Read the following passage carefully:
India has done well from globalisation. No historic transformation can occur with only gains and no losses. But on net reckoning, India, like many other developing countries,has gained. Depict the dire prediction of radical theories of imperialism, the old Ricardian theory of comparative advantage has asserted itself, albeit in a dynamic form. Today, it is the developed world that is haunted by the spectre of free trade, not the developing world.
However, the benefits of globalisation have accrued only to one part of India; the India of IT parks and financial markets, businessmen and trades,corporate leaders and executives and, yes, also the white-collar workers in new corporate hubs like Gurgaon, Whitefields or Rajerhat, and their blue-collar counterparts in the smart new factories. Let us call this globalized India.
Then there is the other India: Bharat as we once used to call it. The India of small farmers, of tribals clinging to their disappearing forests in Orissa, of landless Dalits living in the shadow of upper caste atrocities, of shivering Bihari workers building roads in the frozen deserts of Ladakh. It is another world, till recently untouched by globalisation.
On the basis of the reading of the passage, answer any eight question in brief:
1. How is globalisation viewed?
2. Can any historic change be made without any loss?
3. Is India a developed country or a developing one?
4. Mention any two fields where the benefits of globalisation can be seen in India.
5. Who are not benefited by globalisation?
6. What is the condition of landless Dalits in India?
7. What is the condition of Bihari workers in the cold deserts of Ladakh?
8. What is meant by 'another world' in the last para of the above passage?
9. Give a suitable title to the above passage.
please help me
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Answer:
Sorry but ask one by one plz
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Explanation:
in India globalisation is viewed as
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