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Civil Service of the People's Republic of China

The Civil Service of the People's Republic of China is the administrative system of the traditional Chinese government which consists of all levels who run the day-to-day affairs in China. The members of the civil service are selected through competitive examination.

Civil servants Edit

As of 2009, China has about 10 million civil servants who are managed under the Civil Service Law.[1] Most civil servants work in government agencies and departments. State leaders and cabinet members, who normally would be considered politicians in political systems with competing political parties and elections, also come under the civil service in China. Civil servants are not necessarily members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), but 95 percent of civil servants in leading positions from division (county) level and above are CCP members.[1] The vast majority of civil servants remain in the service for their entire careers.[2]: 3 

The definition of civil servant (Chinese: 公务员; pinyin: gōngwùyuán), a term formally codified in the 2006 Civil Service Law is often ambiguous in China.[3] Most broadly, civil servants in China are a subset of CCP cadres, the class of professional staff who administer and manage Chinese government, party, military, and major business institutions.[4] More specifically, the term denotes public employees in higher positions of authority; according to academic Yuen Yuen Ang, they "form the elite strata of functionaries in the party-state hierarchy", in contrast to shiye renyuan (事业人员) or 'shiye' personnel, who are also public employees but are not considered gongwuyuan.[5]

The definition of the civil service differs from that of many western countries. Civil servants are "the managers, administrators and professionals who work for government bodies," including leadership such as the Premier, state councillors, ministers, and provincial governors, among others.[6] It excludes manual workers and many other types of cadre, such as those employed in public service units such as hospitals, universities, or state-owned enterprises, even though those positions are also paid and managed by the government.[6] While not strictly part of the civil service, the judiciary is governed by the same personnel arrangements as the civil service.[7]

History Edit

A professional corps of dedicated bureaucrats, akin to a modern civil service, has been an integral feature of governance in Chinese civilization for much of its history. Part of the motivation was ideological; Confucian teaching discouraged overly involved, warlike, and rowdy rulers alike, making the delegation of legislative and executive authority particularly necessary.[8] During the Zhou dynasty (c. 1046 – 256 BC), records show that kings would send edicts encouraging local officials to identify promising candidates for office in the capital.[9] This practice was intensified under Emperor Wu of Han (r. 141 – 87 BC), who standardized the selection process with the addition of question-and-answer elements on classic texts judged by a panel of scholars.[9] This helped lay the groundwork for the Imperial examination system that would be formed under the short-lived Sui dynasty before being widely adopted thereafter.[10] The examination system and the bureaucracy it engendered would remain in place in some form until the dissolution of the Qing dynasty in 1911.[11]

Mao-era cadres Edit

The People's Republic of China did not initially maintain a formal civil service like other countries of the era.[12] As the CCP gained ground in the Chinese Civil War against the Kuomintang (KMT), it instead used dedicated Party cadres to oversee and administer territories it took over. The CCP, at the time of its victory in 1949, faced a serious shortage of qualified personnel to the fill over 2.7 million public positions needed to govern the country that had previously been occupied by KMT-affiliated officials, some of whom the Party had to allow to continue to work due to lack of suitable replacements.[13] By the mid-1950s, China had developed a nomenklatura system modeled on the Soviet Union; there was no civil service independent of the ruling party.[14]

Reform Edit

Following the death of Mao Zedong and the rise of reformist Deng Xiaoping, efforts began to change the cadre system after the discord of the Cultural Revolution so that the Party would be able to effectively carry out the modernization of China.[15] Reforms beginning in 1984 did not decrease the approximately 8.1 million cadre positions[16] across China, but began to decentralize their management to authorities at provincial and local levels.[17]

Zhao Ziyang, elected General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party in 1987, sought to transform the cadre system into a more independent body resembling a civil service.[18] The civil service not completely subservient to the CCP, and thus reform the relationship between the Party and the Chinese state.[19] In the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, Zhao and his allies lost their influence among Party elite and the civil service reform project was denounced by remaining leaders.[20] Zhao's proposals were subsequently heavily modified and implemented as the "Provisional Regulations on State Civil Servants" in 1993, albeit on a much less comprehensive scale.[21]

Nevertheless, the Provisional Regulations established the first formal civil service in China since the founding of the People's Republic.[22]

Since the early 2000s, recruitment quotas for non-Communist Party members, gender, and ethnic group, have been institutionalized to increase representation of such groups in the civil service.[23]: 147 

Levels and ranking system Edit

The current ranking system has 27 different ranks (from previously of total 15 levels) and a grade (dangci) system within each rank (at most 14 grades for each rank) to reflect seniority and performance; a combination of rank and dangci ultimately determine pay and benefits.[24] The highest tiers (including department chiefs, deputy department chiefs, and section chiefs) have significant involvement in policy-making.[25]: 147  Within local governments, the highest level decision-makers are typically the party secretary, the state chief, and party committee members.[25]: 147 

The 27 ranks are sub-divisions of 11 "levels".[26][24] The following is a non-exhaustive list of party and state positions corresponding to their civil service rank. The list only comprises "leadership positions" (lingdao ganbu), but not civil servants who are not in leadership positions. Non-leading civil servants can be given high corresponding ranks. For example, an expert or advisor hired by the government on a long-term initiative does not manage any people or lead any organization, but may still receive a sub-provincial rank. Similarly, retired officials who take on lesser-ranked (usually ceremonial) positions after retirement would generally retain their highest rank. Occasionally, officials may hold a position but be of a higher rank than what the position indicates, for example a Deputy Prefecture-level Party Secretary who holds a full prefecture-level rank.

Level Rank Level name Party positions Government positions
1 1 to 3 National leader
(国家级正职)
2 4 to 6 Sub-national leader
(国家级副职)
3 7 to 8 Provincial-Ministerial level
(省部级正职)
  • Provincial Governor (Mayor of a direct-controlled Municipality, Chairman of an Autonomous Region)
  • Ministers of the State Council
  • Commissioners or Directors of agencies that directly report to the State Council, such as the National Development and Reform Commission
  • Chair of a Provincial-level People's Congress
  • Chair of a Provincial-level People's Political Consultative Conference
  • General Managers of key state-owned enterprises deemed to be "ministerial-level"
  • Chair of national civic organizations such as the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, All-China Women's Federation, etc.
4 9 to 10 Sub-Provincial (Sub-Ministerial) level
(省部级副职)
  • Deputy Secretary of Party Committees of Provinces, Autonomous Regions, Direct-controlled Municipalities
  • Standing Committee Members of provincial-level Party Committees
  • Secretary of Party Committees of Sub-provincial cities
  • Deputy leaders of bodies reporting directly to the Central Committee, such as the General Office, International Liaison, United Front, Organization, Propaganda, Politics-Law, Central Party School
  • The chairman, secretary of the party committee (party group) and general manager of central enterprises such as State Grid Corporation of China
  • Party Secretary of key universities, such as Peking University
  • Deputy Governor (Autonomous Region Chairman, Mayor)
  • Deputy Ministers of the State Council
  • Deputy Commissioners or Directors of agencies that directly report to the State Council
  • Vice Chair of a Provincial-level People's Congress
  • Vice Chair of a Provincial-level People's Political Consultative Conference
  • President of key universities, such as Tsinghua University
5 11 to 12 Bureau-Director level
(厅局级正职)
  • Party Secretary of Prefecture-level cities and divisions
  • Deputy Party Secretary of Sub-provincial cities
  • Standing Committee members of Sub-provincial cities
  • Heads of provincial party organizations (Organization, Propaganda, United Front, etc.)
  • Party Secretary of provincially run universities, such as Hubei University
  • Mayor of Prefecture-level cities
  • Vice Mayor of Sub-provincial cities
  • Directors (ministers) of provincial departments
  • Chairs of provincial civil organizations (Unions, Women's Federation etc.)
  • Directors of departments of national-level ministries
  • Chair of Prefecture-level People's Congress
  • Chair of Prefecture-level People's Political Consultative Conference
  • President of provincially run universities, such as Shanxi University
6 13 to 14 Deputy-Bureau-Director level
(厅局级副职)
  • Vice Mayor of Prefecture-level cities
  • Vice Chair of Prefecture-level People's Congress
  • Vice Chair of Prefecture-level People's Political Consultative Conference
  • Deputy Chairs of provincial civil organizations (Unions, Women's Federation etc.)
  • Deputy directors (ministers) of provincial departments
7 15 to 16 Division-Head level
(县处级正职)
  • Party Secretary of Counties or County-level cities
  • Party Secretary of Districts of Prefecture-level cities
  • Heads of prefecture-level party organizations (Organization, Propaganda, United Front, etc.)
  • County Governors
  • Governor of Districts of Prefecture-level cities
  • Mayor of County-level cities
  • Chair of County-level People's Congress
  • Chair of County-level People's Political Consultative Conference
  • Heads of sub-divisions of a provincial department
8 17 to 18 Deputy-Division-Head level
(县处级副职)
  • Deputy Party Secretary of Counties or County-level cities
  • Deputy Party Secretary of Districts of Prefecture-level cities
  • Standing Committee members of County-level Party Committees
  • Deputy County Governors
  • Vice Mayor of County-level cities
  • Vice Chair of County-level People's Congress
  • Vice Chair of County-level People's Political Consultative Conference
9 19 to 20 Section-Head level
(乡科级正职)
  • Party Secretary of Towns or Townships
  • Heads of county-level party organizations (Organization, Propaganda, United Front, etc.)
  • Magistrate of Townships (Mayor of Towns)
  • Chair of Township-level People's Congress
  • Chair of Township-level People's Political Consultative Conference
  • Heads of sub-divisions of a prefecture-level department
10 21 to 22 Deputy-Section-Head level
(乡科级副职)
  • Deputy Party Secretary or Standing Committee member of Towns or Townships
  • Deputy heads of county-level party organizations (Organization, Propaganda, United Front, etc.)
  • Deputy Magistrate of Towns or Townships
  • Vice Chair of Township-level People's Congress
  • Vice Chair of Township-level People's Political Consultative Conference
11 23 to 24 Section member
(科员)
  • Staff subordinate to a section-head
  • Heads party organizations of township-level divisions
  • Staff subordinate to a section-head
  • Head of local departments of towns and townships, such as a town police chief of financial secretary
N/A 25 to 27 Ordinary Staff
  • Any unranked person
  • Village Party Branch Secretary
  • Any unranked person
  • Village chief

State Administration of Civil Service Edit

The State Administration of Civil Service was created in March 2008 by the National People's Congress. It is under the management of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, which resulted from the merger of the Ministry of Personnel and the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security. The function of the administration covers management, recruitment, assessment, training, rewards, supervision and other aspects related to civil service affairs. The administration also has several new functions. These include drawing up regulations on the trial periods of newly enrolled personnel, further protecting the legal rights of civil servants and having the responsibility of the registration of civil servants under central departments. Its establishment was part of the government's reshuffle in 2008. It aimed at a "super ministry" system to streamline government department functions.

Examinations Edit

For decades, civil service jobs have been among the top career choices for college graduates.[27]: 1  In 1993, the civil service examination and evaluation were established.[27]: 11  Generally, more than a million people enroll each year in the civil service examination and success rates are approximately 2%.[27]: 1 

An alternative route to civil service other than the examination is the assigned graduates system (xuandiaosheng, 选调生), which is available to student cadres who are at least probationary members of the Communist Party.[27]: 54–55  Through the assigned graduates system, new university graduates enter a program that sends them to grassroots positions like village leadership roles or local Communist Youth League secretaries for a few years.[27]: 54, 56  Candidates for the assigned graduates system take written and oral examinations arranged by the Communist Party's Organization Department at its local or provincial levels.[27]: 55  The examinations cover public service topics similar to those in the civil service examination, but are generally viewed as less competitive.[27]: 55 

Programs similar to the assigned graduate system began appearing in the 1980s but were formalized after 2000.[27]: 54 

Salary and allowances Edit

There are three main components of civil service pay according to the 2006 pay regulation by the State Council of the People's Republic of China, namely base pay (基本工资), cost-of-living allowances (津补贴), and bonus (奖金).[28]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "China's Civil Service Reform: An Update" (PDF). East Asian Institute at National University of Singapore. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference :02 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Ang, Yuen Yuen (September 2012). "Counting Cadres: A Comparative View of the Size of China's Public Employment". The China Quarterly. 211: 679. doi:10.1017/S0305741012000884. hdl:2027.42/111822. S2CID 15724765.
  4. ^ Burns, John P. (2007). "Civil Service Reform in China" (PDF). OECD Journal of Budgeting. 7 (1): 1–25. doi:10.1787/budget-v7-art3-en., p. 22.
  5. ^ Ang 2012, p. 679.
  6. ^ a b Burns 2007, p. 3.
  7. ^ Burns 2007, p. 5.
  8. ^ Keay, John (2009). China: A History. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02518-3. p. 128
  9. ^ a b Keay 2009, p. 129.
  10. ^ Keay 2009, pp. 227–28.
  11. ^ David Castrillon, "The abolition of the imperial examination system and the Xinhai revolution of 1911." Asia Pacificio, (2012) (2012).
  12. ^ Lee, Hong Yung (1990). ComFrom Revolutionary Cadres to Party Technocrats in Socialist China. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520303072. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  13. ^ Lee 1990, p. 48: "Despite the heavy reliance on military personnel, the CCP encountered a keen shortage of qualified personnel to fill 2.7 million positions when the People's Republic of China was founded. The problem was particularly serious at the local level."
  14. ^ Burns, John P. (September–October 1987). "Reforming China's Bureaucracy, 1979-82" (PDF). Problems of Communism. 36 (5): 36–51.
  15. ^ Burns 1987, p. 37.
  16. ^ Burns 1987, p. 46.
  17. ^ Burns 1987, p. 38.
  18. ^ Lam, Tao-chiu; Chan, Hon S. (August 1996). "Reforming China's Cadre Management System: Two Views of a Civil Service". Asian Survey. 36 (8): 772–786. doi:10.2307/2645438. JSTOR 2645438.
  19. ^ Lam & Chan 1996, pp. 772–73.
  20. ^ Lam & Chan 1996, p. 777.
  21. ^ Lam & Chan 1996, pp. 780–781.
  22. ^ Chan, Hon S.; Li, Edward Suizhou (2007). "Civil Service Law in the People's Republic of China: A Return to Cadre Personnel Management". Public Administration Review. 67 (3): 383–398. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6210.2007.00722.x. ISSN 0033-3352. JSTOR 4624581.
  23. ^ Doyon, Jérôme (2023). Rejuvenating Communism: Youth Organizations and Elite Renewal in Post-Mao China. University of Michigan Press. doi:10.3998/mpub.12291596. ISBN 978-0-472-90294-1.
  24. ^ a b "China's Attempt to Professionalize Its Civil Service" (PDF). East Asian Institute at National University of Singapore. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  25. ^ a b Ang, Yuen Yuen (2016). How China Escaped the Poverty Trap. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-0020-0. JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctt1zgwm1j.
  26. ^ . danjian.cn. Archived from the original on 2015-02-10.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h Doyon, Jérôme (2023). Rejuvenating Communism: Youth Organizations and Elite Renewal in Post-Mao China. University of Michigan Press. doi:10.3998/mpub.12291596. ISBN 978-0-472-90294-1.
  28. ^ Wu, Alfred M. (2014). Governing civil service pay in China (1st ed.). Retrieved January 23, 2015.

civil, service, people, republic, china, administrative, system, traditional, chinese, government, which, consists, levels, affairs, china, members, civil, service, selected, through, competitive, examination, contents, civil, servants, history, cadres, reform. The Civil Service of the People s Republic of China is the administrative system of the traditional Chinese government which consists of all levels who run the day to day affairs in China The members of the civil service are selected through competitive examination Contents 1 Civil servants 2 History 2 1 Mao era cadres 2 2 Reform 3 Levels and ranking system 4 State Administration of Civil Service 5 Examinations 6 Salary and allowances 7 See also 8 ReferencesCivil servants EditAs of 2009 China has about 10 million civil servants who are managed under the Civil Service Law 1 Most civil servants work in government agencies and departments State leaders and cabinet members who normally would be considered politicians in political systems with competing political parties and elections also come under the civil service in China Civil servants are not necessarily members of the Chinese Communist Party CCP but 95 percent of civil servants in leading positions from division county level and above are CCP members 1 The vast majority of civil servants remain in the service for their entire careers 2 3 The definition of civil servant Chinese 公务员 pinyin gōngwuyuan a term formally codified in the 2006 Civil Service Law is often ambiguous in China 3 Most broadly civil servants in China are a subset of CCP cadres the class of professional staff who administer and manage Chinese government party military and major business institutions 4 More specifically the term denotes public employees in higher positions of authority according to academic Yuen Yuen Ang they form the elite strata of functionaries in the party state hierarchy in contrast to shiye renyuan 事业人员 or shiye personnel who are also public employees but are not considered gongwuyuan 5 The definition of the civil service differs from that of many western countries Civil servants are the managers administrators and professionals who work for government bodies including leadership such as the Premier state councillors ministers and provincial governors among others 6 It excludes manual workers and many other types of cadre such as those employed in public service units such as hospitals universities or state owned enterprises even though those positions are also paid and managed by the government 6 While not strictly part of the civil service the judiciary is governed by the same personnel arrangements as the civil service 7 History EditA professional corps of dedicated bureaucrats akin to a modern civil service has been an integral feature of governance in Chinese civilization for much of its history Part of the motivation was ideological Confucian teaching discouraged overly involved warlike and rowdy rulers alike making the delegation of legislative and executive authority particularly necessary 8 During the Zhou dynasty c 1046 256 BC records show that kings would send edicts encouraging local officials to identify promising candidates for office in the capital 9 This practice was intensified under Emperor Wu of Han r 141 87 BC who standardized the selection process with the addition of question and answer elements on classic texts judged by a panel of scholars 9 This helped lay the groundwork for the Imperial examination system that would be formed under the short lived Sui dynasty before being widely adopted thereafter 10 The examination system and the bureaucracy it engendered would remain in place in some form until the dissolution of the Qing dynasty in 1911 11 Mao era cadres Edit The People s Republic of China did not initially maintain a formal civil service like other countries of the era 12 As the CCP gained ground in the Chinese Civil War against the Kuomintang KMT it instead used dedicated Party cadres to oversee and administer territories it took over The CCP at the time of its victory in 1949 faced a serious shortage of qualified personnel to the fill over 2 7 million public positions needed to govern the country that had previously been occupied by KMT affiliated officials some of whom the Party had to allow to continue to work due to lack of suitable replacements 13 By the mid 1950s China had developed a nomenklatura system modeled on the Soviet Union there was no civil service independent of the ruling party 14 Reform Edit Following the death of Mao Zedong and the rise of reformist Deng Xiaoping efforts began to change the cadre system after the discord of the Cultural Revolution so that the Party would be able to effectively carry out the modernization of China 15 Reforms beginning in 1984 did not decrease the approximately 8 1 million cadre positions 16 across China but began to decentralize their management to authorities at provincial and local levels 17 Zhao Ziyang elected General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party in 1987 sought to transform the cadre system into a more independent body resembling a civil service 18 The civil service not completely subservient to the CCP and thus reform the relationship between the Party and the Chinese state 19 In the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests Zhao and his allies lost their influence among Party elite and the civil service reform project was denounced by remaining leaders 20 Zhao s proposals were subsequently heavily modified and implemented as the Provisional Regulations on State Civil Servants in 1993 albeit on a much less comprehensive scale 21 Nevertheless the Provisional Regulations established the first formal civil service in China since the founding of the People s Republic 22 Since the early 2000s recruitment quotas for non Communist Party members gender and ethnic group have been institutionalized to increase representation of such groups in the civil service 23 147 Levels and ranking system EditThe current ranking system has 27 different ranks from previously of total 15 levels and a grade dangci system within each rank at most 14 grades for each rank to reflect seniority and performance a combination of rank and dangci ultimately determine pay and benefits 24 The highest tiers including department chiefs deputy department chiefs and section chiefs have significant involvement in policy making 25 147 Within local governments the highest level decision makers are typically the party secretary the state chief and party committee members 25 147 The 27 ranks are sub divisions of 11 levels 26 24 The following is a non exhaustive list of party and state positions corresponding to their civil service rank The list only comprises leadership positions lingdao ganbu but not civil servants who are not in leadership positions Non leading civil servants can be given high corresponding ranks For example an expert or advisor hired by the government on a long term initiative does not manage any people or lead any organization but may still receive a sub provincial rank Similarly retired officials who take on lesser ranked usually ceremonial positions after retirement would generally retain their highest rank Occasionally officials may hold a position but be of a higher rank than what the position indicates for example a Deputy Prefecture level Party Secretary who holds a full prefecture level rank Level Rank Level name Party positions Government positions1 1 to 3 National leader 国家级正职 General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Members of the Politburo Standing Committee Chairman of the Central Military Commission President of the People s Republic of China Premier of the State Council Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress Chairman of the Chinese People s Political Consultative Conference2 4 to 6 Sub national leader 国家级副职 Members of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party Secretary of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection Secretaries of the Secretariat of the Chinese Communist Party Vice President of the People s Republic of China Vice Premier of the State Council State Councilors Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission Vice Chair of the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress Vice Chair of the Chinese People s Political Consultative Conference President of the Supreme People s Court President of the Supreme People s Procuratorate3 7 to 8 Provincial Ministerial level 省部级正职 Secretary of Party Committees of Provinces Autonomous Regions Direct controlled Municipalities Deputy Secretary of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection Leaders of bodies reporting directly to the Central Committee such as the General Office the International Liaison Office United Front Work Department Organization Department Propaganda Department Politics and Law Commission Central Party School First Secretary of the Communist Youth League Party Branch Secretary of national civic organizations such as the All China Federation of Trade Unions Chiefs of the General Offices that serve a Central Leading Group Provincial Governor Mayor of a direct controlled Municipality Chairman of an Autonomous Region Ministers of the State Council Commissioners or Directors of agencies that directly report to the State Council such as the National Development and Reform Commission Chair of a Provincial level People s Congress Chair of a Provincial level People s Political Consultative Conference General Managers of key state owned enterprises deemed to be ministerial level Chair of national civic organizations such as the All China Federation of Trade Unions All China Women s Federation etc 4 9 to 10 Sub Provincial Sub Ministerial level 省部级副职 Deputy Secretary of Party Committees of Provinces Autonomous Regions Direct controlled Municipalities Standing Committee Members of provincial level Party Committees Secretary of Party Committees of Sub provincial cities Deputy leaders of bodies reporting directly to the Central Committee such as the General Office International Liaison United Front Organization Propaganda Politics Law Central Party School The chairman secretary of the party committee party group and general manager of central enterprises such as State Grid Corporation of China Party Secretary of key universities such as Peking University Deputy Governor Autonomous Region Chairman Mayor Deputy Ministers of the State Council Deputy Commissioners or Directors of agencies that directly report to the State Council Vice Chair of a Provincial level People s Congress Vice Chair of a Provincial level People s Political Consultative Conference President of key universities such as Tsinghua University5 11 to 12 Bureau Director level 厅局级正职 Party Secretary of Prefecture level cities and divisions Deputy Party Secretary of Sub provincial cities Standing Committee members of Sub provincial cities Heads of provincial party organizations Organization Propaganda United Front etc Party Secretary of provincially run universities such as Hubei University Mayor of Prefecture level cities Vice Mayor of Sub provincial cities Directors ministers of provincial departments Chairs of provincial civil organizations Unions Women s Federation etc Directors of departments of national level ministries Chair of Prefecture level People s Congress Chair of Prefecture level People s Political Consultative Conference President of provincially run universities such as Shanxi University6 13 to 14 Deputy Bureau Director level 厅局级副职 Deputy Party Secretary of Prefecture level cities and divisions Standing Committee members of Party Committees of Prefecture level cities Deputy heads of provincial party organizations Organization Propaganda United Front etc Vice Mayor of Prefecture level cities Vice Chair of Prefecture level People s Congress Vice Chair of Prefecture level People s Political Consultative Conference Deputy Chairs of provincial civil organizations Unions Women s Federation etc Deputy directors ministers of provincial departments7 15 to 16 Division Head level 县处级正职 Party Secretary of Counties or County level cities Party Secretary of Districts of Prefecture level cities Heads of prefecture level party organizations Organization Propaganda United Front etc County Governors Governor of Districts of Prefecture level cities Mayor of County level cities Chair of County level People s Congress Chair of County level People s Political Consultative Conference Heads of sub divisions of a provincial department8 17 to 18 Deputy Division Head level 县处级副职 Deputy Party Secretary of Counties or County level cities Deputy Party Secretary of Districts of Prefecture level cities Standing Committee members of County level Party Committees Deputy County Governors Vice Mayor of County level cities Vice Chair of County level People s Congress Vice Chair of County level People s Political Consultative Conference9 19 to 20 Section Head level 乡科级正职 Party Secretary of Towns or Townships Heads of county level party organizations Organization Propaganda United Front etc Magistrate of Townships Mayor of Towns Chair of Township level People s Congress Chair of Township level People s Political Consultative Conference Heads of sub divisions of a prefecture level department10 21 to 22 Deputy Section Head level 乡科级副职 Deputy Party Secretary or Standing Committee member of Towns or Townships Deputy heads of county level party organizations Organization Propaganda United Front etc Deputy Magistrate of Towns or Townships Vice Chair of Township level People s Congress Vice Chair of Township level People s Political Consultative Conference11 23 to 24 Section member 科员 Staff subordinate to a section head Heads party organizations of township level divisions Staff subordinate to a section head Head of local departments of towns and townships such as a town police chief of financial secretaryN A 25 to 27 Ordinary Staff Any unranked person Village Party Branch Secretary Any unranked person Village chiefState Administration of Civil Service EditThe State Administration of Civil Service was created in March 2008 by the National People s Congress It is under the management of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security which resulted from the merger of the Ministry of Personnel and the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security The function of the administration covers management recruitment assessment training rewards supervision and other aspects related to civil service affairs The administration also has several new functions These include drawing up regulations on the trial periods of newly enrolled personnel further protecting the legal rights of civil servants and having the responsibility of the registration of civil servants under central departments Its establishment was part of the government s reshuffle in 2008 It aimed at a super ministry system to streamline government department functions Examinations EditFor decades civil service jobs have been among the top career choices for college graduates 27 1 In 1993 the civil service examination and evaluation were established 27 11 Generally more than a million people enroll each year in the civil service examination and success rates are approximately 2 27 1 An alternative route to civil service other than the examination is the assigned graduates system xuandiaosheng 选调生 which is available to student cadres who are at least probationary members of the Communist Party 27 54 55 Through the assigned graduates system new university graduates enter a program that sends them to grassroots positions like village leadership roles or local Communist Youth League secretaries for a few years 27 54 56 Candidates for the assigned graduates system take written and oral examinations arranged by the Communist Party s Organization Department at its local or provincial levels 27 55 The examinations cover public service topics similar to those in the civil service examination but are generally viewed as less competitive 27 55 Programs similar to the assigned graduate system began appearing in the 1980s but were formalized after 2000 27 54 Salary and allowances EditThere are three main components of civil service pay according to the 2006 pay regulation by the State Council of the People s Republic of China namely base pay 基本工资 cost of living allowances 津补贴 and bonus 奖金 28 See also Edit nbsp China portalPolitics of China Cadre system of the Chinese Communist Party Orders of precedence in the People s Republic of China Administrative divisions of China Chinese Academy of Governance Chinese Public Administration Society Examination Yuan the Republican era equivalent now operates on Taiwan since 1949 References Edit a b China s Civil Service Reform An Update PDF East Asian Institute at National University of Singapore Retrieved October 24 2017 Cite error The named reference 02 was invoked but never defined see the help page Ang Yuen Yuen September 2012 Counting Cadres A Comparative View of the Size of China s Public Employment The China Quarterly 211 679 doi 10 1017 S0305741012000884 hdl 2027 42 111822 S2CID 15724765 Burns John P 2007 Civil Service Reform in China PDF OECD Journal of Budgeting 7 1 1 25 doi 10 1787 budget v7 art3 en p 22 Ang 2012 p 679 a b Burns 2007 p 3 Burns 2007 p 5 Keay John 2009 China A History New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02518 3 p 128 a b Keay 2009 p 129 Keay 2009 pp 227 28 David Castrillon The abolition of the imperial examination system and the Xinhai revolution of 1911 Asia Pacificio 2012 Online 2012 Lee Hong Yung 1990 ComFrom Revolutionary Cadres to Party Technocrats in Socialist China University of California Press ISBN 9780520303072 Retrieved 21 March 2020 Lee 1990 p 48 Despite the heavy reliance on military personnel the CCP encountered a keen shortage of qualified personnel to fill 2 7 million positions when the People s Republic of China was founded The problem was particularly serious at the local level Burns John P September October 1987 Reforming China s Bureaucracy 1979 82 PDF Problems of Communism 36 5 36 51 Burns 1987 p 37 Burns 1987 p 46 Burns 1987 p 38 Lam Tao chiu Chan Hon S August 1996 Reforming China s Cadre Management System Two Views of a Civil Service Asian Survey 36 8 772 786 doi 10 2307 2645438 JSTOR 2645438 Lam amp Chan 1996 pp 772 73 Lam amp Chan 1996 p 777 Lam amp Chan 1996 pp 780 781 Chan Hon S Li Edward Suizhou 2007 Civil Service Law in the People s Republic of China A Return to Cadre Personnel Management Public Administration Review 67 3 383 398 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6210 2007 00722 x ISSN 0033 3352 JSTOR 4624581 Doyon Jerome 2023 Rejuvenating Communism Youth Organizations and Elite Renewal in Post Mao China University of Michigan Press doi 10 3998 mpub 12291596 ISBN 978 0 472 90294 1 a b China s Attempt to Professionalize Its Civil Service PDF East Asian Institute at National University of Singapore Retrieved October 24 2017 a b Ang Yuen Yuen 2016 How China Escaped the Poverty Trap Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 5017 0020 0 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctt1zgwm1j 中国正部级干部有多少 正部 副部级待遇揭秘 danjian cn Archived from the original on 2015 02 10 a b c d e f g h Doyon Jerome 2023 Rejuvenating Communism Youth Organizations and Elite Renewal in Post Mao China University of Michigan Press doi 10 3998 mpub 12291596 ISBN 978 0 472 90294 1 Wu Alfred M 2014 Governing civil service pay in China 1st ed Retrieved January 23 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Civil Service of the People 27s Republic of China amp oldid 1170000836, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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