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Posted by Mahetab Raj 5 years, 1 month ago (10075624)
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Gaurav Seth 5 years ago (2898529)
All the groups that participated in the Civil Disobedience Movement did not have the same ideals, or same views of “Swaraj”.
(i) In the countryside : The active members were the rich peasant communities, the Patidars of Gujarat and the Jats of Uttar Pradesh.
Reason : They were producers of commercial crops which were hit by the trade depression and falling prices. As cash income disappeared they were unable to pay the government’s revenue demands. The government refused to reduce its demands. So they joined the Civil Disobedience Movement, hoping to get the revenue demands reduced. For them “Swaraj” meant fighting against high revenues.
(ii) The poor peasants joined the movement because they were unable to pay the rent for the land they cultivated for the landlords. They did not own the land, they were small tenants who cultivated lands taken on rent from the landlords. As the Depression continued, the small tenants could not pay the rent, so they joined the movement hoping that their unpaid rent would be remitted.
(iii) The rich merchants and industrialists joined the movement to protest against colonial policies that restricted business activities. They wanted protection against import of foreign goods and a rupee-sterling foreign exchange ratio to discourage imports.
(iv) The industrial workers joined the Civil Disobedience Movement dropping to get their demands passed — like laws against low wages and poor working conditions. All four classes were disappointed by the movement.
(a) The rich peasants lost interest because the movement was called off in 1931 without the revenue rates being revised and reduced. Many of them did not join the movement when it was resumed in 1932.
(b) The poor peasants were disappointed because the Congress was unwilling to support their “no rent” campaign.
(c) The industrialists were unhappy with the spread of militant activities and increasing influence of socialism in the Congress. They could not achieve their goal of colonial restrictions on business taken away, so they lost interest.
(d) The industrial working class did not get full Congress support as the Congress did not want to alienate the industrialists and divide the anti-colonial struggle. It could not include the workers’ demand in its programme.
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Akhilesh Kumar 5 years, 1 month ago (9493701)
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Sanskar Sahu 5 years, 1 month ago (9558983)
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Akhilesh Kumar 5 years, 1 month ago (9493701)
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Yogita Ingle 5 years, 1 month ago (2577571)
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Khushboo Rathore 5 years, 1 month ago (9577425)
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Sia ? 4 years, 5 months ago (6945213)
An attainable combination of a set of two goods is as follows:
It is resulted from resource allocation decisions which are made by deciding what to produce and in what quantity. Its the decisions regarding production of one good vs the production of another good.
By making more one type of good (for instance chocolate bars), production of another type of good (for instance toffees) will suffer.
It also describes scenarios where the production is inefficient. That one person could be making 10 chocolates and 5 toffees, but instead you only make 5 chocolates and 2 toffees (inefficient combination)
NON-attainable: This is the production of one good vs another which cannot be done. Because your productive capacity is limited due to the limited resources.
You want to make 20 chocolates and 15 toffees but you cannot due to lack of resources. So therefore, they are unattainable. So that shows relationship of opportunity cost and scarcity.
You may increase productive capacity, and shift your production possibility curve(which shows the two combination of goods), and that way you may achieve something unattainable in the short run.
Posted by Rebecca Mossing 5 years, 1 month ago (10054161)
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Posted by Rebecca Mossing 5 years, 1 month ago (10054161)
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Abhinav Shukla 5 years, 1 month ago (10103427)

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Meghna Thapar 5 years ago (6237)
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