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Journal Article

Exports and New Products in China – A Generalised Propensity Score Approach with Firm-to-Firm Spillovers

Authors

  • Gong
  • Y.
  • Hanley
  • A.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1080/00220388.2021.1956470

JEL Classification

C38 D22 O12 O33

Key Words

export and innovation

export spillovers

Generalized Propensity Score

Related Topics

International Trade

Innovation and Structural Change

Globalization

Companies

China

Underpinning China’s technological advancement are the twin-engines of exports and innovation. To better understand China’s meteoric economic transformation, we explore the extent to which new products are triggered by exports (direct effects) and by exposure to other exporters (indirect effects). Our methodology (generalised propensity score model) tackles two sources of selectivity bias – at the level of the firm and neighbourhood. Given that production is highly specialised and localised, it would be unusual if firms failed to learn from exposure to local exporters.Our findings reveal an overwhelmingly positive direct effect of exports on new product introductions. Also, a more modest spillover effect. Interestingly, firms with a reduced need to innovate (processing exporters) can also appropriate export spillovers. Our findings have implications for other developing countries seeking to maximise exporting in economic clusters, promoting innovation and ultimately growth.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Aoife Hanley, Ph.D.
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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Research Center

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