Corruption, government subsidies, and innovation : evidence from China
Lily Fang, Josh Lerner, Chaopeng Wu, Qi Zhang
Governments are important financiers of private sector innovation. While these public funds can ease capital constraints and information asymmetries, they can also introduce political distortions. We empirically explore these issues for China, where a quarter of firms' R&D expenditures come from government subsidies. Using a difference-in-differences approach, we find that the anti-corruption campaign that began in 2012 and the departures of local government officials responsible for innovation programs strengthened the relationship between firms' historical innovative efficiency and subsequent subsidy awards and depressed the influence of their corruption-related expenditures. We also examine the impact of these changes: subsidies became significantly positively associated with future innovation after the anti-corruption campaign and the departure of government innovation officials.Please see "https://ssrn.com/abstract=3251843" https://ssrn.com/abstract=3251843 for the Appendix to this paper