23-8    Number of Employed Persons by Industry  
             
      (10 000 persons)  
Industry 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001  
             
  Manufacturing                44.30 37.96 35.39 33.37 32.64  
  Construction                 30.31 30.66 28.68 30.17 29.14  
  Wholesale, Retail and                   
    Import/Export Trades,       96.08 95.35 93.51 98.17 98.11  
    Restaurants and Hotels                 
  Transport, Storage and       34.34 34.92 33.94 35.66 35.34  
    Communications                         
  Financing, Insurance, Real              
    Estate and Business Services 40.51 41.03 43.77 45.27 47.81  
  Community, Social and                   
    Personal Services           67.82 69.56 73.29 75.47 79.89  
  Others                       3.00 2.72 2.65 2.62 2.31  
  Total                        316.36 312.20 311.21 320.73 325.23  
             
             
Notes: Employment statistics are compiled separately based on the General Household Survey (GHS) and the Quarterly Survey of Employment and
          Vacancies. Each source has its own merits and limitations in reflecting the employment situation. The GHS estimates are presented here  
           because the omission in terms of coverage of the employed population is negligible. Besides, individual persons, including multiple job  
           holders, are counted only once. However, a major limitation of the GHS estimates is that the respondents might not have reported accurately  
           the industry to which they belong, especially for workers in the manufacturing sector. With the relocation of some production processes to  
           the mainland of China, there is a change in the mode of operation of the traditional manufacturing establishments in Hong Kong. As a result,  
           some of these establishments are more appropriately classified as import/export establishments if the majority of the production activities are  
           carried out in the mainland of China. However, this change in statistical classification may not be readily recognized by all the employed  
           persons, particularly the technicians and craftsmen, of the establishments concerned. Hence, the GHS employment estimate in respect of the  
           manufacturing sector will be overstated to the extent that some respondents mistakenly regard themselves as still being engaged in the  
           manufacturing sector instead of the import/export trades.