U-Explanatory Notes on Main Statistical Indicators
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Number of Athletes in Grades refers to the number of athletes who have been given titles through
examination. The titles of athletes include international masters of sports,
masters of sports, first-grade, second-grade and third-grade sportsmen and
young athletes. |
Number of Referees in Grades refers to the number of
referees who have been given titles after examination. They are classified as
international referees, national referees and referees of the first, second
and third grades. |
Stadiums refer to stadiums for track and field events with six lane 400-meter
tracks around soccer fields, permanent track marks and permanent bleachers.
Stadiums are classified according to seating capacity. They include: Class A
stadiums seating 25000 people each. Class B stadiums seating 15000 to 25000
people each. Class C stadiums seating 5000 to 15000 people each, and Class D
stadiums seating fewer than 5000 people. |
Gymnasiums refer to indoor sports grounds with permanent seats in which basketball,
volleyball. badminton, table tennis and gymnastics
competitions can be held. Gymnasiums are classified according to seating
capacity. They include Class A gymnasiums seating over 6000 people. Class B
gymnasiums seating 4000 to 6000 people. Class C gymnasiums seating 2000 to
4000 people, and Class D gymnasiums seating fewer than 2000 people. |
Hospitals refer to medical institutions with permanent hospital beds, which are able
to take in patients and provide them with medical and nursing services. Hospitals
are classified into three categories: hospitals at or above the county level,
hospitals of rural townships, and other hospitals. According to their
ownership, hospitals can be classified into three categories: hospitals under
the public health departments, hospitals under industrial and other
departments and collective-owned hospitals. Hospitals at or above county
level are divided into comprehensive and specialized hospitals. |
Medical Technical Personnel refers to all medical
staff and workers employed by medical institutions, including doctors of
Chinese and Western medicine, senior doctors who integrate traditional
Chinese therapeutics with Western therapeutics in practice, senior nurses,
pharmacists of Chinese and Western medicine, laboratory specialists, other
specialists, paramedics of Chinese and Western medicine, nurses, midwives,
druggists in Chinese and Western medicine, laboratory technicians, other
technicians, other practitioners of Chinese medicine, nursing attendants,
pharmacological workers of Chinese and Western medicine, laboratory workers,
and other primary medical personnel. |
Doctors refer to qualified professional medical workers approved to practice by
public health departments. They are classified into doctors of Chinese
medicine, doctors of Western medicine, senior doctors who integrate
traditional Chinese therapeutics with Western therapeutics in practice,
paramedics of Chinese medicine and Western medicine, and other specialists of
Chinese medicine. |
Social Welfare Institutions refer to institutions taking care of old people without children,
handicapped people and orphans. They include social welfare institutions run
by civil affairs departments, children welfare institutions, social welfare
institutions for mental patients, and collective-owned old peoples
homes in rural areas. |
Number of People Taken in by Social Welfare
Institutions refers to the number of old people,
children, totally dependent handicapped people and mental patients taken in by
social welfare institutions run by civil affairs departments and those run by
collective units in urban and rural areas. |
Social Welfare Enterprises are
collective owned enterprises which employ the blind, deaf-mute, and other
handicapped people who are able to work in cities and towns and enjoy
exemption from state taxes, including welfare plants, welfare commercial
services, artificial limb plants and farms, etc. |
Rural Households with Livelihood Guaranteed
in Five Aspects refer to the households in which there are old people without child,
orphans and handicapped people who are unable to work and without financial
resources in rural areas. They are taken care of by the collective units and
their food, clothing, housing, medical care, funeral
expenses (or schooling for orphans) are guaranteed to be provided for. |
Households in the Poor Household Support Program refer to the households of martyrs and disabled servicemen, and poor
households, who are able to work but in poor conditions, receiving government
or collective relief funds. In this way, the households can get to work and
make themselves break away from poverty. |
Lawyers are legal workers who are employed full time by legal counseling firms
to act as legal advisers, agents in criminal or civil lawsuits, or defenders
in criminal lawsuits, or to handle non-litigious legal affairs, to advise on
matters of law or to write legal papers for others. Both full-time and part
time lawyers are included. |
Notary Personnel refers to judicial workers of the state notary offices handling notarization
work according to law. They include notaries, assistant notaries, and other
people working for notary offices. |
Notarized Documents refer to the documents settled by notary offices in a year. The notary
documents are drawn up in accordance with the regulations of the Ministry of
Justice, including domestic documents and foreign-related documents. Domestic
documents are divided into two major categories, documents on economic contracts
and documents on civil legal relations. |
Mediators refer to workers on peoples mediation committees responsible for mediating
in civil disputes and cases of slight infraction of the law. They include
members of the mediation committees and mediators of mediation groups. |
Mediation of Civil Disputes refers to mediation committees work in
mediating in civil disputes concerning civil rights and duties through
persuasion and education in accordance with the provisions of law on a
voluntary basis, so as to solve disputes by helping the parties involved come
to an agreement and understanding. These disputes include divorce cases and
disputes over property ownership, but exclude the civil cases to be handled
by the court. |
Number of Labour Dispute Cases Accepted refers to the number of
cases of labour dispute submitted that, after being reviewed by the labour
dispute arbitration committees in line with the relevant state regulations,
are accepted and registered for treatment. |
Acceptance of Case refers to the decision made by the procurators office to confirm the act of
crime after initial investigation and to start legal proceedings of the case
as criminal case. |
Large Case In case of corruption and bribery, it refers to the case involves a
bribery of over 50,000 yuan, or a misappropriation of over 100,000, or other
cases involving 500,000 yuan. In case of offence on dereliction of duty, it
refers to the case that causes an economic loss of over 50,000, loss of one
life, or severe injury of 3 persons; or a case that displays extremely
disgusting behavior of the offender or results in grave aftermath. |
Key Case refers to a case committed by government officials with a ranking of
division director or county administrator. |
Decision on Arrest refers
to decision made by procurators office, in accordance with laws, to arrest
the suspect(s) in the cases that are accepted and to be investigated by
procurators office. |
Approval for Arrest refers to the decision made by procurators office, in accordance with laws
and relevant facts, to approve the arrest of the suspect(s) that is proposed
by the public security departments, state security departments or authority
of prisons . |
Decision on Prosecution refers to the decision made by procurators office, in accordance with laws
and relevant facts, to institute proceedings to the peoples court against the
suspect(s) of criminal cases handed over by the public security departments,
state security departments or authority of prisons, or by the anti-corruption
departments within the procurators office . |
Retired or Resigned Personnel refers to the persons who have formally gone through the formalities for
their retirement or quitting work and enjoy the corresponding treatments. |
Insurance and Welfare Funds
refers to labour insurance and
welfare fund paid by enterprises, organizations and institutions to their
staff and workers as well as retired and resigned persons in addition to
their wages and salaries. |
(1)
Insurance and Welfare Funds for Staff and Workers include: |
Medical
Care Allowance: It refers to the cost of medical care of staff and workers
and their dependent family members who are covered by the medicare
system of enterprises, travelling expenses of
injured employees to hospital and their per diem subsidies during
hospitalization, cost of medical care of employees who are covered by the medicare system of institutions and organizations, as
well as cost of medicine of employees of enterprises and institutions who are
not covered by the medicare system. |
Expenses
for Recreational, Sports and Publicity Activities: They refer to actual
payment made by enterprises and institutions in recreational, sports and
publicity activities, excluding training cost. |
Subsidies
to Collective Welfare Undertakings: They refer to subsidies to the operation
of welfare undertakings that can not fully cover their cost, such as public
bath rooms, barbershops, laundries, nurseries and kindergartens. |
Expenses
for Collective Welfare Facilities: They refer to expenses for collective
welfare facilities that are spent in line with state regulations, such as the
purchase and repair of cooking utensils for canteens, and repair of living
quarters of staff and workers, but excluding the expenses for welfare
projects that are constructed with self-raised funds. |
Others:
They refer to their insurance and welfare funds paid to staff and workers. |
(2)Insurance
and Welfare Funds for Retired and Resigned Staff and Workers
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Pensions
for retired veteran cadres: They refer to pensions, other subsidies, and
additional allowances paid to retired in line with relevant government
documents. |
Pensions
for Retirement: They refer to living allowance, other subsidies and additional
allowances paid to retired staff and workers in line with the relevant
government documents. |
Resignation
Allowances for Living Expenses: They refer to living allowance, and
additional allowances subsidies paid to resigned staff and workers in line
with relevant government instructions. |
Others:
They refer to other expenses, including moving and settlement allowance,
allowance for difficult families, book and newspaper allowance, subsidy for
non staple foods, housing subsidy, water and electricity subsidy, special
allowance for staff and workers of national minorities, travelling
cost for senior retired staff, etc.
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Volume of Industrial Waste Water Discharged refers to the
volume of industrial waste water discharged, through all outlets, to the
outside of industrial enterprises, including waste water produced, direct-cooling
water, underground water from mines that does not meet the standard of
discharge, and the domestic sewage mixed up with industrial waste water when
discharged, but excluding discharged indirect-cooling water. |
Volume of Waste Water up to the Standard for Discharge refers to the volume of discharged industrial waste water that, with
or without treatment, has come up to the national or local standards for
discharge. |
Volume of Treated Industrial Waste Water refers
to the volume of industrial waste water after being treated and purified
through various water treatment facilities in the reference period, including
the volume discharged or recovered after being treated. The volume of waste
water that fails to meet the national or local standards after treatment is
also included. If there are treatment facilities both at the outlets of
workshops and at the outlets of the factory, and the same volume of waste
water has been treated twice, duplication should be avoided in the
calculation of the volume of treated industrial waste water. |
Volume of Waste Industrial Gas Emission refers to waste gas
emitted from burning of fuels and from production process in the area of the
factory, and is measured by 10000 standard cubic meters each year under
normal condition. |
Volume of Industrial Sulphur
Dioxide Discharged refers to the volume of sulphur dioxide
discharged to the air in the process of fuel burning or in the production
process. |
Volume
of Industrial Soot Discharged refers to the volume of solid soot in
the smoke discharged in the process of fuel burning in the area of the
factory. |
Industrial Dust Discharged refers to the total weight of solid dust discharged by industrial
enterprises in the production process, such as dust of refractory materials
from iron plants, dust from coke-screening system or from sintering machines
of coking plants, dust from lime kilns, cement dust from building material
enterprises, etc., but excluding smoke and dust discharged by power plants. |
Volume of Industrial Solid Wastes Produced refers
to the total volume of solid, semi-solid or high concentration liquid residue
produced by industrial enterprises in their production process, including
dangerous wastes, residues from melting, slag, powdered coal ash, gangue,
chemical residues, tailings, radioactive residues and other residues, but
excluding stripped or dug stones in mining (except gangue and acid or alkali
stones which are stones washed or soaked by water with a pH value smaller
than 4 or larger than 10.5) |
Dangerous Wastes refers to the wastes which are
listed by the government as the dangerous wastes or the wastes which are
explosive, inflammable, oxidizable, poisonous,
corrosive or liable to cause infectious diseases or have other dangerous
characteristics specified in accordance with the standards or methods
stipulated by the government for identifying the dangerous wastes. |
Volume of Industrial Solid Wastes Utilized in a
Comprehensive Way refers to the volume of solid wastes from which useful materials can be
extracted or which can be changed to be utilizable resources, energy or other
materials, including the volume of industrial solid wastes stored up in the
previous years and utilized in the current year, such as the solid wastes
utilized as fertilizers, building materials, for making roads or for other
purpose. Statistical data on utilization of industrial solid wastes are
collected by solid wastes producing units. |
Volume of Industrial Stored up Solid Wastes refers to
the volume of industrial solid wastes temporarily stored up or piled with
special facilities or piled in the special sites for the purpose of
utilization or treatment in future. The special facilities or special sites
for storing up solid wastes should have the measures against spreading or
being washed away to other places, permeating the soil or causing air
pollution or water contamination. |
Volume of Industrial Solid Wastes Treated refers to solid wastes
disposed of in a non-recoverable place that meet the requirement of
environmental protection, such as burying (The dangerous wastes should be
buried safely), burning, piling in designated sites, pouring water into the
deep strata, filling of old mines, etc. (including treatment of solid wastes
piled up in the previous years). |
Volume of Industrial Solid Wastes Discharged refers to the
volume of industrial solid wastes produced and discharged at the places
outside the special facilities or special sites for preventing against
pollution, excluding stripped or dug stones in mining (except gangue and acid
or alkali waste stones). |
Output Value of Products Made from Utilization of
Waste Gas, Waste Water and Industrial Solid Wastes refers to the value of
products (calculated at current prices) made by industrial enterprises using
recovered waste water, waste gas or solid wastes as main raw materials. Only
the value of the products which have been sold or are ready to be sold should
be included. The value of the products which will be used in the production
of the enterprises should not be included. |
Profit Obtained from Utilization of Waste Gas, Waste
Water and Industrial Solid Wastes refers to profit obtained from selling or own-consumption of products made
by industrial enterprises using recovered waste water, waste gas or solid
wastes as main raw materials. |
Accidents
of Environment Pollution and Destruction refer
to sudden accidents, due to economic and social behavior or activities in
contrast with environment protection legislation, unexpected factors or
irresistible natural disasters, that cause the pollution of environment, the
destruction of natural protection zones, wild plants and animals, the danger
to the health of people, and the loss in the property of the society and
people. |