PPSC Patwari (Revenue) Geography: Economic Geography MCQs

Practice Economic Geography MCQs for PPSC Patwari (Revenue) Geography — topic-wise sets with solved answers.

PPSC Patwari (Revenue) Geography: Economic Geography MCQs — sample questions

  1. Question 1

    Q1. Under CPEC, how much was the total originally planned investment pledged by China?

    • A) USD 62 billion
    • B) USD 46 billion
    • C) USD 80 billion
    • D) USD 30 billion

    Answer: USD 62 billion

    Explanation: China originally pledged approximately USD 46 billion in CPEC investments, later revised upward to approximately USD 62 billion covering energy, infrastructure, and industrial projects. Energy projects constitute the largest single component.

  2. Question 2

    Q2. A mineral route case ties marble from Mohmand-Khyber highlands to Pakistani industrial markets. Which economic activity best fits the linkage description for dimension stone in that sphere?

    • A) Quarrying and trucking of dimensional marble to urban construction clusters
    • B) Deep-sea tuna fleet operations
    • C) Offshore oil rigs in Makran as marble source
    • D) Sugarcane ethanol distilleries as marble proxy

    Answer: Quarrying and trucking of dimensional marble to urban construction clusters

    Explanation: Marble quarried from the Mohmand and Khyber highlands of KP is trucked to urban markets in Lahore, Karachi, and Islamabad for use in construction - a classic upstream extraction-to-downstream processing supply chain.

  3. Question 3

    Q3. An irrigated Punjab farm grows wheat in rabi mainly because winter temperatures and dependable canal water mimic which production advantage?

    • A) It copies a tropical rainforest moisture regime
    • B) It matches the cool-season wheat belt pattern with controlled water
    • C) It depends on heavy monsoon rain during grain filling
    • D) It needs deep desert dew collection only

    Answer: It matches the cool-season wheat belt pattern with controlled water

    Explanation: Wheat thrives in cool, relatively dry conditions with controlled irrigation, mirroring the cool-season wheat belt climate; Punjab's rabi season provides exactly these conditions with canal water substituting for natural precipitation.

  4. Question 4

    Q4. Compared with rain-fed plateau farms, Lower Indus delta farmers most often diversify income by combining rice with what nearby blue-economy activity?

    • A) Alpine skiing tourism
    • B) Commercial marine and inland fisheries
    • C) High-altitude yak herding exports
    • D) Oil palm plantation harvesting

    Answer: Commercial marine and inland fisheries

    Explanation: Lower Indus delta communities have historically supplemented rice farming with fishing in the Arabian Sea and the extensive coastal creek systems, making marine and inland fisheries the natural blue-economy complement to delta agriculture.

  5. Question 5

    Q5. Thar coal development is geographically notable because reserves lie inside which province-linked desert complex?

    • A) Baloch desert near Taftan only
    • B) Thar Desert mainly across Sindh and into India
    • C) Cold Desert of Skardu plateau
    • D) Katpana dunes of northern Gilgit belt

    Answer: Thar Desert mainly across Sindh and into India

    Explanation: Thar coal deposits are located beneath the Thar Desert in Sindh province, extending into Rajasthan in India; Sindh's Tharparkar district alone holds one of the world's largest lignite coal reserves.

  6. Question 6

    Q6. Why do many Karachi-based textile exporters favor Port Qasim and Karachi port clusters?

    • A) Mountains block all road exits so sea is irrelevant
    • B) Cheap landlocked air-only cargo rules Karachi
    • C) Ocean shipping cuts cost for bulky cotton yarn and garments
    • D) Sugar mills force all cloth onto river barges inland

    Answer: Ocean shipping cuts cost for bulky cotton yarn and garments

    Explanation: Ocean shipping dramatically reduces per-unit freight costs for bulky, heavy commodities like cotton and garments, giving coastal Karachi exporters a significant cost advantage over inland transport modes.

  7. Question 7

    Q7. Why do industrial zones favor plots along Northern Corridor routes from Karachi toward upcountry rather than isolated wadis?

    • A) Markets hubs power links and trucking density cut unit logistics cost
    • B) Mountain shadow eliminates fuel needs
    • C) Ocean fog powers turbines silently
    • D) Deserts guarantee zero warehousing

    Answer: Markets hubs power links and trucking density cut unit logistics cost

    Explanation: Industrial zones along major transport corridors benefit from dense market access, reliable power connections, and high-frequency trucking, all of which reduce unit logistics costs compared with isolated locations.

  8. Question 8

    Q8. The demographic dividend is not automatic because it also needs?

    • A) Only more children
    • B) Only higher mountains
    • C) Only larger deserts
    • D) Productive jobs, skills training, and healthy workers to translate age structure into output

    Answer: Productive jobs, skills training, and healthy workers to translate age structure into output

    Explanation: A demographic dividend occurs only when a large working-age population has access to productive employment, quality education, and good health; without these enablers, the age-structure advantage does not translate into economic growth.

  9. Question 9

    Q9. The North Dome gas field, shared between Qatar and Iran, holds what global distinction?

    • A) World's largest oil field
    • B) World's largest natural gas field
    • C) World's deepest offshore field
    • D) World's oldest producing gas field

    Answer: World's largest natural gas field

    Explanation: The North Dome (Qatar)/South Pars (Iran) gas field is the world's largest natural gas field, holding an estimated 1,800 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas.

  10. Question 10

    Q10. The Al-Burgan oil field in Kuwait is ranked as the world's what?

    • A) Largest oil field
    • B) Second largest oil field
    • C) Third largest oil field
    • D) Fourth largest oil field

    Answer: Second largest oil field

    Explanation: The Greater Burgan oil field in Kuwait is the world's second largest oil field by reserves, after the Ghawar field in Saudi Arabia, with proven reserves of about 66-72 billion barrels.

  11. Question 11

    Q11. Turkmenistan holds the world's fourth largest reserves of which energy resource, making it a significant exporter despite being landlocked?

    • A) Coal
    • B) Oil
    • C) Uranium
    • D) Natural gas

    Answer: Natural gas

    Explanation: Turkmenistan holds the world's fourth largest proven natural gas reserves, centred on the giant Galkynysh field, and exports primarily via pipelines to China.

  12. Question 12

    Q12. A coastal mega-city of 10 million people faces a projected 1-metre sea level rise by 2100. Planners must choose between adaptation and managed relocation. Which economic geography factor most decisively tips the analysis toward relocation rather than adaptation?

    • A) The city sits on a river delta with compacting soils, making Dutch-style dyke systems technically feasible but expensive
    • B) The city has a large informal settlement population that can be rehoused in suburban zones within 50 km
    • C) The city generates less than 3 percent of national GDP and its economic functions can be redistributed to inland centres at lower long-run cost
    • D) The city faces annual storm surge risk that already exceeds current sea wall design specifications

    Answer: The city generates less than 3 percent of national GDP and its economic functions can be redistributed to inland centres at lower long-run cost

    Explanation: If a city generates less than 3% of national GDP and its economic functions can be redistributed to inland centres at lower long-run cost, managed relocation becomes economically more rational than expensive flood-defence adaptation.

  13. Question 13

    Q13. A development economist comparing two neighbouring countries finds that Country X has significant oil revenues but lower manufacturing output than oil-poor Country Y. This pattern is consistent with which economic geography phenomenon?

    • A) The gravity model of trade, which predicts that resource-rich countries trade less with distant partners
    • B) Dutch disease, where resource export revenues appreciate the national currency making manufactured exports uncompetitive and hollowing out the industrial base
    • C) Comparative advantage theory, which suggests that Country X rationally specialises in oil and imports all manufactures
    • D) The product life cycle model, predicting that Country X will eventually develop manufacturing once its oil revenues finance industrialisation

    Answer: Dutch disease, where resource export revenues appreciate the national currency making manufactured exports uncompetitive and hollowing out the industrial base

    Explanation: Dutch disease describes how large natural resource revenues drive up a currency's exchange rate, making manufactured exports uncompetitive and leading to a hollowing out of the industrial sector - a pattern observed in several oil-rich developing economies.

  14. Question 14

    Q14. A trade geography student evaluates why Singapore has become one of the world's wealthiest countries despite having no significant natural resources. Which combination of geographic and economic factors best explains this outcome?

    • A) Singapore discovered offshore oil in the 1970s and used petroleum revenues to fund its sovereign wealth fund and public infrastructure
    • B) Singapore's large domestic population creates a huge consumer market that attracts foreign direct investment and generates economies of scale
    • C) Singapore's position at the Strait of Malacca chokepoint enables it to capture value as a entrepot trading hub, container transshipment centre, refinery cluster, and financial services node connecting global trade flows
    • D) Singapore benefits from being part of Malaysia's integrated production network, sharing manufacturing capacity across the causeway while providing financial services

    Answer: Singapore's position at the Strait of Malacca chokepoint enables it to capture value as a entrepot trading hub, container transshipment centre, refinery cluster, and financial services node connecting global trade flows

    Explanation: Singapore sits astride the Strait of Malacca, one of the world's busiest shipping chokepoints; this position allowed it to develop as an entrepôt hub, container transshipment centre, petrochemical refinery cluster, and global financial node - generating wealth without natural resources.

  15. Question 15

    Q15. A trade economist examines Pakistan's export basket and finds it dominated by low-value textile and apparel products with minimal movement into higher-value electronics or machinery. Which economic geography concept best explains why this structural trap persists?

    • A) Path dependency and industrial lock-in, where existing textile cluster infrastructure, labour skills, and institutional support create high switching costs that prevent capital and labour from relocating to new sectors even when returns are higher elsewhere
    • B) The Heckscher-Ohlin theorem, which predicts that labour-abundant countries will always specialise exclusively in textiles regardless of government industrial policy
    • C) Geographical determinism, since Pakistan's landlocked northern provinces lack access to the ports needed for electronics export logistics
    • D) The infant industry paradox, where textile firms that reached maturity now face zero tariffs globally and therefore have no incentive to move up the value chain

    Answer: Path dependency and industrial lock-in, where existing textile cluster infrastructure, labour skills, and institutional support create high switching costs that prevent capital and labour from relocating to new sectors even when returns are higher elsewhere

    Explanation: Path dependency and industrial lock-in explain why Pakistan's textile sector persists: existing factory infrastructure, specialised labour pools, supplier networks, and government incentive structures all create high barriers to redirecting capital and skills into new export industries.

  16. Question 16

    Q16. A regional development planner in Pakistan studies why Balochistan contributes the smallest share of provincial GDP despite being the largest province by area and having gold, copper, natural gas and coal deposits. Which combination of geographic and institutional factors is most explanatory?

    • A) Extreme distance from population centres and industrial clusters, sparse and dispersed population limiting labour supply and domestic market demand, inadequate road and rail infrastructure raising transport costs, and historical underinvestment in human capital reducing the workforce capacity to develop resources
    • B) Balochistan's borders with Iran and Afghanistan create tariff barriers that prevent its minerals from accessing international markets at competitive prices
    • C) Federal government policy deliberately suppresses Balochistan's development to keep commodity prices low for industrial consumers in Punjab and Sindh
    • D) The province's arid climate makes agriculture impossible and industry unviable, so GDP can only grow through mineral extraction which faces global commodity price volatility

    Answer: Extreme distance from population centres and industrial clusters, sparse and dispersed population limiting labour supply and domestic market demand, inadequate road and rail infrastructure raising transport costs, and historical underinvestment in human capital reducing the workforce capacity to develop resources

    Explanation: Balochistan's low GDP contribution stems from extreme remoteness from markets, a sparsely dispersed population limiting labour supply and domestic demand, inadequate transport infrastructure inflating costs, and chronic underinvestment in education reducing workforce capacity for resource development.

  17. Question 17

    Q17. A development economist analyses why port cities consistently outperform inland cities in GDP per capita across developing countries. Which geographic economic mechanism is the primary explanation?

    • A) Port cities have cooler maritime climates that improve worker productivity relative to hot inland regions
    • B) Port cities receive disproportionate foreign aid because donors prefer visible infrastructure investments in coastal areas
    • C) Port cities were selected as colonial capitals and inherited superior colonial-era administrative institutions that persist as growth advantages
    • D) Port cities benefit from lower trade costs enabling access to export markets and cheaper imported inputs, attracting manufacturing clusters, financial services, and foreign direct investment in a self-reinforcing agglomeration process

    Answer: Port cities benefit from lower trade costs enabling access to export markets and cheaper imported inputs, attracting manufacturing clusters, financial services, and foreign direct investment in a self-reinforcing agglomeration process

    Explanation: Port cities enjoy lower trade costs that enable access to export markets and cheaper imported inputs, attracting manufacturing, finance, and FDI in a self-reinforcing agglomeration cycle that inland cities, burdened by higher logistics costs, cannot easily replicate.

  18. Question 18

    Q18. A new industrial city is proposed in southern Punjab near Multan. Which site selection criterion should receive highest priority from an economic geography perspective?

    • A) Proximity to existing rail and road networks linking raw materials to markets
    • B) Selection of the most aesthetically scenic location available
    • C) Distance from any existing urban settlements to avoid competition
    • D) Availability of foreign direct investment commitments before site selection

    Answer: Proximity to existing rail and road networks linking raw materials to markets

    Explanation: From an economic geography perspective, proximity to existing transport infrastructure (rail and road networks) minimises freight costs and ensures efficient movement of raw materials to the factory and finished goods to markets - the primary site selection criterion for industrial development.

  19. Question 19

    Q19. A local government in Sialkot wants to attract foreign investment to its surgical instruments cluster by improving urban amenities. Which urban geography concept explains why co-located firms in the same industry benefit from being in the same city?

    • A) Urban diseconomies of scale that reduce costs for large firms
    • B) Agglomeration economies where co-location generates shared labour pools, specialized suppliers and knowledge spillovers that benefit all firms in the cluster
    • C) Government subsidies automatically provided to all firms in designated cities
    • D) Lower crime rates in specialized industrial cities reducing security costs

    Answer: Government subsidies automatically provided to all firms in designated cities

    Explanation: Agglomeration economies explain why firms in Sialkot's surgical instrument cluster benefit from co-location: shared specialized labour pools, access to component suppliers, and knowledge spillovers between firms reduce costs and drive innovation.

  20. Question 20

    Q20. A map shows peaks above 7000 m at the northeastern top of Pakistan. Which label fits the main range hosting K2 for high mountain resource and hazard context?

    • A) Western Balochistan coastal range
    • B) Sulaiman Range along the Punjab south rim
    • C) Karakoram range along the China border sector
    • D) Kirthar wall facing the Arabian Sea breeze

    Answer: Karakoram range along the China border sector

    Explanation: K2, the world's second-highest mountain at 8,611 m, lies in the Karakoram Range along Pakistan's northern border with China's Xinjiang region. The Karakoram contains some of the world's longest glaciers outside the polar regions and is distinct from the Himalaya, Sulaiman, and Kirthar ranges, which lie to the south.

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