China is grasping its last chance to educate people to ensure
the accuracy of figures collected during the First National
Economic Census.
Domestic media, including newspapers and television, have all
increased coverage of census-related stories over the last month,
as the day for the formal registration of the census December 31
draws near.
"We want to make December the high tide of our publicity," said
Li Deshui, commissioner of the National Bureau of
Statistics.
Worries of the surveyed need to be removed, while mistakes by
some local statistics departments need to be corrected, said Li,
who is also deputy head of the Leading Group of the State Council
for the First National Economic Census.
"This is vital to the economic census, which is designed to draw
an economic panorama of China's manufacturing, building and service
industries, and complete a database covering all economic sectors,"
he said in an exclusive interview with China Daily.
The government has arranged about 10 million census takers and
billions of yuan, Li said.
The census is expected to involve more than 35 million companies
and institutions with or without legal status, or more than 85
percent of the country's total economic volume.
Government departments, social organizations, companies and
individual company owners will be required to tell census workers
not only their business type, the number of the employees and their
financial status, but also their business situation, production
capacity, the amount of raw materials and energy consumed, and
their scientific activities.
"The census is a big issue in China's economic and social life,"
Li said.
It plays an important role in outlining future strategy and
policies for economic and social development, adjusting and
optimizing the economic structure, as well as beefing up and
improving China's macro-controls, he said.
The government is currently drawing up the 11th Five-Year
(2006-10) plan for the country's economic and social
development.
The results of the economic census can be applied to the plan
immediately, Li said.
For local governments, the census is helpful for them to
understand the basic situations of their respective areas. It will
help them better fine-tune the local economy and beef up market
supervision, social management and public services.
The census also benefits those who are surveyed, Li said.
Companies and other business organizations can take advantage of
the census results to analyze the market and to improve their
business management.
The Statistics Division of the United Nations said last week
conducting an economic census in a country with a population of 1.3
billion is of great significance both to China and to the
world.
The high growth of the Chinese economy over the past 2 decades
has attracted worldwide attention, it said.
"China has emerged as an important economic and trade partner in
Asia and the world. Information collected through the economic
census on the size, structure and efficiency of the economy will
not only meet the needs of the Chinese Government and businesses in
preparing development strategies and investment decisions, but will
also help countries in Asia and in the world understand the Chinese
economy better," it said.
The United Nations Statistics Division is ready to assist
China's census by sharing international experiences and best
practices in the conduct of large-scale censuses, it said.
Li said the central government has paid special attention to the
issue.
Premier Wen Jiabao presided at an executive meeting of the State
Council in November last year, specially studying and deploying the
work of the economic census, he said.
After the meeting, the Leading Group of the State Council for
the First National Economic Census, headed by Vice-Premier Zeng
Peiyan, was established.
In September this year, Premier Wen issued the National Economic
Census Regulation, which provides a law and system guarantee for
the census work.
Preparation work for the census has so far gone smoothly, with
all the provincial, prefectural and county governments establishing
their census offices and leading groups, Li said.
The offices of the leading group of the census and the National
Bureau of Statistics have finished designing the census scheme and
the software for the census data processing.
Selection and training of the census takers have also been
finished.
Li said most of the companies and organizations being surveyed,
especially foreign-funded companies, are cooperative.
However, an inspection by the leading group in October and
November found that problems also exist.
A small group of companies, especially small and medium-sized
companies and individual company owners, refused to cooperate with
census takers, because they worry their company secrets may be
disclosed.
Some local statistics departments also try to artificially
change the census figures collected at the preliminary
registration, so the figures are in line with their annual reports
published earlier.
"If companies report false figures, and the statistics
departments artificially change the figures, how can we ensure the
accuracy of the census?" he said.
He pledged the figures collected during the census would be kept
strictly secret and that no other government departments would be
allowed to punish anyone by using the data as evidence.
"Anyone who discloses the figures to other departments will be
considered having broken the law and be punished," Li said.
According to the National Economic Census Regulation, government
departments, social organizations, enterprises and individual
company owners are obligated to provide correct information to the
authorities.
The government will punish those who refuse to accept the census
or provide false figures, he said. "Some of them will be publicly
criticized through the media."
They may also be fined up to 50,000 yuan (US$6,024).
Earlier in December, the National Bureau of Statistics announced
a list of 30 government departments, institutions and enterprises
who violated the country's statistics law by refusing to provide
data or by giving false figures.
At the top of the list is the Veteran Cadre Bureau of the
Commission for Supervision and Management of State-owned Properties
of the State Council, which repeatedly declined to cooperate with
the census personnel even though the act was publicized by China
Central Television.
The leading group of the census and the National Bureau of
Statistics will also punish local statistics departments, which
artificially change the figures collected during the census, Li
said.
"Directors of local statistics departments, who are found making
such mistakes, will be criticized or even be removed from their
posts," he said.
Li Qiang, chief statistician of the National Bureau of
Statistics, said the top priority of the current census was to
ensure the government would get accurate, timely and comprehensive
figures.
(China Daily December 20, 2004)