TY - JOUR
T1 - Going out to innovate more at home
T2 - Impacts of outward direct investments on Chinese firms' domestic innovation performance
AU - Howell, Anthony
AU - Lin, Jia
AU - Worack, Stephan
N1 - Funding Information: This project received funding from the Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 71603009 and No. 71703172), French region Île de France (AMI program), and Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. The authors thank Zhifeng Ying, CEIBS, Olivier Bertrand, Lorenzo Cassi and Carmine Ornaghi, and participants at the Geography of Innovation Conference in Barcelona, JDD Conference in Clermont-Ferrand and WICK PhD workshop in Turin for their comments. Publisher Copyright: © 2020
PY - 2020/4
Y1 - 2020/4
N2 - This study explores the effects of cross-border mergers & acquisitions (CBMA) on domestic innovation of Chinese firms. We build a new panel dataset that matches information on CBMA and innovation activities for China's publicly listed firms. We rely on matching techniques combined with a difference-in-differences estimator to study the causal effects of CBMA respectively on firms' investments in innovation, innovation outputs, and financial performance. The main findings reveal that CBMA has both a positive impact on firms' R&D spending and number of patent applications, no statistically significant effect on the number of granted patents or on the quality of those patents, and a negative effect on firms' financial performance. These results depend, however, on the type of CBMA (horizontal or vertical), destination country (OECD or non-OECD), and the technological intensity (high-tech or not) of the acquirer and target firm. Overall, the findings bring into question whether CBMAs, and China's going-out strategy, will significantly boost its indigenous innovation capabilities.
AB - This study explores the effects of cross-border mergers & acquisitions (CBMA) on domestic innovation of Chinese firms. We build a new panel dataset that matches information on CBMA and innovation activities for China's publicly listed firms. We rely on matching techniques combined with a difference-in-differences estimator to study the causal effects of CBMA respectively on firms' investments in innovation, innovation outputs, and financial performance. The main findings reveal that CBMA has both a positive impact on firms' R&D spending and number of patent applications, no statistically significant effect on the number of granted patents or on the quality of those patents, and a negative effect on firms' financial performance. These results depend, however, on the type of CBMA (horizontal or vertical), destination country (OECD or non-OECD), and the technological intensity (high-tech or not) of the acquirer and target firm. Overall, the findings bring into question whether CBMAs, and China's going-out strategy, will significantly boost its indigenous innovation capabilities.
KW - China
KW - Innovation
KW - Outward direct investment
KW - Patenting
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85077921347&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85077921347&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.chieco.2020.101404
DO - 10.1016/j.chieco.2020.101404
M3 - Article
SN - 1043-951X
VL - 60
JO - China Economic Review
JF - China Economic Review
M1 - 101404
ER -