📘 Q.10 IAS Prelims 2023 — Economics (Gold Trade & Reserves)

🧷 Authentic Classroom Explanation by IAS Monk


📌 The Question:

Consider the following Statements:

Statement–I: Switzerland is one of the leading exporters of gold in terms of value.
Statement–II: Switzerland has the second largest gold reserves in the world.

Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?

(a) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is the correct explanation for Statement-I
(b) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is not the correct explanation for Statement-I
(c) Statement-I is correct but Statement-II is incorrect
(d) Statement-I is incorrect but Statement-II is correct

Correct Answer: (c)


🧠 Curiosity Raiser

How can a country with limited natural gold reserves still dominate global gold exports?

👉 Because gold trade leadership depends more on refining and re-export hubs than on mining.


📘 Enrichment Notes (Prelims-Focused)

🔹 Understanding Statement-I

✔️ Correct

  • Switzerland is consistently the world’s largest exporter of gold by value
  • In 2021, Switzerland exported ~$86.7 billion worth of gold
  • Reason:
    • Switzerland is the global hub for gold refining
    • Hosts 4 of the world’s largest gold refineries
    • Imports raw gold, refines it, and re-exports high-purity bullion

👉 Key insight: Export dominance ≠ mining dominance


🔹 Understanding Statement-II

Incorrect

  • Switzerland does NOT have the second-largest gold reserves
  • As per USGS data:
    • 🥇 Australia – ~10,000 tonnes (largest)
    • 🥈 Russia – ~5,300 tonnes (second largest)
  • Switzerland’s strength lies in processing and trading, not reserves

🔗 Why Statement-II does NOT explain Statement-I

  • Switzerland’s gold exports are driven by:
    • Advanced refining capacity
    • Strong financial infrastructure
    • Trust, logistics, and vaulting services
  • Not by possession of large gold reserves

🧩 One-Line Memory Anchor

Switzerland exports gold with machines, not mines.


🧘‍♂️ IAS Monk Whisper

In economics, power often lies not in possession—but in position.

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