- Category:Economy of mainland China (edit|talk|history|links|watch|logs) (restore|CfD (March 2006)|CfD (June 2005))
Useful and neccessary category for articles related to the economy of mainland China (more commonly known simply as "China"). "Mainland China" is the official terminology to refer to the People's Republic of China excluding Hong Kong and Macau, which remain separate economies. There are topics related and relevant to mainland China. This category was voted to be kept in June 2005, but was emptied some time before the March 2006 CfD. It was deleted when a user "ignored all rules" and decided not to follow CfD procedures. - Privacy 19:21, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
- Keep deleted It was deleted, rightfully, after extensive discussion, because it is a POV re-structuring of Category:Economy of the People's Republic of China. "mainland" is the adjective used to differentiate the PRC (the current government of China since 1949) from the ROC (the exile government on Taiwan from the 60 year old civil war). By argument, any "Chinese" article could be scoped to be "mainland". The usage to "exclude Hong Kong and Macau" is a red herring. We do not title articles and categories on parent countries because of administrative divisions that keep separate statistics. Hence, no "Economy of the Continental United States excluding Guam and Puerto Rico" nor "Economy of metropolitan France" nor "mainland Finland" etc etc etc. SchmuckyTheCat 19:37, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
- I do not agree it was deleted rightfully after "extensive discussion". It is not a POV (point of view?) re-structuring. "Exclude Hong Kong and Macau" is not red herring - it is official usage even by the People's Republic itself. Nor do I agree Continental United States and Metropolitan France are comparable to Mainland China. Guam and Puerto Rico are not part of the U.S. while French Guiana, Reunion and so on are integral part of France. - Privacy 19:42, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
- It was left intact for a year after a CfD. Then discussed for a week, than a closing admin left it open for a week specifically to get more discussion. That's extensive. SchmuckyTheCat 23:42, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn. "Mainland China" is the only accurate and precise term to refer to that part of China. It is not truly correct to simply call that part of China "China" or "People's Republic of China". This is particularly true in the case of economy which Hong Kong and Macau are considered to be foreign (to mainland China). It would be ridiculous if there isn't a subcategory specifically for the economy of mainland China. Without a mainland China economy category, it is not easy for readers to understand why articles right under Category:Economy of People's Republic of China would say investment from Hong Kong is foreign investment, and trade with Macau is counted towards international trade. It is much easier to understand when such articles are kept under a category specifically for mainland China. Michael G. Davis 22:41, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
- Keep deleted, especially when the primary reasons to delete it after extensive discussions remain valid. Both Michael G. Davis and Privacy are not independent contributors, and have known to take a strong political viewpoint over the political status of the SARS of HK vis-a-vis the rest of China (informally referred to as Mainland China). Their continued promotion of the later term is politically motivated, is not NPOV, and is not "more accurate", just as User:Instantnood has done and continued to do so, resulting in three arbcoms. It is obvious that subject matter related to the concepts of "China", "Mainland China", the "PRC", "ROC" and "Taiwan" should be reviewed with care, which the above users consistently fail to.--Huaiwei 02:02, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
- The term "Mainland China" is official and is used formally. The government of the People's Republic of China itself uses it (either 内地 or 大陆 in Chinese; immediately verifiable by looking into gov.cn websites or the government-sponsored newspapers and wires). Non-Chinese English language press also uses it. It is because of political motivation that Huaiwei and Schmucky deny it's official and formal. They confuse readers on whether Hong Kong and Macau are part of the People's Republic of China, such as calling Hong Kong banks foreign in the People's Republic of China. (Hong Kong banks are indeed foreign in mainland China, but not in the People's Republic of China.)
- What SARS are you talking about? The SARS of HK vis-a-vis the rest of China? Two types of SARS? The Hong Kong type of SARS vis-a-vis the type of SARS in the rest of China? How far do you think Hong Kong is away from the rest of the People's Republic of China? - Privacy 07:01, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn as explained upon DRV request. - Privacy 07:01, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
- Keep deleted, or else relist at CFD without restoration (i.e., defaulting to 'delete'), until such time as there's an evident consensus to scope the-entity-formerly-known-as-the-People's-Republic-of-China as a discrete concept for categorisation purposes, and to describe it as "mainland China" in such contexts. Absent such consensus, we seem to get total inconsistency in categorisation, edit wars, and arbcom cases. This seems to be especially evident in the stub categories, where any time there's an attempt to make things consistent with the rest of the category structure, several otherwise at-most-sporadically-active editors turn up en bloc, 'vote' "keep mainland China, no matter what", and then lurk off again. Their activity during Instantnood's supposed "absence" from Wikipedia seems especially striking. "Lack of consensus to make things consistent" is not a good argument for inconsistency, and in particular, for keeping the categories causing said inconsistencies. Alai 03:06, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn. Alai doesn't seem to understand that "People's Republic of China" and "Mainland China" are not the same thing. The two terms mean something different from each other. Encyclopedic materials should be able to reflect their differences. Neither should be used in place of the another. Passer-by (talk) 15:00, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
- POLLY WANT A CRACKER
- I think I understand the distinction just fine, thanks, and I think it's in fact fairly clear I'm not suggesting using one "in place of" the other. What I'm concerned with is whether "mainland China" is sufficiently encyclopaedic scoping and naming at all, since it a) is precisely (or de facto precisely, at least) what used to be the People's Republic of China, which so far as I know wasn't formally renamed in 1997, b) doesn't appear to be a subdivision of the present PRC (but rather, 31 such subdivisions of various types other than SAR), and c) doesn't appear to be a formal designation used by the PRC for that area, but rather an occasional descriptor used in contradistinction to said SARs. As I've said, I have no objection to such categories if they're to be used on a consistent basis, and if there's a consensus for them to exist on such a basis (and if that happens only because the PRC^W^W MC is daft enough to filter wikipedia so that their editors don't turn up to tout the party line, then more fool them), but not if they're going to exist in a limbo of mutual inconsistency, and neither-consensus-to-delete-nor-consensus-to-keep, which appears to be the state of play at present. (Thank you for (mostly) fixing your sig, btw.) Alai 02:41, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn This is not supposed to be a POV issue. There is very little, if any, dispute about following statement
HK is politically part of the PRC
The economy of HK is separate from the economy of Mainland, de jure as well as de facto
HK has its own currency, its own monetary policy, custom, court of final appeal, etc
Even supporters of Taiwanese independence (a separate issue) would agree with the above bullet points. Huaiwei repeatedly try to make HK and Macau to look like integral part of the PRC, such as this edit. He/she is trying to make a non-POV issue POV. The term "Mainland China" is only controversial in the context of Taiwan, ROC v.s. PRC. "Mainland China" is not controversial in the context of Hong Kong. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 01:37, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
- If I and I alone was somehow able to turn a non-POV issue into one, then mind explaining if the current status quo was a result of my efforts alone? To say the term "Mainland China" is non conroversial with regards to the SARS is itself a POV, and that is not to say I do not have a POV of my own as well. Treating the SARs separate from the rest of China, and listing them as separate entities is not a non-contested issue, especially when one tries to promote the term "Mainland China" just to emphasize political differences. And may I point out that HK does not have a central bank, and has never officially designated any entity as one, hence the edit you cite above. HK may enjoy high autonomy in running its economic system, but it is not separate to the point of being equated with that of an independent state's economic system. The Central government can, and does, exert its influence on the HK economic system, including removing its autonomous status altogether.--Huaiwei 02:16, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
- Just because the previous decision was to delete doesn't mean it should stay deleted forever, otherwise we wouldn't ave this system of deletion review. Hong Kong is a separate economy from the Mainland, and it's hardly contested. If you say you're contesting it, then let me ask you, under what condition would you justify an "Economy of xyz" category created on Wikipedia? And year, Pakistan and Canada and form a political union and an integral economy. But until then, Category:Economy of Pakistan and Category:Economy of Canada should remain. If you want to put Economy of Hong Kong under Economy of the People's Republic of China, that's fine, but economy of mainland China is a real and meaningful entity. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 07:13, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
- The political situation of Hong Kong has nothing to do with the name of the People's Republic of China. There is no economy called "mainland China" except when it is useful for the PRC to distict itself with it's own constituent parts. SchmuckyTheCat 02:21, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
- Spam Readers of this debate may be interested in participating in this discussion. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ideogram (talk • contribs)
Overturn Changed to abstain. Nominator's statement about its history seems to be correct. Back in the days when I was more involved with CfD, it always bothered me when a category had been suddenly emptied, and I usually voted "keep" when that happened. That seems to have been the case with last year's CfD. — Sebastian 08:13, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
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- It was emptied, properly, as a POV fork of Category:Economy of the People's Republic of China. SchmuckyTheCat 22:41, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
- That's not what I remembererd from 2 years ago, when we had a similar discussion. However, I'm so taken aback by this weird contribution that I prefer to abstain from this vote. — Sebastian 22:59, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn and list at CfD - The resolution of this deletion review requires review of the 13 March 2006 CfD, the 25 November 2006 speedy deletion, and the 12 March 2007 speedy deletion. (i) The 22:30 13 March 2006 close by Syrthiss was improper. Although Syrthiss wrote "The result of the debate was delete."[1] Syrthiss also commented that he/she viewed the results as "no consensus" and listed two proposal position for which Syrthiss solicited input as part of that 13 March 2006 CfD. Given the edit war going on over the use of "mainland" vs. "People's Republic of China" for China (which apparently still is going on a year later), this seemed a reasonable mediation attempt. However, since more CfD discussion was solicited, the 13 March 2006 debate was not properly closed. (Another reason that the 13 March 2006 debate was not properly closed is that closer stated that he/she viewed the results as "no consensus" and yet closed the debate with "delete" consensus. -- Jreferee 05:34, 18 March 2007 (UTC)) Instantnood subsequently modified the 13 March 2006 CfD postings a year ago (which I just reverted).[2] (ii) The 25 November 2006 WP:CSD#C1 speedy deletion[3] was improper since the category had contain significant content. (iii) The 12 March 2007 speedy deletion[4] asserted recreation of deleted material. However, since the 13 March 2006 close was improper, the original material was not deleted as the result of a CfD debate. To resolve all this confusion, the 12 March 2007 speedy deletion should be overturn and the Category:Economy of mainland China material deleted as the result of the 12 March 2007 speedy deletion should be listed at CfD. -- Jreferee 15:54, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
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- Syrthiss's close was entirely proper. In the first place, prior to being on CfD there was a massive rename proposal where the idea to rename the PRC to mainland for categories was rejected. The category was an orphan/redirect to the proper PRC category and certain POV warriors kept populating it. That whole issue went to ArbCom. After it was over the category went to CfD, it had no consensus because the same POV warriors insisted on keeping the categories around for future use, so the length it was on CfD was extended. Syrthiss re-framed the discussion and after an extended discussion it was much more clear that it was a POV fork and he ruled it delete. In sticky cases like that we expect administrators to use discretion to make the correct decision.
- And forget process! To accept that this category should exist at all you have to think it is ok to create a POV fork. There is a choice here, either the economy of the China is "of the People's Republic of China", ie, the name of the country, or the economy is "of mainland China" which is a term of convenience when it is necessary to distinguish the parent country from it's special regions and those KMT who still say they are the real China. To think there isn't a POV problem naming the place using a term originally coined by the opposite side of a civil war is ridiculous - the country is named People's Republic of China. When both names exist you simply get teams of editors from countries involved in a 60 year old real life war edit warring putting articles back and forth between the forked categories. SchmuckyTheCat 05:29, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
- Comment Economy of the Unites States would be different than Economy of the continental United States, albeit there will be items that go in both. - Penwhale | Blast the Penwhale 14:42, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
- Temporarily undelete to view the page, cannot make a decision without seeing the article's state. - Penwhale | Blast the Penwhale 14:42, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
- Well, it's not an article, it's a category: the contents of the category page are very much secondary to the structural and naming considerations. But for the record, on 1st July 2005, prior to its last listing at CFD, the contents in full were:
{{catmore}}[[Category:Mainland China]] . Alai 00:24, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
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