Yicai Global In 2017,
Yicai Global, a financial magazine, published an unofficial tiered list of the
Most Commercially Charming Cities in China, ranking 338
Chinese cities above or at the
prefectural level based on the latest business data from 160 commercial brands, customer behavior data from 17 internet companies and
Big Data on cities compiled by research institutions. The new ranking assessed the commercial attractiveness of 338 cities drawing from data on five dimensions: (1) concentration of commercial resources, (2) the extent to which a city serves as a commercial hub, (3) vitality of urban residents, (4) diversity of lifestyle, (5) future dynamism. The list below shows Yicai Global's 2017 classification, which contains 338 cities ranked on 6 tiers: tier 1, new tier 1, tier 2, tier 3, tier 4, and tier 5. It is important to note that a "city" in China may refer to an administrative unit at different levels. In short, while there are 334 prefectural-level units in China, there are 2,851 units at the county level, and 39,864 units at the township level. This list includes only units at the
prefectural level, the second highest
administrative division in China. A "prefectural-level" administrative unit can be a
city, a
prefecture, an
autonomous prefecture, and a
league. The four direct
municipalities, Beijing, Shanghai, Chongqing, and Tianjin are also considered cities even though they are officially provincial-level administrative units. It is for these reasons that
Yicai Global's published list includes 338 "cities": namely all of the 334 prefectural-level units plus the 4 direct municipalities.
South China Morning Post An unofficial list published by the
South China Morning Post ranks 613
Chinese cities on four tiers. This list uses a variety of parameters as the basis of classification: population size, GDP, and administrative hierarchy. According to the
South China Morning Post, the Tier 1 Chinese cities consist of
Beijing,
Shanghai,
Guangzhou,
Tianjin, and
Chongqing. == Criticism ==