NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Geography Chapter 6: Tertiary and Quaternary Activities (NCERT 2026–27)
These Class 12 Geography Chapter 6 solutions cover Tertiary and Quaternary Activities from Fundamentals of Human Geography (Unit III), updated for the 2026–27 session. The chapter explains the service sector — trade and commerce, transport, communication and the many personal and professional services — and then moves to the knowledge-oriented quaternary and decision-making quinary activities, outsourcing, the KPO industry and the digital divide. Below you get step-by-step answers to every NCERT exercise question, key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason and FAQs.
Class 12 Geography Chapter 6 – Overview
Chapter 6, Tertiary and Quaternary Activities, deals with the service sector, which involves the commercial output of services rather than the production of tangible goods. Tertiary activities include trade and commerce (retail and wholesale trading through rural and urban marketing centres), transport (carrying people and goods over km, time and cost distance), communication (telecommunications, mass media and the internet) and a wide range of personal and professional services, of which tourism is the world’s largest in terms of registered jobs. As economies develop, employment shifts from the primary to the tertiary sector. The chapter then explains the quaternary activities (collection, production and dissemination of information; research and development) and the highest-level quinary or ‘gold-collar’ activities of policy makers, along with outsourcing/off-shoring, the rise of call centres and the KPO industry, and the uneven spread of ICT opportunities known as the digital divide.
Key Concepts & Terms
Tertiary activities: service-sector activities that involve the commercial output of services rather than the production of tangible goods; they rely on specialised skills, experience and knowledge (e.g. plumber, teacher, doctor, lawyer, cashier).
Trade and commerce: the buying and selling of items produced elsewhere, for profit, carried out at trading centres — divided into rural marketing centres (quasi-urban, with mandis serving nearby settlements) and urban marketing centres (offering widely specialised goods and services).
Retail & wholesale trading: retail trading is the sale of goods directly to consumers (stores, plus non-store forms like peddling, mail-order, vending machines and internet); wholesale trading is bulk business through intermediary merchants and supply houses, who often extend credit to retailers.
Transport & transport distance: a service by which people, materials and goods are carried from one place to another; transport distance is measured as km distance (actual route length), time distance and cost distance. Isochrone lines join places equal in travel time.
Network and accessibility: as transport develops, places link into a network of nodes (meeting points/origins/destinations) and links (roads joining two nodes); a developed network has many links, so places are well connected.
Communication: the transmission of words, messages, facts and ideas — through telecommunications, radio and television (mass media), newspapers, satellites and the internet; mobile telephony and satellites have made communication independent of transport.
Services & their levels: low-order services (grocery shops, laundries) are common and widespread; high-order services (accountants, consultants, physicians) are specialised. Tourism is the world’s largest tertiary activity in registered jobs (250 million) and revenue (about 40% of total GDP).
Quaternary activities: knowledge-oriented services involving the collection, production and dissemination of information, and research and development; an advanced form of services requiring specialised knowledge and technical skills, and can be outsourced.
Quinary activities: the highest level of decision-making and policy-making services, often called ‘gold-collar’ professions — senior business executives, government officials, research scientists, financial and legal consultants — focusing on the creation, re-arrangement and interpretation of ideas.
Outsourcing & off-shoring: outsourcing (contracting out) is giving work to an outside agency to improve efficiency and reduce costs; when work is transferred to overseas locations it is called off-shoring. Examples include IT, customer support, call centres and BPO/KPO. KPO (knowledge process outsourcing) involves highly skilled, information-driven work and is distinct from BPO.
Digital divide: the uneven distribution of opportunities from ICT-based development across the globe and within countries — developed nations and metropolitan centres surge ahead while developing regions and peripheral rural areas lag behind.
NCERT Exercise — Full Solutions
All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Exercises. Answers are original, written in exam-ready style.
1. Choose the right answer from the four alternatives given below.
(i) Which one of the following is a tertiary activity? (a) Farming (b) Trading (c) Weaving (d) Hunting
(ii) Which one of the following activities is NOT a secondary sector activity? (a) Iron Smelting (b) Catching fish (c) Making garments (d) Basket Weaving
(iii) Which one of the following sectors provides most of the employment in Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata. (a) Primary (b) Quaternary (c) Secondary (d) Service
(iv) Jobs that involve high degrees and level of innovations are known as: (a) Secondary activities (b) Quaternary activities (c) Quinary activities (d) Primary activities
(v) Which one of the following activities is related to quaternary sector? (a) Manufacturing computers (b) Paper and Raw pulp production (c) University teaching (d) Printing books
(vi) Which one out of the following statements is not true? (a) Outsourcing reduces costs and increases efficiency. (b) At times engineering and manufacturing jobs can also be outsourced. (c) BPOs have better business opportunities as compared to KPOs. (d) There may be dissatisfaction among job seekers in the countries that outsource the job.
2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.
(i) Explain retail trading service.
(ii) Describe quaternary services.
(iii) Name the fast emerging countries of medical tourism in the world.
(iv) What is digital divide?
3. Answer the following questions in not more than 150 words.
(i) Discuss the significance and growth of the service sector in modern economic development.
(ii) Explain in detail the significance of transport and communication services.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. What is the main difference between secondary and tertiary activities?
Q2. Distinguish between rural and urban marketing centres.
Q3. What are periodic markets?
Q4. What are isochrone lines?
Q5. What is medical tourism?
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Explain the factors that affect transport and the ways in which transport distance is measured.
Q2. Describe outsourcing, off-shoring and the growth of the KPO industry, with the new trends in quinary services.
Q3. Discuss tourism as a tertiary activity, explaining its importance and the main tourist attractions.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Which one of the following is a tertiary activity?
(a) Mining (b) Transport (c) Iron smelting (d) Fishing
2. Buying and selling of items produced elsewhere, for profit, is called:
(a) manufacturing (b) trade (c) mining (d) gathering
3. Street peddling, mail-order and vending machines are examples of:
(a) wholesale trading (b) non-store retail trading (c) quaternary activity (d) periodic markets
4. Lines drawn on a map joining places equal in travel time are called:
(a) contour lines (b) isobars (c) isochrone lines (d) isohyets
5. In a transport network, the meeting point of two or more routes is called a:
(a) link (b) node (c) route (d) terminal
6. The world’s single largest tertiary activity in terms of registered jobs is:
(a) banking (b) tourism (c) retail trade (d) transport
7. The collection, production and dissemination of information is characteristic of:
(a) primary activities (b) secondary activities (c) quaternary activities (d) gathering
8. ‘Gold-collar’ professions of high-level decision makers belong to:
(a) quaternary activities (b) quinary activities (c) primary activities (d) secondary activities
9. Transferring outsourced work to overseas locations is described by the term:
(a) off-shoring (b) home-shoring (c) regeneration (d) restoration
10. KPO stands for:
(a) Knowledge Process Outsourcing (b) Key Production Output (c) Knowledge Product Office (d) Key Process Operation
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: Tertiary activities involve the commercial output of services rather than the production of tangible goods.
Reason: They rely heavily on the specialised skills, experience and knowledge of workers.
A-R 2. Assertion: In a developed economy the majority of workers are employed in tertiary activity.
Reason: In the initial stages of economic development a larger proportion of people work in the primary sector.
A-R 3. Assertion: All forms of transport are referred to as lines of communication.
Reason: Mobile telephony and satellites have made communication completely independent of transport.
A-R 4. Assertion: Outsourcing continues to grow across the world.
Reason: Comparative advantage from cheap, skilled labour and lower overhead costs makes overseas job-work profitable.
A-R 5. Assertion: The digital divide exists only between countries, not within them.
Reason: Metropolitan centres often possess better connectivity than peripheral rural areas in the same country.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Be clear about the sector hierarchy: primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary and quinary — and be able to classify examples (trading is tertiary, university teaching is quaternary, policy-making is quinary). Memorise the three measures of transport distance (km, time, cost) and the meaning of nodes, links and isochrone lines. For long answers on services, transport, communication, tourism and outsourcing, use the textbook’s own facts — tourism’s 250 million jobs and ~40% of GDP, India as the leader in medical tourism, the difference between BPO and KPO, and the meaning of off-shoring and the digital divide.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Calling trading a secondary activity — trade and commerce are tertiary (service) activities.
- Confusing quaternary (information and R&D) with quinary (highest-level decision-making) activities.
- Thinking BPO has better business opportunities than KPO — KPO involves higher-skilled, information-driven work.
- Mixing up outsourcing (contracting out work) with off-shoring (transferring it overseas).
- Confusing retail trading (sale to consumers) with wholesale trading (bulk business through intermediaries).
- Assuming the digital divide exists only between countries — it also exists within countries.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Chapter 6 of Class 12 Geography (Fundamentals of Human Geography) about?
Chapter 6, Tertiary and Quaternary Activities, deals with the service sector — trade and commerce, transport, communication and personal/professional services such as tourism — and then with the knowledge-based quaternary and decision-making quinary activities, outsourcing, the KPO industry and the digital divide.
What is the difference between quaternary and quinary activities?
Quaternary activities involve the collection, production and dissemination of information and research and development. Quinary activities are the highest level of decision-making and policy-making (‘gold-collar’ professions like senior executives, government officials and consultants), focusing on the creation and interpretation of ideas.
How many questions are in the NCERT exercise for this chapter?
The NCERT Exercises for Chapter 6 have three main questions: six multiple-choice questions, four 30-word questions and two 150-word questions. All of them are answered step by step on this page.
