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A Shirt in the Market Class 7 Notes and Mind Map (Free PDF Download)

market

The chapter “A Shirt in the Market” traces the journey of a shirt from cotton production to its sale in a U.S. store . It highlights a chain of markets linking cotton producers to shirt buyers, with buying and selling at each step . The chapter questions whether everyone benefits equally in this chain, revealing disparities in earnings . Small farmers and weavers earn little despite hard work, while businesspersons and exporters make significant profits . It also explores the exploitation of the poor due to their dependence on the rich for loans, raw materials and employment . The chapter suggests cooperatives and strict law enforcement as ways to overcome market inequalities

A Cotton Farmer in Kurnool

The Cloth Market of Erode

Putting-Out System

Weaver’s Cooperative

Garment Exporting Factory Near Delhi

The Shirt in the United States

Who Gains in the Market?

Markets and Equality

Sustainable Development Goal (SDG)

Questions and Answers

  1. What made Swapna sell the cotton to the trader instead of selling at the Kurnool cotton market? Swapna sold her cotton to the local trader because she had borrowed ₹2,500 from him at a high-interest rate to buy seeds, fertilizers, and pesticides at the beginning of the cropping season. The trader had made it a condition that she would sell all her cotton to him.
  2. Describe the conditions of employment as well as the wages of workers in the garment exporting factory. Do you think the workers get a fair deal?
    • Employment Conditions: Most workers in the Impex garment factory are women employed on a temporary basis, meaning they can be asked to leave whenever the employer deems them unnecessary.
    • Wages: Wages are fixed according to skills. Tailors are the highest paid, earning around ₹3,000 per month. Women employed as helpers for thread cutting, buttoning, ironing, and packaging receive the lowest wages.
    • Fair Deal: The source suggests the workers do not get a fair deal, as their earnings are barely enough to cover their day-to-day needs, and they are vulnerable due to the temporary nature of their employment. The garment exporting factories try to cut costs by maximizing work from workers at the lowest possible wages.
  3. Think of something common that we use. It could be sugar, tea, milk, pen, paper, pencil, etc. Discuss through what chain of markets this reaches you. Can you think of the people that help in the production or trade? The source text uses the example of a shirt to illustrate the chain of markets.
    • Cotton Production: Small farmers like Swapna grow cotton, often taking loans to afford the necessary inputs.
    • Ginning Mill: The trader sells the cotton to a ginning mill, where seeds are removed, and the cotton is pressed into bales.
    • Spinning Mill: The spinning mill buys cotton and sells yarn to yarn dealers.
    • Weaving: Yarn dealers or merchants provide yarn to weavers. Weavers produce cloth, often under a putting-out system where they depend on merchants for raw materials and markets. Weaver’s cooperatives can reduce dependence on merchants.
    • Garment Exporting Factory: The cloth is supplied to a garment exporting factory where shirts are made.
    • Export and Retail: The shirts are exported to foreign buyers, such as businesspersons from the US and Europe, who sell them in their stores.
    • Consumers: Customers buy the shirts in supermarkets.
  4. Arrange the statements given alongside in the correct order and then fill in the numbers in the cotton bolls accordingly. Here is the correct order of the statements, according to the source:
    1. Swapna sells the cotton to the trader. (1)
    2. Trader sells cotton to the Ginning Mill. (3)
    3. Ginning mill cleans the cotton and makes it into bales. (9)
    4. Spinning mill buys the cotton and sells yarn to the yarn dealers. (7)
    5. Yarn dealers or merchants give the yarn to the weavers. (5)
    6. Weavers return with the cloth. (8)
    7. Garment exporters buy the cloth from merchants for making shirts. (4)
    8. The exporter sells shirts to the businessperson from the USA. (6)
    9. Customers buy these shirts in a supermarket. (2)

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