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Section: C. Manufacturing
Subcomponents of this SIC section include:
- Division 10: Manufacture of food products
- Division 11: Manufacture of beverages
- Division 12: Manufacture of tobacco products
- Division 13: Manufacture of textiles
- Division 14: Manufacture of wearing apparel
- Division 15: Manufacture of leather and related products
- Division 16: Manufacture of wood and of products of wood and cork, except furniture; manufacture of articles of straw and plaiting materials
- Division 17: Manufacture of paper and paper products
- Division 18: Printing and reproduction of recorded media
- Division 19: Manufacture of coke and refined petroleum products
- Division 20: Manufacture of chemicals and chemical products
- Division 21: Manufacture of basic pharmaceutical products and pharmaceutical preparations
- Division 22: Manufacture of rubber and plastic products
- Division 23: Manufacture of other non-metallic mineral products
- Division 24: Manufacture of basic metals
- Division 25: Manufacture of fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment
- Division 26: Manufacture of computer, electronic and optical products
- Division 27: Manufacture of electrical equipment
- Division 28: Manufacture of machinery and equipment n.e.c.
- Division 29: Manufacture of motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers
- Division 30: Manufacture of other transport equipment
- Division 31: Manufacture of furniture
- Division 32: Other manufacturing
- Division 33: Repair and installation of machinery and equipment
More Information on this SIC Section
Manufacturing
This section includes the physical or chemical transformation of materials, substances, or components into new products, although this cannot be used as the single universal criterion for defining manufacturing (see remark on processing of waste below). The materials, substances, or components transformed are raw materials that are products of agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining or quarrying as well as products of other manufacturing activities. Substantial alteration, renovation or reconstruction of goods is generally considered to be manufacturing.
The output of a manufacturing process may be finished in the sense that it is ready for utilisation or consumption, or it may be semi-finished in the sense that it is to become an input for further manufacturing. For example, the output of alumina refining is the input used in the primary production of aluminium; primary aluminium is the input to aluminium wire drawing; and aluminium wire is the input for the manufacture of fabricated wire products.
Manufacture of specialised components and parts of, and accessories and attachments to, machinery and equipment is, as a general rule, classified in the same class as the manufacture of the machinery and equipment for which the parts and accessories are intended. Manufacture of unspecialised components and parts of machinery and equipment, e.g. engines, pistons, electric motors, electrical assemblies, valves, gears, roller bearings, is classified in the appropriate class of manufacturing, without regard to the machinery and equipment in which these items may be included. However, making specialised components and accessories by moulding or extruding plastics materials is included in group ##22.2.
Assembly of the component parts of manufactured products is considered manufacturing. This includes the assembly of manufactured products from either self-produced or purchased components.
The recovery of waste, i.e. the processing of waste into secondary raw materials is classified in group ##38.3 (Materials recovery). While this may involve physical or chemical transformations, this is not considered to be a part of manufacturing. The primary purpose of these activities is considered to be the treatment or processing of waste and they are therefore classified in Section ##E (Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities). However, the manufacture of new final products (as opposed to secondary raw materials) is classified in manufacturing, even if these processes use waste as an input. For example, the production of silver from film waste is considered to be a manufacturing process.
Specialised maintenance and repair of industrial, commercial and similar machinery and equipment is, in general, classified in division ##33 (Repair, maintenance and installation of machinery and equipment). However, the repair of computers and personal and household goods is classified in division ##95 (Repair of computers and personal and household goods), while the repair of motor vehicles is classified in division ##45 (Wholesale and retail trade and repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles).
The installation of machinery and equipment, when carried out as a specialised activity, is classified in ##33.20.
Remark: The boundaries of manufacturing and the other sectors of the classification system can be somewhat blurred. As a general rule, the activities in the manufacturing section involve the transformation of materials into new products. Their output is a new product. However, the definition of what constitutes a new product can be somewhat subjective. As clarification, the following activities are considered manufacturing in SIC:
- fresh fish processing (oyster shucking, fish filleting), not done on a fishing boat (see ##10.20)
- milk pasteurising and bottling (see ##10.51)
- leather converting (see ##15.11)
- wood preserving (see ##16.10)
- printing and related activities (see ##18.1)
- tyre retreading (see ##22.11)
- ready-mixed concrete production (see ##23.63)
- electroplating, plating, and metal heat treating (see ##25.61)
- rebuilding or remanufacturing of machinery (e.g. automobile engines, see ##29.10)
Conversely, there are activities that, although sometimes involving transformation processes, are classified in other sections of SIC; in other words, they are not classified as manufacturing. They include:
- logging, classified in section ##A (Agriculture, forestry and fishing);
- beneficiating of agricultural products, classified in section ##A (Agriculture, forestry and fishing);
- preparation of food for immediate consumption on the premises is classified to division ##56 (Food and beverage service activities)
- beneficiating of ores and other minerals, classified in section ##B (Mining and quarrying);
- construction of structures and fabricating operations performed at the site of construction, classified in section ##F (Construction);
- activities of breaking bulk and redistribution in smaller lots, including packaging, repackaging, or bottling products, such as liquors or chemicals; sorting of scrap; mixing paints to customer order; and cutting metals to customer order; treatment not resulting into a different good is classified to section ##G (Wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles).