Exam Pattern Practice Test 2
14 important questions for RRB PO Mains covering reading comprehension (India's agricultural export potential) and paragraph rearrangement (NABARD, irrigation, SBI, climate change, pulses) with detailed explanations.
RRB PO Mains — Practice Test 2
This practice set covers two major question types: Reading Comprehension (inference, vocabulary, error correction, author's view) and Paragraph Rearrangement. Each question includes a detailed explanation and speed tips.
Section A — Reading Comprehension (Q1–Q9)
Directions: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions based on the passage.
TIP
Speed Strategy for RC:
- Skim the passage first (60–90 seconds) — identify the topic, author's tone, and main argument
- Read each question carefully — is it asking for inference, fact, vocabulary, or the author's view?
- Go back to the relevant paragraph — do not answer from memory; locate the exact lines
- Eliminate extreme options — words like "always," "never," "completely," "exclusively" are usually wrong in inference questions
The Passage — India's Agricultural Export Potential: Promise, Constraints, and the Road Ahead
India is the world's second-largest producer of fruits and vegetables, the largest producer of milk, and among the top five producers of rice, wheat, and sugarcane. Yet its share of global agricultural trade remains disproportionately small — roughly 2.5 percent of world agricultural exports — a gap that reflects not a shortage of produce but a tangle of structural, regulatory, and infrastructure challenges that have long constrained the sector's outward reach.
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RRB PO Mains — Practice Test 2
This practice set covers two major question types: Reading Comprehension (inference, vocabulary, error correction, author's view) and Paragraph Rearrangement. Each question includes a detailed explanation and speed tips.
Section A — Reading Comprehension (Q1–Q9)
Directions: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions based on the passage.
TIP
Speed Strategy for RC:
- Skim the passage first (60–90 seconds) — identify the topic, author's tone, and main argument
- Read each question carefully — is it asking for inference, fact, vocabulary, or the author's view?
- Go back to the relevant paragraph — do not answer from memory; locate the exact lines
- Eliminate extreme options — words like "always," "never," "completely," "exclusively" are usually wrong in inference questions
The Passage — India's Agricultural Export Potential: Promise, Constraints, and the Road Ahead
India is the world's second-largest producer of fruits and vegetables, the largest producer of milk, and among the top five producers of rice, wheat, and sugarcane. Yet its share of global agricultural trade remains disproportionately small — roughly 2.5 percent of world agricultural exports — a gap that reflects not a shortage of produce but a tangle of structural, regulatory, and infrastructure challenges that have long constrained the sector's outward reach.
The promise is undeniable. India's comparative advantage in labour-intensive horticulture, spices, marine products, and processed foods is well-documented. The Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) has identified several high-value commodity groups — mangoes, grapes, basmati rice, guar gum, and Buffalo meat — where India is already a significant global supplier. Between 2014 and 2023, agricultural exports grew from approximately 53 billion, a creditable trajectory, though analysts caution that much of this growth was driven by commodity price inflation rather than a structural expansion of volumes and markets.
The constraints, however, are formidable. India's domestic support regime — including minimum support prices (MSPs), input subsidies, and food procurement policies — has historically been challenged at the World Trade Organization (WTO) under the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA). Trading partners, particularly the United States and the European Union, have argued that India's food subsidy programme results in prices to producers that exceed WTO-permissible limits, distorting global trade. India disputes these calculations, arguing that the "external reference price" used by the WTO is frozen at 1986–88 levels and does not reflect current market realities.
Beyond trade diplomacy, domestic quality standards remain a persistent barrier. The European Union's stringent maximum residue limits (MRLs) for pesticides have led to consignment rejections of Indian grapes, okra, and rice in recent years. A 2022 report by APEDA noted that over 40 percent of rejected export consignments involved pesticide residue violations — a problem rooted in the fragmented nature of Indian agriculture, where millions of small farmers apply inputs without precision or standardised training.
Infrastructure deficits compound the problem. India's agri-export ecosystem lacks the seamless cold chain, processing capacity, and port logistics that competitors like Thailand, Vietnam, and Brazil have developed. Post-harvest losses of 15–35 percent for horticulture crops mean that a significant share of exportable surplus never reaches the port. The government's Agriculture Export Policy of 2018 acknowledged these gaps and set an ambitious target of doubling agricultural exports to 100 billion by 2030.
Critics argue that achieving $100 billion will require not just investment in infrastructure but a fundamental rethinking of the incentive structure for farmers, exporters, and processors. As long as the domestic market — supported by MSPs and procurement — remains the more secure and less demanding option for most farmers, the transition to export-quality, residue-compliant, globally competitive production will remain voluntary and uneven.
Q1 — India's share in global agricultural trade
Question: According to the passage, why does India's share in global agricultural trade remain small despite being a major producer?
Options:
- (a) India lacks sufficient agricultural output to meet global demand
- (b) APEDA has failed to identify viable export commodities
- (c) A combination of structural, regulatory, and infrastructure challenges limits export potential
- (d) India's agricultural products are globally uncompetitive in quality and price
- (e) WTO restrictions have completely barred India from agricultural trade
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c)**The passage states: "a gap that reflects not a shortage of produce but a tangle of structural, regulatory, and infrastructure challenges." This directly matches (c).
| Option | Why wrong/right |
|---|---|
| (a) | Wrong — the passage explicitly says the issue is NOT a shortage of produce |
| (b) | Wrong — APEDA has identified high-value commodities; not the bottleneck |
| (c) | Correct — directly from the passage's own diagnosis |
| (d) | Wrong — the passage says India has comparative advantage in several categories |
| (e) | Wrong — WTO disputes are mentioned but the passage does not say India is "barred" |
TIP
Factual Questions: The correct answer is almost always a paraphrase of one or two specific sentences in the passage. Go back and locate the sentence rather than reasoning from general knowledge.
Q2 — Growth in agricultural exports (2014–2023)
Question: What reservation do analysts express about India's agricultural export growth from 53 billion?
Options:
- (a) The growth was largely driven by APEDA's misreporting of export figures
- (b) Much of the growth reflected commodity price inflation rather than an increase in volumes and markets
- (c) The growth benefited only large agribusinesses and not smallholder farmers
- (d) The export figures include non-agricultural products misclassified under agricultural trade
- (e) The growth rate was slower than that of competitor nations like Vietnam and Thailand
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (b)**The passage states: "analysts caution that much of this growth was driven by commodity price inflation rather than a structural expansion of volumes and markets." Option (b) is a direct paraphrase.
| Option | Why wrong |
|---|---|
| (a) | Not mentioned — no allegation of misreporting |
| (b) | Correct — directly from the passage |
| (c) | Not mentioned — distribution of benefits is not discussed |
| (d) | Not mentioned — no misclassification claim |
| (e) | Not the specific reservation made — competitor comparison appears elsewhere in the passage for a different point |
Q3 — WTO dispute on food subsidies
Question: What is India's counter-argument against WTO challenges to its food subsidy programme?
Options:
- (a) India argues that it does not have a food subsidy programme as defined by the WTO
- (b) India contends that other nations' subsidies are far larger and should be addressed first
- (c) India argues that the external reference price used by the WTO is outdated and does not reflect current market realities
- (d) India maintains that its MSP programme targets only domestic consumption and has no export-distorting effect
- (e) India disputes the WTO's jurisdiction over domestic agricultural policy
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c)**The passage states: "India disputes these calculations, arguing that the 'external reference price' used by the WTO is frozen at 1986–88 levels and does not reflect current market realities." This maps directly to option (c).
| Option | Why wrong |
|---|---|
| (a) | Wrong — India does not deny having a subsidy programme |
| (b) | Not mentioned in the passage |
| (c) | Correct — verbatim basis in the passage |
| (d) | Not stated — the passage does not mention India making this particular argument |
| (e) | Not stated — India disputes the calculation methodology, not jurisdiction |
Q4 — Leading cause of export consignment rejections
Question: According to the 2022 APEDA report mentioned in the passage, what was the leading cause of export consignment rejections?
Options:
- (a) Poor packaging and inadequate cold chain during transportation
- (b) Failure to meet WTO price limits for agricultural produce
- (c) Pesticide residue violations exceeding EU maximum residue limits
- (d) Excessive post-harvest losses before produce reaches the port
- (e) Lack of bilateral trade agreements with European markets
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c)**"Over 40 percent of rejected export consignments involved pesticide residue violations." The EU's stringent MRLs are cited as the direct cause. (a), (b), (d), (e) are not cited as causes of consignment rejections by the APEDA report.
Q5 — Vocabulary: "formidable"
Question: The word "formidable" as used in the passage ("The constraints, however, are formidable") most nearly means:
Options:
- (a) Temporary
- (b) Familiar
- (c) Negligible
- (d) Impressive in a positive sense
- (e) Intimidatingly large or difficult to overcome
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (e)**In context, "formidable constraints" means constraints that are very large and difficult to overcome — intimidating in scale. "Formidable" does NOT mean impressive in a positive sense in this context; it means powerful/difficult opposition. (a), (b), (c), (d) all miss the correct meaning.
TIP
Vocabulary in Context: "Formidable" can mean either impressively powerful (of an ally) or dauntingly powerful (of an obstacle). The context here — constraints, challenges — makes (e) the only correct answer.
Q6 — Vocabulary: "fragmented"
Question: The word "fragmented" as used in the passage most nearly means:
Options:
- (a) Unified
- (b) Technologically advanced
- (c) Broken into many small, disconnected parts
- (d) Financially unsupported
- (e) Geographically remote
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c)**"The fragmented nature of Indian agriculture, where millions of small farmers…" — fragmented here means broken into countless small, uncoordinated units. This is the standard usage of "fragmented" in economic and agricultural contexts. (a) is opposite. (b), (d), (e) do not reflect what the passage says.
Q7 — Inference: incentive structure
Question: What can be inferred from the passage about the role of domestic support policies in India's agricultural export performance?
Options:
- (a) MSPs and government procurement have directly increased the volume of agricultural exports
- (b) Domestic support policies make the home market a safer and less demanding option, reducing the incentive to export
- (c) The government has deliberately designed MSPs to prevent farmers from exporting produce
- (d) Farmers who participate in government procurement are legally prohibited from exporting
- (e) Domestic support policies have had no measurable impact on India's export potential
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (b)**The passage's final paragraph states: "As long as the domestic market — supported by MSPs and procurement — remains the more secure and less demanding option for most farmers, the transition to export-quality…production will remain voluntary and uneven." This is an inference that domestic support creates a disincentive for export-oriented farming. (a) contradicts the passage. (c) and (d) are too extreme and not stated. (e) contradicts the passage's analysis.
Q8 — Error Correction Question
Question: One of the following sentences contains a grammatical error. Identify the incorrect sentence.
Options:
- (a) India's share of global agricultural exports remains disproportionately small.
- (b) APEDA have identified several high-value commodity groups for export promotion.
- (c) The government's Agriculture Export Policy set an ambitious target for 2022.
- (d) Post-harvest losses compound the problem of reaching exportable surplus to ports.
- (e) The EU's maximum residue limits have led to consignment rejections of Indian produce.
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (b)**"APEDA have identified" — APEDA (Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority) is a singular institution/organisation. It should be "APEDA has identified." This is a Subject-Verb Agreement error with a collective/institutional noun.
All other options are grammatically correct:
- (a) "remains" — correct SVA with singular "share"
- (c) "set" — correct past tense
- (d) "compound" — correct SVA with plural "losses"
- (e) "have led" — correct SVA with plural "limits"
Q9 — Author's View
Question: Which of the following best summarises the author's overall view in the passage?
Options:
- (a) India's agricultural export sector is performing well and requires no significant policy intervention
- (b) India's agricultural exports are permanently constrained by WTO rules and cannot grow further
- (c) India has significant export potential, but realising it requires addressing deep structural, regulatory, and infrastructural barriers alongside rethinking farmer incentives
- (d) Infrastructure is the only barrier to agricultural export growth and all other issues are manageable
- (e) India should abandon the domestic MSP system entirely in order to compete globally
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c)**The passage's arc is: potential (para 2) → constraints (paras 3–5) → deeper rethinking needed (para 6). The author acknowledges promise but insists multiple structural layers must be addressed together. (a) contradicts the extensive list of constraints. (b) is too pessimistic — WTO is one challenge, not an absolute ceiling. (d) is too narrow — the passage lists multiple barriers, not just infrastructure. (e) is not stated and is more radical than the passage's position.
Section B — Paragraph Rearrangement (Q10–Q14)
Directions: Each question contains a set of sentences labelled P, Q, R, S, T (and U in some sets). Rearrange them to form a coherent paragraph. Answer the specific question asked about each set.
TIP
Speed Strategy for Paragraph Rearrangement:
- Identify the opening sentence — introduces the topic without dangling pronouns ("it," "they," "this") pointing to something not yet mentioned
- Find the closing sentence — usually a conclusion, outcome, or future-looking statement
- Chain the middle sentences using pronoun references, time markers (first, then, later, eventually), and logical connectives (however, therefore, despite)
- Test your order by reading through once — if it reads naturally, you have the right sequence
Q10 — History of NABARD
P. The institution was given a mandate to oversee rural credit flow, support cooperative banks and regional rural banks, and promote rural development through investment and refinancing.
Q. However, as India's rural economy grew more complex in the post-Green Revolution decades, it became clear that a dedicated apex institution was needed to coordinate agricultural and rural finance across the country.
R. Before 1982, the Reserve Bank of India managed agricultural credit in India through its Agricultural Credit Department, alongside the Agricultural Refinance and Development Corporation (ARDC).
S. NABARD — the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development — was established on 12 July 1982 following the recommendations of the B. Sivaraman Committee.
T. Over the decades, NABARD has expanded far beyond refinancing to become a key driver of rural infrastructure investment, watershed development, and self-help group promotion across India.
Q10. Which sentence comes FIRST in the correct arrangement?
(a) P (b) Q (c) R (d) S (e) T
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c) R**Correct Order: R → Q → S → P → T
- R is the opener: sets the pre-NABARD context (RBI + ARDC) — no unresolved pronouns.
- Q follows: "However" — contrasts the earlier arrangement and signals the need for a new institution.
- S follows Q: announces NABARD's establishment in 1982 — the solution Q called for.
- P follows S: describes NABARD's mandate — elaborates on what it was set up to do.
- T closes: "Over the decades" — long-term evolution; concludes the arc.
The first sentence is R.
Q11 — India's Irrigation Paradox
P. As a result, most of the electricity used for pumping groundwater is heavily subsidised, giving farmers no financial incentive to conserve water, leading to alarming depletion of aquifers in states like Punjab, Haryana, and Gujarat.
Q. India draws more groundwater annually than any other country in the world, and yet tens of millions of farmers still depend entirely on erratic rainfall.
R. The paradox is rooted in policy: successive governments have provided free or near-free electricity to agricultural pump sets to win rural votes.
S. This dual reality — water abundance for some and scarcity for others — captures the central paradox of India's irrigation story.
T. Solving this paradox requires bold political decisions: rationalising power subsidies, investing in efficient micro-irrigation, and completing long-delayed river-linking projects.
Q11. Which sentence comes THIRD in the correct arrangement?
(a) P (b) Q (c) R (d) S (e) T
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c) R**Correct Order: Q → S → R → P → T
- Q opens: introduces the paradox (most groundwater + rainfall dependency) — no prior reference required.
- S follows: "This dual reality" — summarises/names the paradox introduced in Q.
- R follows S: "The paradox is rooted in policy" — begins explaining the cause.
- P follows R: "As a result" — gives the consequence of the subsidy policy described in R.
- T closes: "Solving this paradox requires…" — solution/conclusion.
The third sentence is R.
Q12 — How SBI Became a Universal Bank
P. To this end, SBI acquired several associate banks over the years, and in a landmark consolidation in 2017, merged five associate banks and Bharatiya Mahila Bank into itself, creating one of the world's fifty largest banks by assets.
Q. The Imperial Bank of India, which was nationalised and renamed as the State Bank of India in 1955, was originally conceived as a banker to governments and a provider of agricultural credit.
R. This transformation — from a colonial-era banking institution to a universal bank serving urban, rural, corporate, and retail customers — reflects the broader journey of India's public sector banking system.
S. Over the following decades, however, SBI steadily expanded its mandate, entering retail banking, international finance, insurance, and capital markets to become a truly universal bank.
T. Today, SBI has over 22,000 branches, 65,000 ATMs, and more than 500 million customers — making it not just a bank but an institution that touches almost every aspect of India's financial life.
Q12. Which sentence comes LAST in the correct arrangement?
(a) P (b) Q (c) R (d) S (e) T
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (e) T**Correct Order: Q → S → P → R → T
- Q opens: historical background of SBI (Imperial Bank, 1955) — clear starting point.
- S follows: "Over the following decades" — chronological progression; SBI expands.
- P follows S: specific evidence of expansion (associate bank mergers, 2017).
- R follows P: reflects on the transformation — meta-summary of Q→S→P.
- T closes: present-day statistics and grand conclusion — "not just a bank but an institution."
The last sentence is T.
Q13 — Climate Change and Rabi Crops
P. Wheat, the dominant rabi crop, is particularly sensitive to temperature spikes during grain-filling — even a two-degree Celsius rise can reduce yields by 15 to 20 percent.
Q. India's rabi season — the winter crop cycle sown in October–November and harvested in March–April — is increasingly under threat from the changing climate.
R. Beyond wheat, changes in the frequency of western disturbances, which bring critical moisture to northern India's rabi belt, are making rainfall patterns less predictable and harder to plan around.
S. In recent years, farmers across Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, and Madhya Pradesh have reported premature heat waves in February and March that have damaged standing wheat crops, corroborating scientific projections.
T. Without urgent investment in heat-tolerant crop varieties, climate-smart farming practices, and crop insurance, the rabi season's contribution to India's food security will become increasingly precarious.
Q13. Which sentence comes SECOND in the correct arrangement?
(a) P (b) Q (c) R (d) S (e) T
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (a) P**Correct Order: Q → P → S → R → T
- Q opens: introduces the rabi season and its climate threat — sets the scene.
- P follows: "Wheat, the dominant rabi crop" — introduces the most affected crop; elaborates on Q's threat with specifics.
- S follows P: field-level evidence from farmers corroborating the scientific statement in P.
- R follows S: expands the threat to a second factor — western disturbances and moisture.
- T closes: "Without urgent investment…" — recommendation/conclusion.
The second sentence is P.
Q14 — India's Pulses Deficit
P. Despite being the world's largest producer and consumer of pulses, India has consistently struggled to meet its domestic demand, importing lentils, peas, and chickpeas from Canada, Australia, and Myanmar each year.
Q. The fundamental problem is structural: pulses are rain-fed crops grown predominantly by resource-poor farmers on marginal lands, with little access to irrigation, quality seeds, or reliable market prices.
R. The government has responded with procurement schemes and MSPs for tur, moong, and urad, but price signal volatility — in which good harvests crash prices, discouraging farmers in the following season — continues to undermine supply stability.
S. This deficit has real consequences: pulses are the primary source of protein for hundreds of millions of vegetarian Indians, and rising prices hit low-income urban consumers the hardest.
T. Solving the pulses deficit will require a combination of targeted research into high-yield, stress-tolerant varieties, stable pricing mechanisms, and direct linkages between producer cooperatives and institutional buyers.
Q14. Which sentence comes FOURTH in the correct arrangement?
(a) P (b) Q (c) R (d) S (e) T
Answer & Explanation
**Answer: (c) R**Correct Order: P → S → Q → R → T
- P opens: states the paradox — largest producer yet a deficit nation.
- S follows: "This deficit has real consequences" — "this deficit" refers directly to P; explains the human impact.
- Q follows S: diagnoses the structural cause — why the deficit persists.
- R follows Q: government response to the problem diagnosed in Q; but response is flawed (price volatility).
- T closes: "Solving the pulses deficit will require…" — solution/conclusion.
The fourth sentence is R.
Top Grammar Rules & Concepts Tested
| Rule | What It Means | Exam Trap |
|---|---|---|
| SVA — Institutional Nouns | APEDA, NABARD, SBI, RBI are singular → singular verb | "APEDA have identified" → wrong; "APEDA has identified" → correct |
| Formidable vs Admirable | Formidable = powerfully difficult (obstacle); Admirable = worthy of praise | Context (obstacle vs ally) determines correct reading |
| Fragmented | Broken into many small, disconnected units | In agri context: millions of small uncoordinated farmers |
| Inference vs Assumption | Inference = logically derived from passage; Assumption = taken for granted without evidence | RC questions ask for inference from what is stated, not what you know |
| Opening Sentence Identification | Does NOT begin with "this," "it," "they," "such" referring to undefined entity | Test: can you understand it without reading anything before? If yes → possible opener |
| Closing Sentence Identification | Contains conclusion, recommendation, result, or future outlook | "Without…," "Solving…," "Over the decades…" signal closers |
| Concessive vs Causal Connector | Although/Despite = contrast; Since/Because = cause | "Although India produces a lot, exports are small" — concession, not cause |
Quick Revision — Answer Key
| Q | Answer | Topic / Rule Tested |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | (c) | RC factual — structural/regulatory/infrastructure barriers |
| Q2 | (b) | RC factual — price inflation vs volume growth |
| Q3 | (c) | RC factual — India's WTO counter-argument |
| Q4 | (c) | RC factual — APEDA 2022 report, pesticide residues |
| Q5 | (e) Intimidatingly large | RC vocabulary — formidable |
| Q6 | (c) Broken into many parts | RC vocabulary — fragmented |
| Q7 | (b) | RC inference — domestic MSP creates disincentive to export |
| Q8 | (b) | RC grammar — SVA error (APEDA have → has) |
| Q9 | (c) | RC author's view — potential + multi-layered barriers |
| Q10 | (c) R | Rearrangement — NABARD history; chronological |
| Q11 | (c) R | Rearrangement — irrigation paradox; cause-effect |
| Q12 | (e) T | Rearrangement — SBI's evolution; closing statistics |
| Q13 | (a) P | Rearrangement — rabi + climate; dominant crop detail |
| Q14 | (c) R | Rearrangement — pulses deficit; government response |
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