A new compilation of social data by National Bureau of Statistics of China places 2024 at the forefront of China, with a figure of 67 (Value) for 2026. The reading is the highest across the province's 30 regencies and cities, and stands in stark contrast to 1978, which posts the bottom value at 17.92 (Value). The disparity points to deep-seated structural differences in how the indicator unfolds locally.
Taken together, the highest and lowest readings differ by 49.08, equivalent to a 3.7-fold gap. The variation, which observers consider meaningful, illustrates the degree to which social hinges on factors ranging from urban density and infrastructure to historical access to public services.
Aggregating across the 30 regions yields an average of 47.38 per district and a combined total of 1.42K for 2026, offering a baseline against which individual readings can be compared. By that measure, 2024's reading is roughly 41.4% above the provincial mean, while 1978 sits about 62.2% below it.
Beyond the 2026 headline figures, the data take on additional weight when viewed against China's broader development indicators. Regional disparities in social of this magnitude are far from unique to China: similar patterns recur across several provinces, where urban centres consistently outperform rural and remote districts. The challenge for policymakers is to translate the diagnostic value of these readings into targeted programmes capable of nudging the laggards closer to the leading districts over time.
The figures are compiled by National Bureau of Statistics of China as part of its routine reporting on social and economic indicators at the subnational level. The dataset for China covers all 30 of the province's regencies and cities, with values referenced to the 2026 reporting year.
Looking ahead, the 2026 readings establish a clear baseline for tracking how social evolves in China over the coming years. Closing the gap between the leading and trailing districts is widely seen as one of the more pressing tasks for both provincial authorities and the national agencies that allocate resources across China's subnational units.
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China · 2026-06-19T21:06:18.131Z