Explanatory Notes on Main Statistical Indicators
Regular
Institutions of Higher Education refer to educational establishments set
up according to the government evaluation and approval procedures, recruiting
graduates from senior secondary schools as the main target by National
Matriculation TEST. They include full-time universities, colleges, institutions
of higher professional education, institutions of higher vocational education,
institutions of higher vocational education and others (non-university
tertiary, branch schools and undergraduate classes).
Universities and colleges primarily provide
undergraduate courses; institutions of higher professional education and
institutions of higher vocational education primarily provide professional
trainings; and others refer to educational establishments, which are
responsible for enrolling higher education students under the State Plan but
not enumerated in the total number of schools, including: branch schools of
universities and colleges, and universities and colleges that have been
approved and under plan for construction. Non-university tertiary refers to the
regular undergraduate branch college which is running in new mechanism and
mode, excluding the branch schools and other similar branches of educational
institutions.
Net
Enrolment Ratio of Primary Schools refers to the proportion of school age children enrolled at schools to the
total number of school age children both in and outside schools (including
retarded children, but excluding blind, deaf and mute children). The formula
is:
|
Net Enrolment Ratio |
= |
Total Primary
School-age |
×100% |
|
Total Primary
School-age |
Scientific
and Technological Activities (S&T Activities)
refer to organized activities which are closely related with the creation,
development, dissemination and application of the scientific and technical
knowledge in the fields of natural sciences, agricultural science, medical
science, engineering and technological science, humanities and social sciences
(referred to as scientific and technological fields). S&T activities can be
classified into 3 categories: research and development (R&D) activities, application
of R&D results, and related S&T services. This statistical definition
is made by UNICHIEF for scientific and technological activities to meet the
need of carrying out statistical work in this field for its member countries
particularly the developing countries.
Personnel
Engaged in S&T Activities refer to personnel directly engaged in S&T activities, in the
management of S&T activities, and in providing direct service to S&T
activities, with over 10% of the total working hours in a year spent on S&T
activities. (1) Personnel directly engaged in S&T activities include
researchers, engineers, technicians and other related personnel engaged in
S&T activities in independent-accounting R&D institutions, institutions
of higher learning, and in research institutes, laboratories, technology
development centres and central experiment workshops
under enterprises and institutions. Also included are people working in S&T
research project teams, professional and technical personnel working in S&T
information archiving institutes, and graduate students working on the design
of their thesis. (2) Personnel engaged in the management of S&T activities
and in providing direct service to S&T activities include senior management
people responsible for S&T activities in independent-accounting R&D
institutions, S&T information archiving institutes, institutions of higher
learning and in enterprises and institutions where S&T activities are
undertaken. Also included are people responsible for the planning, administration,
personnel management, financial management, logistics supply, equipment
maintenance, information and library management that are related with S&T
activities. People providing indirect services are excluded, such as security,
medical service, drivers, plumbers, cleaners and those providing catering and
related service. This indicator reflects the size of personnel engaged in
S&T activities.
Scientists
and Engineers refer to persons engaged in S&T activities either having obtained
titles of senior and middle level professional positions, or those without such
positions but have completed university or higher education. This indicator
reflects the quality of personnel engaged in S&T activities.
Research
and Development (R&D) refers to systematic and creative activities in the field of science and
technology aiming at increasing the knowledge and using the knowledge for new
application. R&D includes 3 categories of activities: basic research,
applied research and experimentation for development. The scale and intensity
of R&D are widely used internationally to reflect the strength of S&T
and the core competitiveness of a country in the world.
Basic
Research refers to empirical or theoretical research aiming at obtaining new
knowledge on the fundamental principles regarding phenomena or observable facts
to reveal the intrinsic nature and underlying laws and to acquire new
discoveries or new theories. Basic research takes no specific or designated
application as the aim of the research. Results of basic research are mainly
released or disseminated in the form of scientific papers or monographs. This
indicator reflects the innovation capacity for original knowledge.
Applied
Research refers to creative research aiming at obtaining new knowledge on a
specific objective or target. Purpose of the applied research is to identify
the possible uses of results from basic research, or to explore new
(fundamental) methods or new approaches. Results of applied research are
expressed in the form of scientific papers, monographs, fundamental models or
invention patents. This indicator reflects the exploration of ways to apply the
results of basic research.
R&D
Personnel refer to persons engaged in research, management and supporting
activities of R&D, including persons in the project teams, persons engaged
in the management of S&T activities of enterprises and supporting staff
providing direct service to the research projects. This indicator reflects the
size of personnel engaged in R&D activities with independent intellectual
property.
Full-time
Equivalent of R&D Personnel refers to the sum of the full-time persons and the full-time equivalent of
part-time persons converted by workload. For instance, if there are 2 full-time
persons and 3 part-time workers (20%, 30% and 70% of working hours respectively
on R&D activities), the full-time equivalent are 2+0.2+0.3+0.7=3.2
person-years. This is an internationally comparable indicator of S&T
manpower input.
Professional
and Technical Personnel refer to persons engaged in professional and technical work or in the
management of professional and technical activities, i.e., people with
professional or technical positions who are engaged in professional and
technical work or in the management of professional and technical activities,
and people without professional or technical positions but are working on
professional or technical posts. They include professionals and technicians
working in 17 categories of technical occupations including engineering,
agriculture, scientific researches, medical service, teaching, economic
research and application, accounting, statistics, translation, libraries,
archives, cultural and museum service, journalism and publication, lawyers,
notarization service, radio and television broadcasting, handicraft and fine
arts, sports, performing art, and political workers in enterprises. This
indicator reflects the condition of human resources in S&T.
Funding
for S&T Activities refers to funds obtained from various sources for S&T activities,
including government funds, self-raised funds by enterprises, self-raised funds
by institutions, loans from financial institutions, foreign funds and other
funds. This indicator reflects the efforts made by various social economic
entities in promoting the development of S&T.
Government
Funds refer to funds obtained from government agencies at all levels to be used
for S&T activities, including fund for scientific undertakings, 3 kinds of
fund for S&T activities, fund for capital construction for scientific
researches, science fund, funds from education expenditures by education
departments for S&T activities, and extra-budget fund from government
agencies for S&T activities.
Funds
of Enterprises refers to funds of enterprises from their own budget; funds from other
enterprises; or funds received by universities or research institutions from
enterprises for scientific research or technical development projects. Excluded
from this category are funds from government agencies, financial institutions
or from foreign institutions.
Internal
Expenditure on S&T activities refer to the actual expenditure on
S&T activities during the reference year, including service fees,
expenditure on research activities, expenditure on research management,
purchase or construction of fixed assets not included in the investment for
capital construction, expenditure on capital construction for scientific
researches, and other expenditure on S&T activities. Not included are
expenditure on production activities, repayment of loans and transfer expenditure.
This indicator reflects the net investment in S&T more accurately.
Service
Fees refer to direct or indirect payment, in cash or in kind, made to
personnel engaged in S&T activities as remuneration and other fees. They
include, in various forms, salaries, subsidies, bonus, benefits, retirement
pension, stipend, etc. This indicator reflects the improvement of the
remuneration package for S&T personnel.
Purchase
or Construction of Fixed Assets refers to the fixed assets purchased or constructed using funds other than
the investment in capital construction, and the actual expenditure on capital
construction for scientific researches. In other words, it is the sum of the
actual expenditure on fixed assets and the accomplished investment in capital
construction for scientific researches. Fixed assets refer to main materials
and equipment, literatures and documents in libraries, materials for
experiments, specimen, instruments, furniture, buildings and constructions that
can be used for a long time without changing the form and shape of those
articles or constructions. This indicator reflects the input in improving the
condition of S&T and the means of scientific research.
New Products refer to brand new products produced with new technology and new design,
or products that represent noticeable improvement in terms of structure,
material, or production process for improving significantly the character or
function of the older versions. They include new products certified by relevant
government agencies within the period of certification, as well as new products
designed and produced by enterprises within a year without certification by
government agencies. This indicator reflects the direct contribution of S&T
output to economic growth.
Patent is an
abbreviation for the patent right and refers to the exclusive right of
ownership by the inventors or designers for the creation or inventions, given
from the patent offices after due process of assessment and approval in
accordance with the Patent Law. Patents are granted for inventions, utility
models and designs. This indicator reflects the achievements of S&T and
design with independent intellectual property.
Patented
Inventions refer to new technical proposals to the products or methods or their
modifications. This is universal core indicator reflecting the technologies
with independent intellectual property.
Patented
Utility Models refer to the practical and new technical proposals on the shape and
structure of the product or the combination of both. This indicator reflects
the condition of technological results with certain technical content.
Designs refer to
the aesthetics and industrially applicable new designs for the shape, pattern
and colour of the product, or their combinations.
This indicator reflects the appearance design achievements with independent
intellectual property.
Culture
and Related Industries refer to the aggregate of activities, providing the mass with culture
goods, amusement goods and services. According to the characteristics of culture
goods, amusement goods and services, they can be classified into two
categories, or nonprofit cultural activities and profit cultural activities.
Culture and related industries is the
important component of the tertiary industry. These are the derivative sector
from the Industrial Classification of the National Economy and are composed of
two categories of culture services and related cultural services.
Culture
services mainly include news services, publishing and copyright services, radio,
television, film, arts, network, recreation, and other cultural services
Arts
Performance Troupes refer to the various professional performing arts groups, which sponsored
by the cultural sectors or guided by the cultural society (approved by the
cultural market administration, or registered and permitted with the relative
certificate), including non-governmental troupes, such as drama troupes,
dialect troupes, comedy troupes, children troupes, Opera troupes, puppetry
troupes, Shadowgraph troupes, etc., comprehensive professional arts performance
troupes. The semi-working and semi-farming arts troupes are not included.
Arts
Performance Places refer to the various sites for cultural
activities, which sponsored by the cultural sectors or guided by the cultural
society (approved by the cultural market administration, or registered and
permitted with the relative certificate), with the facility of auditorium,
stage, and lighting, and selling tickets in public, specially performed by arts
troupes, including theatre, concert halls, opera halls, dance halls, drama
halls, cinemas, circus fields, and other showplaces for the performing arts.
The cinemas, auditoriums, stadiums, and arts museums, such as art galleries,
painting houses, sculpture houses, are not included.
Cultural
Market Operating Units refer to the units dealing in culture and cultural services, which
registered and permitted with the relative certificate by cultural market
administration.
Radio
Coverage of Population refers to the percentage of population, which can listen to one of
central, provincial, city, prefecture, and county radio programs by wireless,
cable, satellite and other technical means, in the surveying area, to national
total population, according to Statistical Standard and Method on Television
and Radio Coverage of Population established by the State Administration of
Broadcasting, Film and Television.
Television
Coverage of Population refers to the percentage of population, which can watch one of central,
provincial, city, prefecture, and county television programs by wireless,
cable, satellite and other technical means, in the surveying area, to national
total population, according to Statistical Standard and Method on Television
and Radio Coverage of Population established by the State Administration of
Broadcasting, Film and Television.