Civil service grades of China: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "The '''civil service grades of China''' determine the salaries received by both civil and military public servants. The scale has 25 grades in total. ==Relationship with appointment== Chinese law establishes four kinds of appointment procedures: *Special appointment (特任), only for elected or ministerial officials whose tenures are not guaranteed. *Direct appointment (簡任), selected with approval of the central or central and provincial cabinet. *Recommended appoi...")
 
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==Relationship with testing==
==Relationship with testing==
China maintains a rigorous system of examinations that grades public service candidates according to their aptitude for office at certain grades. The ''Examination Act'' classifies civil service examinations as follows:
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Civil examination tiers
|-
! Exam level !! Eligibility !! Education qualification
|-
| Higher Exam I || C8 || Higher Exam II qualified
|-
| Higher Exam II || A10 || Doctorate or Master's degree or equivalent experience
|-
| Higher Exam III || A13 || Bachelor's degree or equivalent experience
|-
| Standard Exam || D13 || Senior high school or equivalent experience
|-
| Basic Exam || D18 || N/A
|}


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Republic of China]]
*[[Republic of China]]

Revision as of 13:48, 25 August 2024

The civil service grades of China determine the salaries received by both civil and military public servants. The scale has 25 grades in total.

Relationship with appointment

Chinese law establishes four kinds of appointment procedures:

  • Special appointment (特任), only for elected or ministerial officials whose tenures are not guaranteed.
  • Direct appointment (簡任), selected with approval of the central or central and provincial cabinet.
  • Recommended appointment (薦任), appointed at the recommendation of the head of agency.
  • Devolved appointment (委任), appointed by head of agency.

The rationale for separate appointment procedures is to ensure that roles demanding policy development and interpretation abilities will be filled at a higher level where such abilities are more visible and relevant. These roles often but do not always co-incide with seniority in management or supervision. Additionally, if all positions are controlled from above, lower-ranking executives may face difficulty with stagnant staffing options.

Appointment vs grade
Grade Possible appointments Position Salary pts Military rank
1 Special Cabinet Cabinet Secretary 800
2 Ordinary Deputy Secretary 600
3 Divisional Secretary 480 General
4 Approval Director-general (C); Chief Statistician (A) 420 Lieutenant-general
5 Deputy Divisional Secretary (C), Senior inspector (A) 360 Major-general
6 Policy Advisor (C) 320 Brigadier-general
7 Discretion Special Commissioner (C), County Secretary (D) 290 Colonel
8 Secretary (C) 260 Lieutenant-colonel
9 Office Chief (A) 230 Major
10 Secretary (A) 210 Captain
11 Deputy Office Chief (A) 190 Lieutenant
12 Senior supervisor (A) 170 Ensign
13 Supervisor (A) 150 Warrant Officer I
14 Senior specialist (A) 130 Warrant Officer II
15 Specialist (A), Secretary (D) 115 Warrant Officer III
16 Recording officer-in-charge 100 Sergeant-major I
17 Senior recording officer 90 Sergeant-major II
18 Recording officer 80 Sergeant-major III
19 Temporary Tenure-based 72 N/A
20 64
21 56
22 50
23 45
24 42
25 40

Relationship with testing

China maintains a rigorous system of examinations that grades public service candidates according to their aptitude for office at certain grades. The Examination Act classifies civil service examinations as follows:

Civil examination tiers
Exam level Eligibility Education qualification
Higher Exam I C8 Higher Exam II qualified
Higher Exam II A10 Doctorate or Master's degree or equivalent experience
Higher Exam III A13 Bachelor's degree or equivalent experience
Standard Exam D13 Senior high school or equivalent experience
Basic Exam D18 N/A

See also