Provincial and ministerial deputy refers to a civil servant level. Provincial and ministerial level deputy (fourth-level cadres), the administrative level has nothing to do with the position within the party in principle, but if a local official is also a member of the Standing Committee of the Party Committee at the next higher level, the level will be calculated at the next higher level.
Provincial and ministerial deputy: (fourth-level cadres)
Standing Committee of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, deputy leaders of administrative organs and institutions directly under the central government (members of party groups), deputy ministerial organs (party groups), the National People's Congress Standing Committee (NPCSC), the State Council and Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, and deputy heads of people's organizations (party groups).
Deputy leaders of party committees (deputy secretaries and standing committees) of provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government, deputy leaders of people's congresses, governments and CPPCC, secretary of provincial discipline inspection commission, deputy provincial-level city party committees, people's congresses, governments and CPPCC (specially appointed deputy leaders), national-level enterprises, national-level enterprises and deputy provincial-level universities.
Extended data:
The corresponding relationship between the level and rank of civil servants' leadership positions is:
National level: level 1;
(2) State-level deputies: level 4 to level 2;
(3) Chief positions at the provincial and ministerial levels: Grade 8 to Grade 4;
(four) deputy provincial and ministerial level: ten to six;
(5) Chief post at bureau level: 13 to 8;
(six) deputy bureau level: fifteen to ten;
(7) Chief post at county level: Grade 18 to Grade 12;
(eight) county deputies: twenty to fourteen;
(9) Chief posts at the township level: grades 22 to 16;
(10) Township deputies: Grade 24 to Grade 17.