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What's the rank of district chief?
The mayor of a sub-provincial city is a deputy bureau-level leading cadre.

Generally speaking, the order of administrative levels of units and organizations is: official department level-deputy national level-official provincial level-deputy provincial level-official department level/official department level-deputy department level/deputy department level-official county level-deputy county level-official township level-clerk level.

It is customary to use only one word to address the two words in the middle. Then, for ordinary teachers and units at all levels, the levels below the provincial level and above the township level and the corresponding positions will generally be:

(Deputy leader of the province) ministerial level-deputy ministerial level.

(Deputy leaders of local or provincial organs) Principal department level-Deputy department level.

(deputy of county and city organs) at the level-deputy level.

(Deputy of township or regional organs) Zheng Ke-Suboke.

Municipalities and provinces are at the same level, but the division under them is slightly different: due to the lack of ordinary prefecture-level cities (counties of municipalities directly under the central government), the municipal districts of municipalities directly under the central government have been raised to the level of ordinary prefecture-level cities. At the same time, municipalities directly under the central government may prefer to use "bureau level" rather than "department level":

(Principal and deputy leaders of municipalities directly under the Central Government) Ministerial level-deputy ministerial level.

(deputy leaders of district and municipal authorities) at the level (director level)-deputy director level (deputy director level).

(director and deputy director of the district direct organs) at the level-deputy level.

However, sub-provincial cities have broken these laws: half a level lower than municipalities directly under the central government, but half a level higher than other ordinary prefecture-level cities. This law will spread to the municipal organs and subordinate districts of sub-provincial cities, and their leaders are also half a level lower than their counterparts under the municipality directly under the central government, but half a level higher than their counterparts under ordinary prefecture-level cities.

But this rule is not passed down as usual: the organs or sub-district offices (towns) under sub-provincial cities are usually nominally set with reference to municipalities directly under the central government, which is one level higher than the corresponding units under ordinary prefecture-level cities!

This change is realized by inserting a special "deputy bureau level", or vice bureau level, or vice bureau level, or vice bureau level for short.

So it becomes like this:

(Sub-provincial cities still have provinces, but the leaders of sub-provincial cities will also be the deputy leaders of their provinces. )

Deputy ministerial level ("city level")-main department level ("city level")

(Deputy leaders of district or municipal organs) Deputy departmental level ("bureau level")-Deputy departmental level in the middle ("deputy bureau level")

(Director and Deputy Director of the organs directly under the district) at the level-deputy level.

In short, sub-provincial cities also use the name "bureau", but it is different from the "bureau" of provincial municipalities directly under the central government and cannot correspond to "hall":

The "official bureau level" and "deputy bureau level" of a municipality directly under the Central Government are equivalent to the official department level and the deputy department level respectively;

The "bureau level" of sub-provincial cities corresponds to the deputy department level, and the "deputy bureau level" should be the main department level, but it is actually a level divided from the main department level.