TY - JOUR
T1 - Is technology acquisition enough to improve China's product quality? Evidence from firm-level panel data
AU - Fisher-Vanden, Karen
AU - Terry, Rebecca
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Patricia Anderson, Eric Edmonds, Gary Jefferson, and Nina Pavcnik for helpful comments on an earlier draft. This research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Biological and Environmental Research Program (contract #DE-FG02-04ER63930) and the National Science Foundation (project/grant #450823).
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - As developing countries open themselves up to trade, many industrial firms in these countries are finding it difficult to compete internationally due to poor product quality and low product variety. Although China has been the largest producer of crude steel since 1996, China's steel firms have produced an overabundance of low-quality steel while domestic purchasers of steel have increasingly demanded higher quality steel products. Many have argued that for Chinese steel firms to improve product quality they must adopt more advanced technologies. Employing firm-level panel data of steel firms in China, we econometrically test the relative importance of two possible sets of factors affecting a firm's ability to utilize technology to improve product quality: technology acquisition factors and technology absorptive capacity factors. We find that technology complements such as in-house R&D and foreign knowledge must be combined with technology for Chinese firms to improve product quality.
AB - As developing countries open themselves up to trade, many industrial firms in these countries are finding it difficult to compete internationally due to poor product quality and low product variety. Although China has been the largest producer of crude steel since 1996, China's steel firms have produced an overabundance of low-quality steel while domestic purchasers of steel have increasingly demanded higher quality steel products. Many have argued that for Chinese steel firms to improve product quality they must adopt more advanced technologies. Employing firm-level panel data of steel firms in China, we econometrically test the relative importance of two possible sets of factors affecting a firm's ability to utilize technology to improve product quality: technology acquisition factors and technology absorptive capacity factors. We find that technology complements such as in-house R&D and foreign knowledge must be combined with technology for Chinese firms to improve product quality.
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U2 - 10.1080/10438590701560402
DO - 10.1080/10438590701560402
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:57049107411
SN - 1043-8599
VL - 18
SP - 21
EP - 38
JO - Economics of Innovation and New Technology
JF - Economics of Innovation and New Technology
IS - 1
ER -