Government of Macau explained

Government Name:Government of the Macau Special Administrative Region
Country:China
Legislature:Legislative Assembly
Headquarters:Macau Government Headquarters
Document:Macao Basic Law
Court:Court of Final Appeal
Leader Title:Chief Executive
Main Organ:Executive Council
Appointed:Premier, State Council of China
Meeting Place:Legislative Assembly Building
Speaker:President
Seat:Superior Court of Macau Building

The Government of the Macau Special Administrative Region, commonly known as the Macau Government, is the executive authorities of Macau. Formed on 20 December 1999 in accordance with the Sino-Portuguese Joint Declaration, it is headed by secretariats or commissioners and report directly to the chief executive. The affairs of the government are decided by secretaries, who are appointed by the chief executive and endorsed by the State Council of the Central People's Government in Beijing. As a special administrative region of China, Macau has a high degree of autonomy, in light of the "One Country, Two Systems" policy. The Macau Government, financially independent from the Central People's Government, oversees the affairs of Macau.

Head of government

The chief executive is responsible for the administration of Macau. The affairs of the government are decided by secretariats, who are appointed by the chief executive and endorsed by the State Council of the People's Republic of China in Beijing. The office of chief executive replaced that of governor after 1999 as head of the government in Macau. The chief executive reports to the State Council.

The current chief executive is Ho Iat Seng and Hoi Lai Fong is the chief of the Office of the Chief Executive.[1]

Principal officials

The secretaries are similar to the Hong Kong Government policy bureaux secretaries. However, there are fewer secretaries in Macau, and they are considered part of the civil service instead of officials employed on contracts.[2] The current (fifth) government was inaugurated in December 2019.[3]

The principal officials of the current government are:

Organisation of government

Each secretary leads a number of bureaux (Chinese: s=局 or 署; Portuguese: direcções or instituto,), which carry out decisions and plans made by the secretaries.

Pre-1999 government

The structure of the Portuguese administration in Macau was slightly different from the current:

Localisation of key positions was non-existent prior to the handover, all department heads were Portuguese. Chinese civil service heads did not appear until after the establishment of the special administrative region. Currently, many government officials received education in Mainland China, some of them even grew up in China.

Government Information Bureau

The Government Information Bureau (Chinese: 澳門特別行政區政府新聞局, Portuguese: Gabinete de Comunicação Social, GCS), commonly known as Macaogcs is the agency responsible for coordinating and studying the social transmission of government of the Macao Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China The departments that broadcast and provide assistance to the administrative authorities in this field are directly under the jurisdiction of the chief executive.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Office of the Chief Executive . Macau SAR Governmental Portal . Office of the Chief Executive . 16 May 2020.
  2. Web site: Top officials to be made accountable. Eli Lau. The Standard. 11 October 2001. 18 July 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20110522071408/http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=&art_id=12721&sid=&con_type=1&d_str=20011011&sear_year=2001. 22 May 2011. dead.
  3. News: China State Council appoints senior officials of the 5th Government of Macau . 16 May 2020 . MacauHub . MacauHub . 2 December 2019 . 3 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221203020141/https://macauhub.com.mo/2019/12/02/pt-conselho-de-estado-da-china-nomeia-titulares-dos-principais-cargos-do-v-governo-de-macau/ . dead .
  4. Web site: Gabinete de Comunicação Social . 2022-05-14 . Portal do Governo da RAE de Macau . pt-PT.