Difference between revisions of "Industrial classification"

From CNM Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(ISIC)
(NAICS)
Line 57: Line 57:
 
|-
 
|-
 
!62
 
!62
|[[Healthcare industry|Health Care]] and Social Assistance||[[CNM industry classification|CNMIC]] includes [[compulsory social security industry|compulsory social security]] into the [[public service industry]].
+
|[[Healthcare industry|Health Care]] and Social Assistance||[[CNM industry classification|CNMIC]] includes [[compulsory social security industry|compulsory social security]] into the [[public service industry]] and [[social work industry|social work]] into the [[live-sustaining industry]].
 
|-
 
|-
 
!71
 
!71

Revision as of 02:44, 6 August 2019

An industrial classification (alternatively known as industry classification and industry taxonomy; hereinafter, the Taxonomy) is any economic taxonomy that groups businesses based on their products and/or production processes, as well as on their selling, marketing, and/or social appealing techniques into industries.


Key Taxonomies

NAICS

The North American Industry Classification System (also known by its acronym, NAICS) is the primary Taxonomy used by government and business in Canada, Mexico, and the United States. Some government agencies such as the United States Securities and Exchange Commission historically use the Standard Industrial Classification (or SIC) system.
Sector # Description Comparison with CNMIC
11 Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting One part of the raw materials industry
21 Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction Another part of the raw materials industry
22 Utilities Energy, electricity, gas, as well as water service are parts of the infrastructure industry
23 Construction A part of the infrastructure industry
31-33 Manufacturing No difference
41/42 Wholesale Trade (41 in Canada; 42 in the United States) One part of the market exchange industry
44-45 Retail Trade Another part of the market exchange industry
48-49 Transportation and Warehousing CNMIC includes warehousing into transportation since warehouses are not designed to be final destinations.
51 Information CNMIC introduces the digital industry, which excludes those information services such as paper book libraries and printed media that don't entirely rely on computers.
52 Finance and Insurance One part of the enterprise support industry.
53 Real Estate and Rental and Leasing Real estate sales are parts of the market-exchange industry; rental and leasing are parts of the property-sustaining industry.
54 Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services Accounting, administrative service, banking, insurance, investment management, and legal service are a part of the enterprise support industry; the others are a part of the live-sustaining industry.
55 Management of Companies and Enterprises Another part of the enterprise support industry.
56 Administrative and Support and Waste Management and Remediation Services Waste disposal is a part of the infrastructure industry. Accounting, administrative service, banking, insurance, investment management, and legal service are a part of the enterprise support industry. The others are a part of the live-sustaining industry.
61 Educational Services Altogether with the community outreach, included into the human development industry
62 Health Care and Social Assistance CNMIC includes compulsory social security into the public service industry and social work into the live-sustaining industry.
71 Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation CNMIC includes hospitality, entertainment, accommodation service, food service, real estate service, rental service, property-sustaining industry, repair service, maintenance service, technical service, printed-book library, cleaning service, performing arts service, recreation service, and sports activity into the live-sustaining industry.
72 Accommodation and Food Services
81 Other Services (except Public Administration)
92 Public Administration CNMIC introduces the public service industry, which also includes compulsory social security.

ISIC

The International Standard Industrial Classification (also known by its acronym, ISIC; officially known as International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities is the Taxonomy that is used by the United Nations.
Sector # Description Comparison with CNMIC
A Agriculture, forestry and fishing One part of the raw materials industry

Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction||Another part of the raw materials industry

Utilities||Energy, electricity, gas, as well as water service are parts of the infrastructure industry

Construction||A part of the infrastructure industry

Manufacturing||No difference

Wholesale Trade (41 in Canada; 42 in the United States)||One part of the market exchange industry

Retail Trade||Another part of the market exchange industry

Transportation and Warehousing||CNMIC includes warehousing into transportation since warehouses are not designed to be final destinations.

Information||CNMIC introduces the digital industry, which excludes those information services such as paper book libraries and printed media that don't entirely rely on computers.

Finance and Insurance||One part of the enterprise support industry.

Real Estate and Rental and Leasing||Real estate sales are parts of the market-exchange industry; rental and leasing are parts of the property-sustaining industry.

Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services||Accounting, administrative service, banking, insurance, investment management, and legal service are a part of the enterprise support industry; the others are a part of the live-sustaining industry.

Management of Companies and Enterprises||Another part of the enterprise support industry.

Administrative and Support and Waste Management and Remediation Services||Waste disposal is a part of the infrastructure industry. Accounting, administrative service, banking, insurance, investment management, and legal service are a part of the enterprise support industry. The others are a part of the live-sustaining industry.

Educational Services||Altogether with the community outreach, included into the human development industry

Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation||rowspan="3"|CNMIC includes hospitality, entertainment, accommodation service, food service, real estate service, rental service, property-sustaining industry, repair service, maintenance service, technical service, printed-book library, cleaning service, performing arts service, recreation service, and sports activity into the live-sustaining industry.

B Mining and quarrying
C Manufacturing
D Electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply
E Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities
F Construction
G Wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles
H Transportation and storage
I Accommodation and food service activities
J Information and communication
K Financial and insurance activities
L Real estate activities
M Professional, scientific and technical activities
N Administrative and support service activities
O Public administration and defence; compulsory social security CNMIC introduces another name, public service industry, which roughly includes both public administration and compulsory social security.
P Education
Q Human health and social work activities CNMIC includes social work into the live-sustaining industry.
R Arts, entertainment and recreation
S Other service activities
T Activities of households as employers; undifferentiated goods- and services-producing activities of households for own use
U Activities of extraterritorial organizations and bodies

CNM classification

Main wikipage: CNM industry classification