Interpreting the eight issues of the G20 summit
Wild golden monkeys live at Qinling Mountains in NW China
President Xi visits four central Asian nations and attend G20, SCO summits
Tibetan ethnic costumes presented during tourism festival in NW China
Update the China-ASEAN relationship
Summer jobs: A or B
Vintage cars exhibited at auto cultural festival in China's Shanxi
Reading by the tongue
Those embarrassing copycat buildings
BEIJING, Aug. 29 -- Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli on Thursday said the third national economic census is a key survey on the country's conditions and power as China is advancing toward completing the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects.
The economic census should provide basic information to cope with risks and challenges and promote continuous and healthy economic growth, Zhang said.
Accurate data should be the soul of statistics and data quality is the lifeblood of economic census, Zhang said.
The census data must be real, complete, reliable and solid, but should not be inflated or even false, Zhang said.
The target of the census lies in its application and the census data should be analyzed in a comprehensive way to pinpoint development trends and provide guidance for macro-economic policies, Zhang said.
China launched its third economic census in 2013 and during the year-long census, statisticians will collect data related to enterprise ownership, financial status, production capacity and research and development activities.
Weekly selection of world photos (Aug.19-Aug.24)
Army aviation brigade in actual-troop drill
Top 10 Chinese provinces for the well-heeled
Fan Bingbing poses for Malaysian magazine Citta Bella
Wild dream: Hell-like training for bodyguard
Zhang Xinyi covers COSMOPOLITAN
The story of a savior sibling
China’s weekly story
A collection of bizarre rooftop buildings around China
100th birthday of 'Little Mermaid'
China, U.S. conduct joint anti-piracy drill
Adorable! Marmots get along well with herdsmen
2013 Taiwan Int'l Tourism Expo kicks off in Taipei
Photo story: Take a gap year
Nokia's Global Headquarters: visiting a declining empireDay|Week|Month