Employment Personnel of Urban
Households
refer to the persons who are engaged in social labour and receive payment or earn business income,
including the staff and workers in the state-owned, the staff and workers in
collective-owned, other employed, employed persons individual business, etc. No
matter he is permanent or temporary.
Total Income of Urban Households
refers to the total income of all the members of the sample
households, including wage, income from business, income from property,
transfer income, excluding proceeds from sales of belongings and credit income.
It is calculated on real income, no matter the income is supplied again or
beforehand. Accounting for the greater impact on small-sample-sized cities and
counties, large revenue-sharing can be credited, but the number of assessments
should be minimized and shared before the end of year.
Disposable Income of Urban
Households
refers to the disposable income of the sample households,
including those which can be used for final expenditure and other
non-obligation expenditure and savings. It refers to the difference of total
income minus income tax, expenditure for social security and subsidies of
account. The following formula is used :
Disposable Income of Urban
Households = Total Income - Income Tax - Expenditure for Social Security -
Survey Subsidies
Wages and Salaries of Urban
Households refer to all labour
compensation from working units, including the wage of major career and the
subsidies from the second career and other job.
Net Business Income of Urban
Households refer to net income earned by
household members from production and management activities, which equals total
income from production and management activities minus cost and taxes.
Property Income of Urban
Households refer to income from movables
(savings, securities) and non-movables (houses, vehicle, land, collection,
etc.), including interest income dividends and bonuses, income from leasing
houses and intellectual property income, etc.
Transferred Income of Urban
Households refer to income transferred from
state, unit, social organization to households or between different households,
including income, parental support, boarding fees paid by relatives and friends
and housing accumulation funds, etc.
Consumption Expenditures of
Urban Households
refer to total expenditures of the sample households in daily
life. It is classified into 8 categories: food, clothing, household facilities
and articles service, medicine and medical service, transportation and communication,
recreation, education and culture service, residence, miscellaneous commodities
services, including commodities and service as gift.
Service Consumption Expenditures
of Urban Households
refers to total non-commodity expenditures of the sample households
for consumption in culture and life, including service expenditure paid for
other persons. Service expenditure is different from commodity expenditure,
with the character of uniform of labour process and
consumes process in time and space.
Service Expenditure for
Consumption of Urban Households = Food Processing Service Fees + Dining Out
Fees �� 50% + Tailoring and Laundering Service Fees + Household
Services Expenditures + Medical Services Expenditures + Transportation Tools
Service Fees + Transportation Expenditures + Communications Service
Expenditures + Cultural and Recreation Service Expenditures + Education
Expenditures + Rent + Room Decorations Expenditures ��
40% + Residence Service Expenditures + Other Service Expenditures
Rural Permanent Population
refers to population staying at home permanently or for over 6
months during a year and sharing life economically with the household. Members
of the household staying away from the household for over 6 months but keeping
a close economic life with the household by sending the majority of income to
the household are regarded as resident population of the household. Government
staff and workers or retirees living as close members of the household are also
considered as resident population. However, servicemen, students of secondary
technical schools or schools of higher education and persons with stable jobs
and residence outside the household (excluding those visiting relatives or
seeking medical service) are not included as resident population of the
household.
Full/Semi Labour
Force of Rural Households
Full
labour force refers to persons capable of work, aged
18-50 for males and 18-45 for females. Semi labour
force refers to persons capable of work, aged 16-17 and 51-60 for males and
16-17 and 46-55 for females. Persons at their working ages but not capable of
work are not to be included as labour force. Persons
not at working ages but participating regularly in work are included in semi labour force. For staff and workers who are usual
residents, are included as full or semi labour force
of the household if they are in the labour force.
Net Income of Rural Residents
refers
to the total income of the rural households after the deduction of the expenses
for the various cost, which can then be spent for investment in reproduction,
expenditure for living consumption, saving, non-productive construction. The
formula for calculating is as follows:
Net Income of Rural Households =
Total Income - Expenses for Productive Operation - Taxes - Depreciation of
Fixed Assets for Production - Gifts to Relatives
Rewards of Labours
of Rural Residents
refers to income from labour earned by members of
rural households employed by other units or individuals. It includes:
1.
Income by members of rural households employed by administration business units
and social organizations, including wages (Cash awards and subsidy) of village
staff and teachers in schools run by the local people, ages (Cash awards and
subsidy) of staff employed by administration business units at township and
higher level.
2.
Income earned at local region income from labour
earned by members of rural households employed by other units or individuals at
local township.
3.
Income of permanent residence outside the household income from labour earned by members of rural households employed by
other units or individuals at outside local region.
Income from Family Business of
Rural Households refers to income obtained from
family productive operation. Family productive operation cover farming,
forestry, animal husbandry, fishery, industry, construction, transport, post,
telecommunication, wholesale and retail trade, catering, social services,
culture, education, health care and other household operation.
Property Income of Rural
Residents refers
to the income received as returns by owners of financial assets or tangible
non-productive assets by providing capital or tangible non-productive assets to
other institutional units. It includes interest income, bonus stock income,
rent income, compensatory income of collected land.
Transferred Income of Rural
Residents refers
to the receipt by rural households and their members of goods, services,
capitals or rights of assets without giving or repaying accordingly, excluding capitals
provided to them for the formation of fixed assets. In general, it refers to
all income received by rural household through redistribution. It includes
income receipt by non-permanent residents, gifts of urban & rural
relatives.
Living Expenditure of Rural
Residents
is
use on material life and cultural life by rural households, including food
expenditure, clothing expenditure, residence, household facilities, articles
and services, medicines and medical services, transportation and
communications, cultural, education and recreation articles and services, other
commodity and services.
Engel��s Coefficient
refers to the percentage of expenditure on food in the total
consumption expenditure, using the following formula:
Engel's Coefficient = |
expenditure on food |
��100% |
total consumption expenditure |