (d) A socialist development organization
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) The most influential and central machinery for deciding India’s development path

    10. What was the main purpose of the Bombay Plan?
  • (a) To establish a socialist economy
  • (b) To promote agricultural development
  • (c) To advocate for a planned economy with government initiatives
  • (d) To support private actors in the economy
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) To advocate for a planned economy with government initiatives

    11. What did the nationalist leaders agree on regarding the responsibility of the government after Independence?
  • (a) Economic concerns should be left to private actors
  • (b) Poverty alleviation and economic redistribution were not government responsibilities
  • (c) Government’s role should be similar to the colonial government
  • (d) Poverty alleviation and economic redistribution were government responsibilities
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Poverty alleviation and economic redistribution were government responsibilities

    12. What was the common perception about private investors and their attitude towards planning in India?
  • (a) They were supportive of an open economy without state control
  • (b) They were against any form of planning
  • (c) They only supported socialist planning
  • (d) They preferred a completely state-controlled economy
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) They were supportive of an open economy without state control

    13. What contributed to the idea of planning gaining public support in the 1940s and 1950s?
  • (a) Failure of planning in the Soviet Union
  • (b) Success of planning in Europe
  • (c) Great Depression in the US
  • (d) Spectacular economic growth in the Soviet Union
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Spectacular economic growth in the Soviet Union

    14. When did the Planning Commission come into existence in India?
  • (a) 1930s
  • (b) 1940s
  • (c) 1950s
  • (d) 1960s
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) 1950s

    15. Who proposed the Bombay Plan?
  • (a) Indian farmers
  • (b) British colonial rulers
  • (c) Big industrialists in India
  • (d) Soviet leaders
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Big industrialists in India

    16. What was the main purpose of the Bombay Plan?
  • (a) To establish a socialist economy
  • (b) To promote agricultural development
  • (c) To advocate for a planned economy with government initiatives
  • (d) To support private actors in the economy
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) To advocate for a planned economy with government initiatives

    17. Who was the Chairperson of the Planning Commission?
  • (a) The President
  • (b) The Prime Minister
  • (c) The Finance Minister
  • (d) The Chief Justice
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) The Prime Minister

    18. What did the Planning Commission become in terms of its influence?
  • (a) A minor advisory body
  • (b) The most influential and central machinery for deciding India’s development path
  • (c) A market-driven organization
  • (d) A socialist development organization
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) The most influential and central machinery for deciding India’s development path

    19. What was the main purpose of the Bombay Plan?
  • (a) To establish a socialist economy
  • (b) To promote agricultural development
  • (c) To advocate for a planned economy with government initiatives
  • (d) To support private actors in the economy
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) To advocate for a planned economy with government initiatives

    20. Who was the Chairperson of the Planning Commission?
  • (a) The President
  • (b) The Prime Minister
  • (c) The Finance Minister
  • (d) The Chief Justice
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) The Prime Minister

    1. What was the main concept behind the five-year plans in India?
  • (a) Yearly budget planning
  • (b) Long-term intervention in the economy
  • (c) Monthly financial planning
  • (d) Random economic decisions
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Long-term intervention in the economy

    2. How is the budget of the central and state governments divided in the context of five-year plans?
  • (a) Yearly basis
  • (b) Monthly basis
  • (c) Two parts: ‘non-plan’ and ‘plan’ budgets
  • (d) Quarterly basis
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Two parts: ‘non-plan’ and ‘plan’ budgets

    3. What does the ‘non-plan’ budget cover?
  • (a) Routine items on a yearly basis
  • (b) Long-term economic goals
  • (c) Monthly expenses
  • (d) Unplanned expenditures
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Routine items on a yearly basis

    4. What advantage does a five-year plan offer to the government?
  • (a) Short-term focus
  • (b) Yearly intervention
  • (c) Long-term focus on the larger picture
  • (d) Random economic decisions
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Long-term focus on the larger picture

    5. When was the draft of the First Five Year Plan released?
  • (a) 1947
  • (b) 1951
  • (c) 1956
  • (d) 1966
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) 1951

    6. What did the actual Plan Document of the First Five Year Plan generate in the country?
  • (a) Economic crisis
  • (b) Plan holiday
  • (c) Excitement and extensive discussions
  • (d) Decline in economic development
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Excitement and extensive discussions

    7. When did the excitement with planning reach its peak?
  • (a) First Five Year Plan
  • (b) Second Five Year Plan
  • (c) Third Five Year Plan
  • (d) Fourth Five Year Plan
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Second Five Year Plan

    8. Why did the government decide to take a ‘plan holiday’?
  • (a) Decline in economic development
  • (b) Acute economic crisis
  • (c) Critics’ feedback on the plans
  • (d) Lack of public support
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Acute economic crisis

    9. What was the main criticism about the Fourth Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Lack of excitement
  • (b) Lack of government involvement
  • (c) Novelty of planning had declined
  • (d) Overemphasis on economic crisis
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Novelty of planning had declined

    10. What did the foundation of India’s economic development rely on by the Third Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Economic crisis resolution
  • (b) Excitement with planning
  • (c) Acute economic crisis
  • (d) Long-term planning and intervention
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Long-term planning and intervention

    11. What marked the decline of the novelty of planning in India?
  • (a) First Five Year Plan
  • (b) Second Five Year Plan
  • (c) Third Five Year Plan
  • (d) Fourth Five Year Plan
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) First Five Year Plan

    12. What did the foundation of India’s economic development rely on by the Third Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Economic crisis resolution
  • (b) Excitement with planning
  • (c) Acute economic crisis
  • (d) Long-term planning and intervention
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Long-term planning and intervention

    13. What marked the decline of the novelty of planning in India?
  • (a) First Five Year Plan
  • (b) Second Five Year Plan
  • (c) Third Five Year Plan
  • (d) Fourth Five Year Plan
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Fourth Five Year Plan

    14. Why did the government decide to take a ‘plan holiday’?
  • (a) Decline in economic development
  • (b) Acute economic crisis
  • (c) Critics’ feedback on the plans
  • (d) Lack of public support
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Acute economic crisis

    15. What was the main criticism about the Fourth Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Lack of excitement
  • (b) Lack of government involvement
  • (c) Novelty of planning had declined
  • (d) Overemphasis on economic crisis
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Novelty of planning had declined

    1. What was the main objective of the First Five Year Plan (1951–1956)?
  • (a) Industrial growth
  • (b) Democracy promotion
  • (c) Breaking the cycle of poverty
  • (d) Population control
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Breaking the cycle of poverty

    2. What did K.N. Raj, an economist involved in drafting the plan, suggest for the initial two decades of development?
  • (a) Rapid development for economic growth
  • (b) Slow and cautious development to protect democracy
  • (c) No development for the first two decades
  • (d) Focusing only on industrial development
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Slow and cautious development to protect democracy

    3. What sector did the First Five Year Plan mainly address?
  • (a) Industrial sector
  • (b) Education sector
  • (c) Agricultural sector
  • (d) Health sector
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Agricultural sector

    4. What was identified as the principal obstacle in the way of agricultural growth?
  • (a) Lack of technology
  • (b) Inadequate rainfall
  • (c) Pattern of land distribution
  • (d) Lack of skilled labor
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Pattern of land distribution

    5. What was considered the key to the country’s development in the First Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Industrialization
  • (b) Technology advancements
  • (c) Land reforms
  • (d) Population control
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Land reforms

    6. What was one of the basic aims of the planners regarding national income?
  • (a) Increasing spending
  • (b) Reducing spending
  • (c) Keeping spending constant
  • (d) Raising the level of national income through increased savings
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Raising the level of national income through increased savings

    7. Why did the planners seek to push savings up in the First Five Year Plan?
  • (a) To increase government revenue
  • (b) To reduce government expenditure
  • (c) To raise the level of national income
  • (d) To promote consumer spending
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) To raise the level of national income

    8. What was challenging in pushing savings up according to the passage?
  • (a) Low basic level of spending
  • (b) High basic level of spending
  • (c) Lack of government support
  • (d) Lack of public awareness
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Low basic level of spending

    9. Until when did people’s savings rise in the first phase of the planned process?
  • (a) Until the end of the Second Five Year Plan
  • (b) Until the end of the Third Five Year Plan
  • (c) Until the end of the Fourth Five Year Plan
  • (d) Until the end of the Fifth Five Year Plan
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Until the end of the Third Five Year Plan

    10. What happened to the proportion of savings in the country from the early 1960s to the early 1970s?
  • (a) It remained constant
  • (b) It increased consistently
  • (c) It dropped consistently
  • (d) It reached a peak
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) It dropped consistently

    1. What was the focus of the Second Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Education
  • (b) Heavy Industries
  • (c) Agriculture
  • (d) Healthcare
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Heavy Industries

    2. Who led the team of economists and planners that drafted the Second Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Jawaharlal Nehru
  • (b) P. C. Mahalanobis
  • (c) K.N. Raj
  • (d) Avadi
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) P. C. Mahalanobis

    3. What was the declared goal of the Congress party during the session held at Avadi?
  • (a) Capitalist society
  • (b) Socialist pattern of society
  • (c) Industrial revolution
  • (d) Agricultural transformation
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Socialist pattern of society

    4. What key strategy did the government employ to protect domestic industries in the Second Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Export subsidies
  • (b) Currency devaluation
  • (c) Subsidies to farmers
  • (d) Substantial tariffs on imports
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Substantial tariffs on imports

    5. What sector saw significant development in the public sector during this period?
  • (a) Education
  • (b) Healthcare
  • (c) Agriculture
  • (d) Electricity, railways, steel, machineries, and communication
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Electricity, railways, steel, machineries, and communication

    6. What marked a turning point in India’s development according to the passage?
  • (a) Agricultural reforms
  • (b) Technological advancement
  • (c) Push for industrialization
  • (d) Urbanization
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Push for industrialization

    7. What problem did India face due to being technologically backward?
  • (a) Overpopulation
  • (b) Food shortage
  • (c) Lack of infrastructure
  • (d) Economic recession
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Food shortage

    8. What criticism did critics level against the Third Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Urban bias
  • (b) Agricultural bias
  • (c) Industrial bias
  • (d) Socialist bias
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Urban bias

    9. What did some critics think was wrongly prioritized in the plans?
  • (a) Agriculture
  • (b) Heavy Industries
  • (c) Education
  • (d) Healthcare
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Heavy Industries

    10. What challenge did Indian planners find difficult in the Second Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Technological backwardness
  • (b) Balancing industry and agriculture
  • (c) Lack of foreign exchange
  • (d) Lack of skilled labor
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Balancing industry and agriculture

    11. What marked a turning point in India’s development according to the passage?
  • (a) Agricultural reforms
  • (b) Technological advancement
  • (c) Push for industrialization
  • (d) Urbanization
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Push for industrialization

    13. Who was the leader of the team of economists and planners that drafted the Second Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Jawaharlal Nehru
  • (b) P. C. Mahalanobis
  • (c) K.N. Raj
  • (d) Avadi
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) P. C. Mahalanobis

    14. What was the declared goal of the Congress party during the session held at Avadi?
  • (a) Capitalist society
  • (b) Socialist pattern of society
  • (c) Industrial revolution
  • (d) Agricultural transformation
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Socialist pattern of society

    15. What key strategy did the government employ to protect domestic industries in the Second Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Export subsidies
  • (b) Currency devaluation
  • (c) Subsidies to farmers
  • (d) Substantial tariffs on imports
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Substantial tariffs on imports

    16. What sector saw significant development in the public sector during this period?
  • (a) Education
  • (b) Healthcare
  • (c) Agriculture
  • (d) Electricity, railways, steel, machineries, and communication
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Electricity, railways, steel, machineries, and communication

    17. What marked a turning point in India’s development according to the passage?
  • (a) Agricultural reforms
  • (b) Technological advancement
  • (c) Push for industrialization
  • (d) Urbanization
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Push for industrialization

    18. What problem did India face due to being technologically backward?
  • (a) Overpopulation
  • (b) Food shortage
  • (c) Lack of infrastructure
  • (d) Economic recession
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Food shortage

    19. What criticism did critics level against the Third Five Year Plan?
  • (a) Urban bias
  • (b) Agricultural bias
  • (c) Industrial bias
  • (d) Socialist bias
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Urban bias

    20. What did some critics think was wrongly prioritized in the plans?
  • (a) Agriculture
  • (b) Heavy Industries
  • (c) Education
  • (d) Healthcare
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Heavy Industries

    1. What is the common theme depicted on the stamps issued between 1955 and 1968?
  • (a) Historic landmarks
  • (b) Natural landscapes
  • (c) Planned development
  • (d) Cultural heritage
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Planned development

    2. Which of the following is NOT depicted on the stamps?
  • (a) Bhakra Dam
  • (b) Wheat Revolution
  • (c) Gauhati Refinery
  • (d) Jal Nagari
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) Jal Nagari

    3. What do the stamps reflect about the time period they were issued?
  • (a) Technological advancements
  • (b) Agricultural practices
  • (c) Vision of planned development
  • (d) Cultural diversity
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Vision of planned development

    1. What are the villagers protesting against in Orissa?
  • (a) Construction of a dam
  • (b) Establishment of a steel plant
  • (c) Implementation of a water project
  • (d) Expansion of a power station
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Establishment of a steel plant

    2. Where did the villagers stage their demonstration?
  • (a) Outside the Rashtriya Yuva Sangathan office
  • (b) Outside the Nabanirman Samiti office
  • (c) Outside the Korean company’s office
  • (d) Outside the Orissa government office
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Outside the Korean company’s office

    3. What were the protesters demanding?
  • (a) Construction of more factories
  • (b) Expansion of the steel plant
  • (c) Cancellation of the memorandum of understanding
  • (d) Collaboration with the government
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Cancellation of the memorandum of understanding

    4. Which gram panchayats were represented by the protesters?
  • (a) Dhinkia, Nuagaon, and Gadakujanga
  • (b) Jal Yojana, Jal Nagari, Jal Gram
  • (c) POSCO-India, Rashtriya Yuva Sangathan, Nabanirman Samiti
  • (d) Bhubaneswar, Bhadrak, Bargarh
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Dhinkia, Nuagaon, and Gadakujanga

    5. Who organized the demonstration?
  • (a) The Orissa government
  • (b) Rashtriya Yuva Sangathan and Nabanirman Samiti
  • (c) POSCO-India
  • (d) The Hindu newspaper
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Rashtriya Yuva Sangathan and Nabanirman Samiti

    1. How are Left and Right ideologies characterized in politics?
  • (a) By their stance on environmental issues
  • (b) By their position on social change and economic redistribution
  • (c) By their support for military interventions
  • (d) By their stance on cultural heritage
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) By their position on social change and economic redistribution

    2. What does the term “Left” typically refer to in political ideology?
  • (a) Supporters of free competition
  • (b) Advocates for market economy
  • (c) Those in favor of the poor and downtrodden
  • (d) Believers in minimal government intervention
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Those in favor of the poor and downtrodden

    3. What does the term “Right” typically refer to in political ideology?
  • (a) Supporters of free competition
  • (b) Advocates for market economy
  • (c) Those in favor of the poor and downtrodden
  • (d) Believers in minimal government intervention
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Supporters of free competition

    4. According to the passage, where do Left parties typically stand regarding government policies?
  • (a) Against government policies
  • (b) In favor of government policies for the benefit of the poor
  • (c) Supportive of military interventions
  • (d) Opposed to economic progress
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) In favor of government policies for the benefit of the poor

    5. According to the passage, what do Right parties typically believe in regarding economic progress?
  • (a) Government intervention is necessary
  • (b) Free competition and market economy ensure progress
  • (c) Both Left and Right ideologies are equally valid
  • (d) Cultural heritage is more important than economic progress
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Free competition and market economy ensure progress

    1. When was the Planning Commission set up?
  • (a) 1947
  • (b) 1950
  • (c) 1960
  • (d) 1975
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) 1950

    2. What is the nature of the Planning Commission’s role?
  • (a) Legislative
  • (b) Executive
  • (c) Advisory
  • (d) Judicial
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Advisory

    3. When did the NITI Aayog replace the Planning Commission?
  • (a) 2000
  • (b) 2010
  • (c) 2015
  • (d) 2020
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) 2015

    4. What was the scope of work defined for the Planning Commission in the resolution?
  • (a) To enforce Fundamental Rights
  • (b) To control the economy
  • (c) To promote the welfare of the people
  • (d) To interpret the Constitution
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) To promote the welfare of the people

    5. When did the NITI Aayog come into existence?
  • (a) 1947
  • (b) 1955
  • (c) 2010
  • (d) 2015
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) 2015

    6. According to the passage, what did the NITI Aayog replace?
  • (a) Supreme Court
  • (b) Election Commission
  • (c) Planning Commission
  • (d) Reserve Bank of India
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Planning Commission

    7. What did the resolution setting up the Planning Commission mention about the economic system?
  • (a) It should be completely controlled by the government
  • (b) It should result in the concentration of wealth
  • (c) It should be based on free competition and market economy
  • (d) It should not result in the concentration of wealth
  • Answer

    Answer: (d) It should not result in the concentration of wealth

    8. When did the Planning Commission resolutions become effective?
  • (a) Automatically after drafting
  • (b) After approval by the Union Cabinet
  • (c) Immediately upon release
  • (d) After being ratified by the President
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) After approval by the Union Cabinet

    9. What did the resolution emphasize regarding the ownership and control of material resources?
  • (a) It should be completely government-controlled
  • (b) It should be in the hands of a few individuals
  • (c) It should be distributed for the common good
  • (d) It should be solely controlled by private businesses
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) It should be distributed for the common good

    10. What was the primary reason for replacing the Planning Commission with NITI Aayog?
  • (a) To enhance government control over the economy
  • (b) To promote the welfare of the people more effectively
  • (c) To align with the objectives of the Directive Principles
  • (d) To eliminate advisory roles in the government
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) To align with the objectives of the Directive Principles

    1. Who is P.C. Mahalanobis?
  • (a) Politician
  • (b) Scientist and statistician
  • (c) Industrialist
  • (d) Economist
  • Answer

    Answer: (b) Scientist and statistician

    2. What is the significance of P.C. Mahalanobis in the context of Indian planning?
  • (a) Founder of the Indian Statistical Institute
  • (b) Architect of the First Five Year Plan
  • (c) Advocate for agrarian reforms
  • (d) Pioneer in environmental sciences
  • Answer

    Answer: (a) Founder of the Indian Statistical Institute

    3. What role did P.C. Mahalanobis play in economic planning?
  • (a) Supporter of slow-paced development
  • (b) Advocate for privatization
  • (c) Architect of the Second Plan
  • (d) Critic of public sector involvement
  • Answer

    Answer: (c) Architect of the Second Plan

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