NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Economics Chapter 1: Introduction

These Class 12 Economics Chapter 1 solutions cover Introduction, the opening chapter of Introductory Macroeconomics, the NCERT textbook for the 2026–27 session. The chapter explains how macroeconomics differs from microeconomics, why economists study the economy as a whole using a single representative good, how macroeconomics emerged after J. M. Keynes wrote The General Theory (1936) in the wake of the Great Depression, the features of a capitalist economy, and the four sectors — households, firms, government and the external sector. Below you get step-by-step answers to every NCERT exercise question, key concepts, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason and FAQs.

Class: 12 Subject: Economics Book: Introductory Macroeconomics Chapter: 1 Chapter Name: Introduction Session: 2026–27

Class 12 Economics Chapter 1 – Overview

Chapter 1, Introduction, sets up the whole subject of macroeconomics. While microeconomics studies the choices of individual economic agents — a consumer maximising satisfaction, a firm maximising profit — in single markets of demand and supply, macroeconomics studies aggregate variables such as total output, the general price level, total employment and the rate of interest for the economy as a whole. To simplify, macroeconomists treat all goods and services as a single representative good because output, prices and employment in different units tend to move together. The chapter traces the emergence of macroeconomics after the British economist John Maynard Keynes published The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money in 1936, prompted by the mass unemployment of the Great Depression of 1929, which the earlier classical view (that all who wished to work would find work and all factories would run at full capacity) could not explain. It then describes the working of a capitalist economy — private ownership of the means of production, production for sale in the market, and wage labour — and identifies the four sectors of an economy: households, firms, government and the external sector.

Key Concepts & Terms

Microeconomics: the study of individual economic agents (consumers, producers, firms) and individual markets of demand and supply, where each agent tries to maximise private profit or welfare and economy-wide phenomena like inflation are taken as given.

Macroeconomics: the study of the economy as a whole through aggregate variables — aggregate output, the general price level, total employment, the rate of interest — and the interlinkages between the different sectors.

Representative good: a single imaginary commodity standing for all goods and services, used to simplify analysis because output, prices and employment in different production units tend to rise or fall together.

Economic agents (units): individuals or institutions that take economic decisions — consumers, producers, and entities like the government, corporations and banks.

Macroeconomic agents/players: the State and statutory bodies such as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and SEBI, which pursue public goals defined by law or the Constitution rather than private profit.

Classical tradition: the pre-Keynesian school holding that all willing labour finds employment and all factories work at full capacity.

Great Depression (1929): a prolonged collapse of output and employment in Europe and North America; in the USA, unemployment rose from 3% to 25% (1929–1933) and aggregate output fell about 33%.

Capitalist economy: an economy in which most activity features (a) private ownership of the means of production, (b) production for sale in the market, and (c) sale and purchase of labour services at a wage rate (wage labour).

Factors of production: capital, land and labour (with entrepreneurship), whose owners earn interest, rent and wages respectively; the entrepreneur’s residual earning is profit.

Investment expenditure: spending on new machinery and factories that raises productive capacity.

Four sectors of an economy: households, firms, government and the external sector (the rest of the world, linked through exports, imports and capital flows).

NCERT Exercise — Full Solutions

All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT Introductory Macroeconomics Chapter 1 Exercises. Answers are original, written in CBSE exam-ready style.

1. What is the difference between microeconomics and macroeconomics?

ANSWER Microeconomics and macroeconomics are the two main branches of economic analysis, distinguished mainly by their scope and the variables they study. Microeconomics studies the behaviour of individual economic agents — a consumer choosing the best combination of goods given her tastes and income, or a producer trying to maximise profit by keeping costs low and selling at the highest price. It examines individual markets of demand and supply and takes economy-wide phenomena like inflation and unemployment as given. The nearest microeconomics comes to the aggregate picture is the analysis of general equilibrium (equilibrium of demand and supply in every market at once). Macroeconomics studies the economy as a whole using aggregate variables — aggregate output, the general price level, total employment and the rate of interest — and the interdependence among the different sectors. Its decision-makers (‘players’) are the State and bodies like the RBI and SEBI, who pursue public goals rather than private profit. In short, microeconomics looks at the parts (individual agents and markets) while macroeconomics looks at the whole (aggregates and their interlinkages).
BasisMicroeconomicsMacroeconomics
MeaningStudy of individual economic units and marketsStudy of the economy as a whole
VariablesIndividual price, individual demand & supply, individual outputGeneral price level, aggregate demand & supply, national output, total employment
Decision-makersIndividual consumers, producers, firmsThe State and statutory bodies (RBI, SEBI, etc.)
Objective of agentsMaximise private profit / welfarePursue public/social goals
Also calledPrice theoryIncome and employment theory

2. What are the important features of a capitalist economy?

ANSWER A capitalist economy is one in which most economic activities have the following important features: (a) Private ownership of the means of production: the means of production — capital, land and other assets — are largely owned privately by individuals or capitalist enterprises rather than by the State. (b) Production for the market: goods and services are produced mainly for selling in the market to earn profit, not for the producer’s own consumption. (c) Wage labour: there is sale and purchase of labour services at a price called the wage rate; labour sold and bought against wages is called wage labour. Other characteristics that follow: production is carried out by capitalist enterprises run by entrepreneurs who control major decisions and bear the risk; the factors of production (land, labour, capital) earn their incomes — rent, wages and interest — through production and sale of output, while the entrepreneur’s residual is profit, part of which is ploughed back as investment expenditure to expand capacity.

3. Describe the four major sectors in an economy according to the macroeconomic point of view.

ANSWER From the macroeconomic point of view, an economy is seen as a combination of four major sectors: (i) Firms: the production units. A firm is run by entrepreneurs who hire wage labour and the services of capital and land, undertake production, and sell the output in the market to earn profit, bearing the risks and uncertainties involved. (ii) Households: a single individual, or a group of individuals, who take joint decisions about consumption. Households supply factor services — they work in firms and government for wages and salaries, own firms and earn profits, and earn rent and interest by leasing land or lending capital. They also save and pay taxes, and their demand sustains the market. (iii) Government (the State): frames and enforces laws and delivers justice; it also imposes taxes, spends on public infrastructure, schools, colleges and health services, and often undertakes production itself. (iv) External sector (the rest of the world): all countries engage in external trade. The domestic economy sells goods abroad (exports) and buys goods from abroad (imports), and capital may flow in from foreign countries or out to them.

4. Describe the Great Depression of 1929.

ANSWER The Great Depression of 1929 was a severe and prolonged economic crisis that began in 1929 and continued through the following years, deeply affecting the economies of Europe and North America and other parts of the world. During this period, output and employment levels fell by huge amounts. Demand for goods in the market was very low, many factories lay idle, and large numbers of workers were thrown out of their jobs. In the USA, between 1929 and 1933, the unemployment rate rose sharply from about 3 per cent to 25 per cent, and over the same period aggregate output in the USA fell by about 33 per cent. The classical economists could not explain such long-lasting unemployment, since they believed all willing workers would find jobs and all factories would run at full capacity. These events forced economists to think about the working of the economy in a new way. J. M. Keynes, in his book The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936), studied the economy in its entirety and the interdependence of its sectors — and with this the subject of macroeconomics was born.

Extra Practice Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. Define macroeconomics.

ANSWERMacroeconomics is the branch of economics that studies the economy as a whole through aggregate variables such as aggregate output, the general price level, total employment and the rate of interest, and the interlinkages among the different sectors of the economy.

Q2. Who is regarded as the founding father of macroeconomics, and which book marked its emergence?

ANSWERThe British economist John Maynard Keynes is regarded as the founder of macroeconomics as a separate branch. It emerged after he published The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money in 1936.

Q3. What is meant by a ‘representative good’ in macroeconomics?

ANSWERA representative good is a single imaginary commodity used to stand for all the goods and services in the economy. Macroeconomists use it to simplify analysis because output, prices and employment in different production units generally tend to rise or fall together.

Q4. Who are economic agents? Give two examples.

ANSWEREconomic agents (or economic units) are individuals or institutions that take economic decisions. Examples include consumers who decide what to consume and producers who decide what to produce; entities like the government, corporations and banks are also economic agents.

Q5. State the classical view of employment that Keynes challenged.

ANSWERThe classical tradition held that all labourers ready to work would find employment and all factories would operate at their full capacity. The Great Depression, with its mass unemployment, contradicted this view and led Keynes to develop a new theory.

Long Answer Type Questions

Q1. Explain why macroeconomists use the idea of a single representative good, and when they depart from it.

ANSWERIf we observe a country’s economy as a whole, the output, price and employment levels of different goods and services tend to move together — when food-grain output grows, industrial output usually rises too, and prices and employment generally move in the same direction across goods. Because of this close relationship, macroeconomists can treat a single representative good as standing for all goods and services: its production reflects the average output of the economy, and its price and employment reflect the general price and employment levels. This greatly simplifies the analysis of how total production and employment relate to variables like prices, interest, wages and profits, and the simplification works best when variables change fast, as during inflation or depression, since they then move in the same direction for individual goods and for the aggregate. However, macroeconomists depart from this simplification when the economy is best seen as composed of distinct sectors — for instance the interdependence of agriculture and industry, or the relationship between households, firms and government. Treating a single good can overlook vital differences (agricultural versus industrial production conditions, or different kinds of labour), so sometimes a handful of categories — agricultural goods, industrial goods and services — are used instead.

Q2. Describe the working of a capitalist economy and how the factors of production earn their incomes.

ANSWERA capitalist economy is defined by private ownership of the means of production, production for sale in the market, and the buying and selling of labour at a wage rate (wage labour). Production is carried out by capitalist enterprises run by one or several entrepreneurs, who exercise control over major decisions and bear much of the risk. They may supply the capital themselves or borrow it, and they use three factors of production — capital, land and labour. After producing output the entrepreneur sells it in the market and earns revenue. Part of this revenue is paid as rent for the services of land, part as interest to capital, and part as wages to labour; the remainder is the entrepreneur’s earning, called profit. Profits are often used in the next period to buy new machinery or build new factories, expanding productive capacity — this is investment expenditure. In this way, in a capitalist country the factors of production earn their incomes through the process of production and the sale of output in the market. Strictly, only a handful of countries fully qualify as capitalist, but many developing countries like India have a significant presence of production units organised on capitalist principles, here called firms.

Q3. Explain how the Great Depression of 1929 led to the birth of macroeconomics.

ANSWERBefore the 1930s the dominant classical thinking held that all willing labour would find employment and all factories would run at full capacity, so prolonged unemployment was not considered possible. The Great Depression of 1929 shattered this belief: output and employment in Europe and North America fell by huge amounts, demand for goods collapsed, many factories lay idle and workers lost their jobs. In the USA, unemployment rose from about 3% to 25% between 1929 and 1933, while aggregate output fell by about 33%. The fact that an economy could suffer such long-lasting unemployment had to be theorised and explained, which the classical view could not do. The British economist J. M. Keynes took up this challenge in The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936). Unlike his predecessors, he examined the working of the economy in its entirety and studied the interdependence of its different sectors. This new way of looking at aggregate output, employment and demand for the economy as a whole gave birth to the subject of macroeconomics.

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. Macroeconomics studies the economy:

(a) of a single firm    (b) as a whole    (c) of a single market    (d) of an individual consumer

2. Who is regarded as the founding father of modern economics?

(a) J. M. Keynes    (b) Alfred Marshall    (c) Adam Smith    (d) David Ricardo

3. Macroeconomics emerged as a separate branch after the publication of The General Theory in:

(a) 1776    (b) 1919    (c) 1929    (d) 1936

4. The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money was written by:

(a) Adam Smith    (b) J. M. Keynes    (c) N. G. Mankiw    (d) A. Bhaduri

5. During the Great Depression, the unemployment rate in the USA rose from 3% to about:

(a) 10%    (b) 15%    (c) 25%    (d) 33%

6. Which of the following is not a feature of a capitalist economy?

(a) Private ownership of the means of production    (b) Production for sale in the market    (c) Wage labour    (d) State ownership of all firms

7. The earning of the entrepreneur after paying rent, interest and wages is called:

(a) revenue    (b) profit    (c) investment    (d) capital

8. Which of the following is not one of the four sectors of an economy?

(a) Households    (b) Firms    (c) Banks    (d) External sector

9. Goods bought by the domestic economy from the rest of the world are called:

(a) exports    (b) imports    (c) investment    (d) revenue

10. The Reserve Bank of India and SEBI are examples of:

(a) individual consumers    (b) firms maximising profit    (c) macroeconomic agents/players    (d) the external sector

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(c), 3-(d), 4-(b), 5-(c), 6-(d), 7-(b), 8-(c), 9-(b), 10-(c).

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: Macroeconomics studies aggregate variables of the economy.

Reason: It examines variables such as aggregate output, the general price level and total employment for the economy as a whole.

A-R 2. Assertion: Macroeconomics emerged as a separate subject due to Adam Smith.

Reason: Macroeconomics emerged after J. M. Keynes published The General Theory in 1936.

A-R 3. Assertion: In a capitalist economy, production is mainly for sale in the market.

Reason: A capitalist economy is marked by private ownership of the means of production and the use of wage labour.

A-R 4. Assertion: The classical tradition could not explain the long-lasting unemployment of the Great Depression.

Reason: Classical economists believed that all willing workers would find employment and all factories would run at full capacity.

A-R 5. Assertion: The external sector is one of the four sectors of an economy.

Reason: Countries engage in external trade through exports, imports and capital flows with the rest of the world.

Answer key: 1-(A), 2-(D), 3-(B), 4-(A), 5-(A).

Exam Tips & Common Mistakes

How to score full marks in this chapter

Memorise the difference between micro and macroeconomics in a clean table (variables, decision-makers, objective) — it is a frequent 3–4 mark question. For the capitalist economy, learn the three core features (private ownership, production for market, wage labour) word-perfect. List the four sectors (households, firms, government, external) with one line each. For the Great Depression, remember the key figures — USA unemployment 3% → 25% and output falling about 33% (1929–1933) — and always link it to Keynes’ General Theory (1936). Quote dates and names exactly as in the textbook.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Crediting macroeconomics to Adam Smith — he is the founder of modern economics; macroeconomics is due to Keynes (1936).
  • Confusing the year of the Great Depression (1929) with the year of The General Theory (1936).
  • Listing banks as one of the four sectors — the four are households, firms, government and the external sector.
  • Mixing up exports (sold to the rest of the world) with imports (bought from the rest of the world).
  • Forgetting wage labour as a feature of capitalism, or confusing revenue with profit.
  • Saying microeconomics studies the whole economy — it studies individual agents and markets.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Chapter 1 of Class 12 Introductory Macroeconomics about?

Chapter 1, Introduction, explains how macroeconomics differs from microeconomics, why a single representative good is used, how macroeconomics emerged after Keynes’ General Theory (1936) following the Great Depression of 1929, the features of a capitalist economy, and the four sectors of an economy — households, firms, government and the external sector.

What is the main difference between microeconomics and macroeconomics?

Microeconomics studies individual economic agents and single markets of demand and supply, where each agent maximises private profit or welfare. Macroeconomics studies the economy as a whole through aggregate variables such as aggregate output, the general price level, total employment and the rate of interest, and the interlinkages between sectors.

How many questions are there in the NCERT exercise for this chapter?

The NCERT Exercises for Introductory Macroeconomics Chapter 1 contain 4 questions — on the micro–macro difference, features of a capitalist economy, the four sectors of an economy, and the Great Depression of 1929 — all answered step by step on this page.

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