The effect of the U.S.–China trade war on Chinese corporate innovation: A curse or a blessing?

Prof. Leona Shao-Zhi LI
Assistant Professor in Business Economics

Date: 27 September 2023 (Wednesday)
Time: 13:00 to 14:00pm
Venue: FBA Lobby
Moderator: Prof. Tony Zhenjiang QIN, Associate Professor in Finance

Abstract

Exploiting tariff variations during the U.S.–China trade war, we find that the U.S. tariff escalation is associated with a relative increase in corporate expenditure on research and development by listed Chinese manufacturing companies. Through a novel approach that infers the degree of competitive pressure from textual analyses of company annual reports, we identify an induced competition mechanism and offer evidence that is consistent with escape-competition motives. The marginal treatment effect is more pronounced for firms initially in neck-to-neck competition industries. Our findings are robust to various sensitivity tests, and we consider different approaches of addressing the potential endogeneity concern. This is among the pioneering studies to examine the impact of adverse foreign trade shock on innovation responses in the source country, thus contributing with scholarly and policy implications in the face of rising protectionism.

Speaker

Leona Shao-Zhi LI is an Assistant Professor in Business Economics at Faculty of Business Administration, University of Macau. She obtained her degrees from Peking University (B.A.), Columbia University (M.A.), and The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Ph.D.). Her research interests include economic development, international trade, and the economics of entrepreneurship and innovation. Her papers have appeared in refereed journals such as Journal of Development Economics and Journal of Business Venturing.

All are welcome!