School of Business
Provincial economic growth and firm excess investment: Evidence from China
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Local governments in China frequently report provincial economic growth rates that exceed their targets. Prior studies suggest that this phenomenon is attributable to governmental influence over local firms, particularly through coercing these firms into escalating investments to maximize economic expansion. Using a sample of 18,349 Chinese listed firms from 2001 to 2017, we find that firms located in regions that exceed economic growth targets tend to invest more heavily. This effect is more pronounced in years when local government officials face stronger promotion pressure; furthermore, excess economic growth is associated with diminished investment efficiency within firms and increased government subsidies. These findings suggest that excess economic growth proxies for local government opportunism and plays an important role in local firms’ investment decisions.
Publication Title
Economic Modelling
Publication Date
8-2024
Volume
137
ISSN
0264-9993
DOI
10.1016/j.econmod.2024.106764
Keywords
excess economic growth, GDP growth, government intervention, investment, investment efficiency
Repository Citation
Liu, Jianhua; Liu, Jingjun; Tang, Zhenyang; and Xu, Yue, "Provincial economic growth and firm excess investment: Evidence from China" (2024). School of Business. 210.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_school_of_management/210