Unissued Chinese was my first SKS, and my first rifle in General. I'd recommend one.
It was very tight to take apart and put back together the first few times, the finish is fine but nothing spectacular, and it came covered in enough cosmoline to preserve a tank. After five range trips, it was very smooth to disassemble and re-assemble, the finish was the last thing on my mind, and the cosmoline was of course long gone before I first shot it. The rifle is as accurate as an SKS can get, and I literally cannot make it stop working. I've stopped cleaning it - all I do is neutralize the corrosive salts and then reassemble. The working parts are caked black, the gas tube has so much carbon in it that you can tap on it and some will fall out, and the barrel is actually fine looking, dirty, but no corrosion and the chrome lining is holding up. It's been over 4000 rounds of Chinese, Romanian, and Polish corrosive surplus since it's last cleaning and it hasn't jammed and accuracy is the same as when it was clean. I even threw all the working parts in the mud at the range, re-assembled, and shot 200 rounds - no malfunctions. I can't get it to stop working.
For the $199 I paid for it, it's probably the best deal in Canada. The Chinese ones aren't as flashy as the Russian ones, and are more plentiful, so if you get it and neglect or bang it up, you don't need to feel as bad. Bad, but not as bad. Out of my five SKS's, including Russians, a Yugo, and Chinese, my first Type 56 sees by far the most use.
Whatever you get, I'm sure you won't be disappointed. These things won't be around at this price for ever, and when they're gone, you'll regret not buying one at this price. Keep it stock, too. If you want to put some tacticool plastic garbage all over it (which won't change the fact that it's STILL AN SKS), get another one and keep that one stock. You'll not regret it when they're going for 500 bucks a piece. Back in the early 1990's, Danish Garands cost under 300 bucks a pop. Look at what they sell for now. One day, the under $200 we pay for most of these will be nothing but a memory we tell on CGN 2.0 to the new shooters of the future about how much better things used to be.