Chapter
Nov 30, 2023

Research on the Impact of Land Factor Mismatch on Economic Resilience

ABSTRACT

In order to promote rapid economic growth in the short term, local governments in China attract investment by lowering the price of industrial land and compensating by raising the supply price of residential land. Although this mismatch of land factors is beneficial for stimulating economic growth in the short term, it is not conducive to the quality of economic development in the long run and may even reduce the resilience of urban economies. This paper selects 13 year panel data from 79 cities in China to empirically test the impact of land mismatch on economic resilience. The results show that land factor mismatch has a significant negative impact on economic resilience. Based on this, this article proposes measures and suggestions to reduce administrative intervention in land supply and improve the efficiency of intensive use of industrial land.

Get full access to this chapter

View all available purchase options and get full access to this chapter.

REFERENCES

Cailnelli, G. (2019). “Industrial relatedness and regional resilience in the European Union.” Paper Regional Science, 98(2), 755-778.
Chen, G.J. (2022). “Land resource misallocation, industrial structure and haze pollution: An empirical study base on spatial econometrics and dynamic panel threshold model.” China Soft Science, (12), 143-152. (in Chinese).
Cheng, G.B., and Jin, Y. (2022). “Can the improvement of innovation ability enhance the resilience of urban economy?” Modern Economic Research, 482(02), 1-11+32. (in Chinese).
Foster, K.A. (2007). A case study approach to understanding regional resilience, Fort Worth, Texas.
Holling, C.S. (1973). “Resilience and stability of ecological systems.” Annual Review of Ecology & Systematic, 4(1),1-23.
Kitsos, A., Carrascal-Incera, A., and Ortega-Argilés, R. (2019). “The role of embeddedness on regional economic resilience: Evidence from the UK.” Sustainability, 11(4), 3800.
Lagravinese, R. (2015). “Economic crisis and rising gaps north-south: Evidence from the Italian regions.” Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 8(2), 331-342.
Lai, M. (2019). “Does the mismatch of land factors hinder the optimization and upgrading of China’s industrial structure? Empirical evidence based on 230 prefecture-level cities in China.” Industrial Economic Research, 99(02), 39-49. (in Chinese).
Martin, R. (2012). “Regional economic resilience, hysteresis and recessionary shocks.” Journal of Economic Geography, 12(1), 1-32.
Pendall, R., and Foster, K.A. (2009). “Resilience and regions: Building understanding of the metaphor.” Cambridge Journal of Regions Economy and Society, 3(1), 71-84.
Reggiani, A., Graff, T.D., and Nijkamp, P. (2002). “Resilience: An evolutionary approach to spatial economic systems.” Networks & Spatial Economics, 2(2), 211-229.
Yang, Q.J., Zhuo, P., and Yang, J.D. (2014). “Competition for bottom line quality of industrial land transfer and investment attraction.” Journal of Management World, 254(11), 24-34. (in Chinese).
Zeng, B. (2021). “Evaluation of China’s provincial economic resilience under the impact of COVID-19 Epidemic.” Journal of Industrial Technological Economics, 40(7), 127-133. (in Chinese).

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to ICCREM 2023
ICCREM 2023
Pages: 872 - 879

History

Published online: Nov 30, 2023

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

ASCE Technical Topics:

Authors

Affiliations

Ph.D. Candidate, School of Government, Beijing Normal Univ., Beijing, China. Email: [email protected]
School of Government, Peking Univ., Beijing, China (corresponding author). Email: [email protected]

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Download citation

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

View Options

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Paper
$35.00
Add to cart
Buy E-book
$242.00
Add to cart

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Paper
$35.00
Add to cart
Buy E-book
$242.00
Add to cart

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share with email

Email a colleague

Share