Mf Section C Manufacturing
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Class 1702 - Manufacture of Corrugated Paper and Paperboard and of Containers of Paper and Paperboard

PSIC Class 1702 covers Manufacture of Corrugated Paper and Paperboard and of Containers of Paper and Paperboard. Current child subclasses include Manufacture of Corrugated Paper and Paperboard and of Containers of Paper...

Level Class
Hierarchy depth 4/5
Children 1
Last verified 2026-05-12
About this level

Practical summary

Class 1702 sits in the PSIC 2019 hierarchy under C Manufacturing > 17 Manufacture of Paper and Paper Products > 170 Manufacture of paper and paper products. This class usually fans out into more specific subclasses such as Manufacture of Corrugated Paper and Paperboard and of Containers of Paper and Paperboard. It is the level people use when they already know the activity family but still need the exact five-digit match.

Administrative context

Where this code is used

This class is used when a business can already narrow the activity family and only needs to compare the final subclasses such as Manufacture of Corrugated Paper and Paperboard and of Containers of Paper and Paperboard. It is the level most often checked before a five-digit decision is finalized.

Selection note

How to choose it

Use this class to choose between its final subclasses such as Manufacture of Corrugated Paper and Paperboard and of Containers of Paper and Paperboard. If two options look close, compare the exact activity, the outputs and the way the business actually earns revenue.

FAQ

What does PSIC Class 1702 cover?

PSIC Class 1702 is the four-digit layer that sits just above the final subclasses and usually defines the activity family for Manufacture of Corrugated Paper and Paperboard and of Containers of Paper and Paperboard.

How do I compare Class 1702 with the sibling classes?

Read the neighboring classes and compare the exact wording of the child subclasses. Nearby options include 1701 Manufacture of pulp, paper and paperboard and 1709 Manufacture of other articles of paper and paperboard.

Why does Class 1702 matter for a filing decision?

It is usually the last broad checkpoint before the five-digit subclass choice, so it is the right place to catch near-miss classifications.