Class 8 Social Science

Chapter 7 — Factors of Production

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Overview

Summary

Chapter 7 of the Class 8 Social Science NCERT textbook (Exploring Society: India and Beyond) covers the factors of production — the resources used to make goods and services, classified in economics into four types: land (natural resources), labour (physical and mental effort), capital (monetary resources and durable assets), and entrepreneurship — with technology acting as a key enabler of production.

  • Land and labour reimaginedIn economics 'land' means far more than geography — it covers natural resources like soil, water, forests, minerals, and sunlight — while labour is the physical and mental effort people put into producing goods and services.
  • Human capitalDistinct from raw labour, human capital is the skill, knowledge, and expertise workers bring, built up through education, good healthcare, and social influences that raise the quality and efficiency of what they produce.
  • Capital and entrepreneurshipCapital covers money and human-made assets like machinery, raised through savings, loans, or the stock market, while the entrepreneur takes risks and combines all the factors to create goods and services that benefit society.
  • How the factors work togetherThe four factors are interconnected, so a missing or misused factor can stall production; some sectors are labour-intensive while others, like semiconductors, are capital-intensive, and technology helps produce more from the same inputs.
Essentials

Key points & formulas

  1. 01Four factors of production: land (natural resources), labour, capital, and entrepreneurship; technology is described as a crucial facilitator — not a factor itself — that enables businesses to produce more with the same or fewer inputs.
  2. 02In economics, 'land' encompasses not just geographical land but also natural resources including soil, forests, water, air, sunlight, minerals, oil, and natural gas.
  3. 03Labour refers to physical and mental effort used in production; human capital is distinct — it refers to the specialised skills, knowledge, abilities, and expertise that determine the quality and efficiency of that labour.
  4. 04Facilitators of human capital are education and training, good healthcare (which supports cognitive development and productivity), and social/cultural influences — such as Japan's kaizen ('continuous improvement') concept applied since the mid-1940s.
  5. 05Capital includes monetary resources and durable human-made assets such as machinery, tools, equipment, vehicles, computers, shops, and factory buildings; businesses raise capital through personal savings, bank loans (paying interest), or the stock market (issuing shares and paying dividends).
  6. 06An entrepreneur identifies a problem, takes risks by investing money and time, combines all factors of production, makes key business decisions, and contributes to society through innovation and job creation — J.R.D. Tata, who started India's first airline (Tata Airlines) in 1932 and received the Bharat Ratna in 1992, is cited as an example.
  7. 07The factors are interconnected — if one is missing or misused, production can become inefficient or halt; agriculture, construction, and handicrafts are labour-intensive, while semiconductor chips and satellites are capital-intensive.
  8. 08India's Adult Literacy Rate was 85% for males and 70% for females as of 2023 (World Bank); 65% of India's population is below age 35 (Economic Survey of India 2024), giving the country a potential demographic dividend if quality education, health, and skilling are ensured.
Questions

Frequently asked questions

01

What are the four factors of production according to Class 8 Exploring Society Chapter 7?

The four factors of production are land (natural resources), labour (physical and mental effort), capital (monetary resources and durable assets), and entrepreneurship. Technology is also identified as a crucial facilitator that enables businesses to produce more goods with the same or fewer inputs.

02

What does 'land' mean in economics?

In economics, 'land' is broader than geographical land. It includes all natural resources such as soil, forests, water, air, sunlight, minerals, oil, and natural gas. Businesses either purchase land or pay rent to use it.

03

What is the difference between labour and human capital?

Labour refers to the physical and mental effort used in production. Human capital refers to the specialised skills, knowledge, abilities, and expertise required to perform that labour. Human capital is not just basic effort — it captures the quality and efficiency of that labour.

04

What are the facilitators of human capital mentioned in the chapter?

The chapter lists three facilitators: (1) education and training — helping individuals gain knowledge from basic literacy to field expertise; (2) healthcare — good health supports cognitive development and lets workers be more productive; and (3) social and cultural influences — such as a culture of continuous improvement (e.g., Japan's kaizen concept, applied since the mid-1940s) or the German work ethic known for punctuality, attention to detail, and quality.

05

What is kaizen and which country does it come from?

Kaizen is a Japanese concept meaning 'continuous improvement.' It has been applied in Japan since the mid-1940s and has helped Japan achieve higher standards of living for its people.

06

What is the demographic dividend and how does it apply to India?

The demographic dividend is the benefit a country gets when it has a large number of young and working people — more earners and fewer dependents allows the country to grow businesses and improve living standards. According to the Economic Survey of India 2024, 65 per cent of India's population is below the age of 35, giving India a potential demographic dividend if quality education, health, training, and skilling are ensured.

07

What is capital in economics?

In economics, capital includes both monetary resources and durable human-made assets used to produce goods and services — examples include machinery, tools, equipment, vehicles, vending carts, computers, shops, factories, and office buildings.

08

How do businesses raise capital?

Businesses typically start with personal savings and support from family and friends. If funds are insufficient, they take bank loans and pay interest over time. Large companies can raise financial capital through the stock market by offering shares of their business to the public and paying dividends (a share of profits) to shareholders.

09

What does an entrepreneur do? What are the key qualities?

According to the chapter, an entrepreneur identifies a problem and seeks an innovative solution, takes risks by investing money and time, combines various factors of production, makes key decisions about business operations, and contributes to the welfare of society through their innovation. They also create job opportunities and support livelihoods.

10

Who was J.R.D. Tata and why is he given as an example in this chapter?

J.R.D. (Jehangir Ratanji Dadabhoy) Tata, born in 1904, is cited as an example of a great entrepreneur. He headed the Tata Group, started India's first airline — Tata Airlines in 1932, which later became Air India — and expanded into steel, cars, power, and chemicals. He was known for caring about his workers and was awarded the Bharat Ratna, India's highest civilian award, in 1992.

11

What is SWAYAM and how does it help students?

SWAYAM stands for Study Webs of Active Learning for Young Aspiring Minds. It is a government platform offering free online courses (MOOCs) for Grade 9 onwards in subjects like robotics, aquaculture, and textile printing. Students can learn at their own pace from anywhere. It is accessible at swayam.gov.in. The National Career Service portal (ncs.gov.in) similarly helps people find job opportunities across sectors from plumbing to accounting.

12

What is a supply chain and what disruptions can affect it?

A supply chain is a network of individuals, organisations, resources, activities, and technology involved in the production and sale of goods. When businesses rely on far-off sources rather than local inputs, disruptions can halt the production process — as happened during the COVID-19 pandemic.

13

What is the difference between labour-intensive and capital-intensive production?

Labour-intensive production relies more on human effort — the chapter gives agriculture, construction, and handicrafts as examples. Capital-intensive production requires more capital, specialised machinery, and equipment — examples given are semiconductor chips and satellites.

14

What is India's CSR law and what makes it significant?

India enacted a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) law in 2014, making it the first nation in the world to do so. The law mandates companies to spend 2 per cent of their average profits of the last three years on CSR activities such as reducing pollution, addressing community well-being, and treating employees and customers with respect.

15

Can I download Chapter 7 of Class 8 Exploring Society: India and Beyond for free?

Yes — the PDF is available free with no sign-up required on cbseprepmaster.com.

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