Explanatory Notes on Main Statistical Indicators
Gross Output Value of
Farming, Forestry, Animal Husbandry and Fishery refers
to the total value of products of farming, forestry, animal husbandry and
fishery, which reflects the total scale and result of agricultural production
during a given period. Gross output value of agriculture is obtained by first
multiplying the output of each product or by product by its price, resulting in
t he output value of each s ingle item. For a small number of products, annual
output of which is not available or difficult to get due to the long production
growing process involved, t he output value is estimated through an indirect
approach. The sum of out put value of all products of farming, forestry, animal
husbandry, and fishery is then equal to the gross output value of agriculture.
Prior to 1957, Chinas gross agricultural output value included barnyard manure
and handicraft products for self-consumption (clothes, shoes, stockings, and
initial grain processing undertaken by peasants). Since 1958, cutting and
felling of bamboo and trees by villages and other cooperative organizations
under villages have been included in forestry; value of barnyard manure has
been excluded from animal husbandry; self consumed handicraft s has been
excluded from sideline occupations, while the output value of industries run by
villages and cooperative organizations under village had been included inside
line occupations and the out put value of fish catches by motor fishing boats
has been added to fishery. Since 1980, the value of handicraft products made
for sale by individuals in households had been added to sideline occupations.
Since 1984, industries run by villages and under villages have been included in
the sector of industry. Since 1993, the subdivision of sideline occupations has
been canceled, and the hunting of wild animals has been classified into animal
husbandry, and the gathering of wild plants and commodity industry run by rural
household have been included in farming. The firs t agriculture census of China
in 1996 revealed some discrepancy between the production of animal products
from the annual reports and that from the census. Efforts were made by NBS to
adjust the output value of animal husbandry to make the figures from the annual
reports consistent with the census data.
Grain Output refers to the total output of rice, wheat, corn, sorghum, millet and
other miscellaneous grains as well as tubers and bean in the whole country
including grains produced by state farms, collective units, industrial
enterprises and mines. Output of beans refers to dry beans without pods. The
output of tubers (sweet potatoes and potatoes, not including taros and cassava)
was converted into that of grain at the ratio 4:1, i.e. 4 kilograms of fresh tubers
was equivalent to 1 kilogram of grain up to 1963. Since 1964 the ratio for
conversion has been 5:1.Tubers supplied as vegetables (such as potatoes) in
cities and suburbs are calculated as fresh vegetables and their output is not
included in the output of grain. Output of all other grains refers to husked
grain. Data on grain production before 1989 were obtained through Comprehensive
Statistical Reporting System, since then, sample survey data are used.
Cotton Output refers to t he cot ton product ion in the whole country including cotton
sown in spring and in autumn. Output is measured as the weight of ginned
cotton. Three kilograms of seed-cotton are equivalent to 1 kilogram of ginned
cotton, excluding ceiba.
Output of Oil-bearing
Crops refers to the total production of oil-bearing
crops of various kinds, including peanuts, (dry, in shell) rapeseeds, sesame,
sunflower seeds, flax seeds, and other oil-bearing crops. Soybeans, oil-bearing
woody plants, and wild oil-bearing crops are not included.
Output of Aquatic
Products refers to catches of both artificially cultured
and naturally grown aquatic products, including fish, shrimps, crabs and
shellfish in sea and inland water as well as seaweed. Freshwater plants are not
included. Data on output of aquatic products are reported by aquatic product
and statistical agencies level by level. Before 1995, among the shellfish, the
oyster was counted as fresh meat; 5 kilograms of ark shell, clams and frogs are
equivalent to 1 kilogram of fresh aquatic product s; t hey are all counted as
fresh aquatic product s since1996.
Output of Pork, Beef,
and Mutton refers to the meat of slaughtered hogs, cattle,
sheep and goats wit h head, feet, and offal taken away. The statistical scope
is of the whole society. The first agriculture census of China in 1996 revealed
some discrepancy between the production of animal products from the annual
reports and that from the census. Efforts were made by NBS to adjust the output
value of animal husbandry to make the figures from the annual rep orts
consistent with the census data. Since 1999, NBS conducted sample survey for t
he major animal husbandry products, such as hogs, cattle, sheep and goats and
fowls, and the data from sample surveys are used as national finalized data.
Those products, which are not covered by the sample survey, are st ill reported
by statistical agencies level by level.
Number of Livestock or
Poultry in Stock at Beginning (or End) refers to the total number of large animals, pigs,
sheep, fowls, etc. raised by rural cooperative organizations, state farms,
rural individuals, government agencies, schools, industrial and mining
enterprises, army, and urban residents at the beginning (or end) of the
reference period. Data rep or ting system and data adjustment are the same as
that in the output of pork, beef and mutton.
Regularly Cultivated
Land refers to farmland among the total land
resources, which is exclusively used for farming and is under regular
cultivation with harvest in normal years. Include dare currently cultivated
land, land that has been abandoned or put in idle for less than 3 years and
could be re-used for cultivation at any time, and new-claimed land that has
been put into cultivation for more than 3 years. According to statistical
coverage, it includes the gouges, dykes, roads and ridges of field with 1 meter
wide in Southern areas and 2 meters wide in Northern areas. Excluded under this
category are steep slope land over 25 degrees under temporary cultivation, land
(large or small plots) that is claimed along river bends, lake sides or banks
of reservoirs, as well as land that has been designated under the "Green
for Grain" programs of the state and provincial governments but is still
temporarily under cultivation. The regularly cultivated land is the key protection
land of the nation, which reflects the comprehensive productivity of
agriculture of China.
Sown Area of Crops refers t o area of land sown or transplanted with crop s regardless of
being in cultivated area or no cultivated area. Area of land re-sown due to
natural disasters is also included. The indicator can reflect the utilization
condition of the cultivated land in China. At p resent, t he sown area of crops
mainly include the following 9 categories of crops: grain, cotton, oil-bearing
crops, sugar crops, fiber crops, Tobacco, Vegetables and melons, medicinal
materials and other farm crops.
Irrigated Area refers to areas that are effectively irrigated, i.e. level land, which has
water source and complete sets of irrigation facilities to lift and move
adequate water for irrigation purpose under normal conditions. Under normal
conditions, irrigated area is the sum of watered fields and irrigated fields
where irrigation systems or equipment have been installed for regular
irrigation purpose. This indicator can reflect drought resistance capaCity of
the cultivated land in China.
Consumption of Chemical
Fertilizers in Agriculture refers to the quantity of
chemical fertilizers applied in agriculture in the y ear, including nitrogenous
fertilizer, phosphate fertilizer, potash fertilizer, and compound fertilizer.
The consumption of chemical fertilizers is required in calculation to convert
the gross weight into weight containing 100% effective component (e.g. 100%
nitrogen content in nitrogenous fertilizer, 100%phosphorous pent oxide contents
in phosphate fertilizer, 100%potassium oxide contents in potash fertilizer).
Compound fertilizer is converted with it s major component. The formula is:
Volume of effective component = physical quantity X
effective component of certain chemical fertilizer (%)
Total Power of Farm
Machinery refers to total mechanical power of machinery
used in farming, forestry, animal husbandry, and fishery, including ploughing,
irrigation and drainage, harvesting, transport, plant protection, stock
breeding, forestry and fishery. The power of internal combust ion engines is
required to convert horsepower into watts and the power of electric motors is
required to be converted into watts. Machinery employed for non-agricultural
purposes, such as the machines used in township run and village-run industry,
construction, nonagricultural transport, scientific experiments and teaching,
is excluded. Data are mainly from agricultural machinery agencies.
Rural Employed Persons refer to rural labor forces aged over 16 years old who are engaged in
real production and management activities and receive payment in kind or wages,
including those covered within the age frame and regularly participating in
production activities, and those who are out of the range of age frame and also
participating in product ion activities regularly. Excluding students studying
in other places with their permanent residence registered in local areas,
servicemen and persons incapable of working; also excluding those who are
waiting for jobs and those engaged in household work. Persons employed are
classified as rural employed persons; industrial employed
persons; const ruction industry employed persons;
transport, storage and telecommunications industries employed persons; whole
sales and retail sales trade and catering industry employed persons and others
according to the longest period of persons engaged in major activities (or
using income indicator when periods are the same).
Township Enterprises refer to collective
economic organization in rural areas or various enterprises bearing the
responsibilities of supporting the agricultural sector in t own (including
related village), which mainly invest ed by farmers. The share of rural
economic organizations or farmers should account for over50%, if it were below
50%, it should play the leading role or hold the share. Those enterprises
include: township enterprises, village enterprises, joint-household
enterprises, household (private, individual) enterprises; and also the joint
venture enterprises with various ownership s among above-mentioned enterprises,
or with state-owned enterprises, urban collective enterprises, private
enterprises and foreign funded (including Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan)
enterprises.