Research on the Impact of Ambidextrous Innovation on Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance from a Policy-Oriented Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theory and Hypothesis
2.1. Ambidextrous Innovation and Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance
2.1.1. Exploratory Innovation and Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance
2.1.2. Exploitative Innovation and Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance
2.2. The Regulatory Role of Government Policies
2.2.1. The Moderating Effect of Government Subsidies
2.2.2. The Moderating Effect of Environmental Tax
3. Methods
3.1. Sample and Procedure
3.2. Measures
- (1)
- Explained variable
- (2)
- Core explanatory variables
- (3)
- Moderating variables
- (4)
- Control variables
3.3. Empirical Model
4. Results
4.1. Descriptive Statistics and Correlation Analysis
4.2. Results
4.3. Robustness Test
5. Discussion
5.1. Conclusions
- (1)
- Exploratory innovation has a positive impact on sustainable entrepreneurial performance, and exploitative innovation has a positive impact on sustainable entrepreneurial performance. This matches our hypothesis. Many studies have found that ambidextrous innovation is conducive to improving the financial performance of enterprises. As enterprises carry out ambidextrous innovation, the accumulation of knowledge and technical experience of enterprises continues to increase, the competitive advantage is improved, and the financial performance is also continuously improved. Combining the needs of stakeholders for enterprises to take into account social and environmental benefits [45,46], this study found that ambidextrous innovation in enterprises can not only fully introduce R&D human capital and create new social value, but also improve resource utilization, develop green products, and continuously reduce the pollution to the environment. Therefore, exploratory innovation and exploitative innovation can continuously balance economic, social, and environmental performance, thereby improving the sustainable entrepreneurial performance of enterprises.
- (2)
- Government subsidies have a negative moderating effect on the positive impact of exploratory innovation on sustainable entrepreneurial performance but have no moderating effect on the positive impact of exploitative innovation on sustainable entrepreneurial performance. This is different from our assumption. On the one hand, government subsidies weaken the positive impact of exploratory innovation on sustainable entrepreneurial performance. ICT industry enterprises are often faced with the requirements of a high level of core technology and rapid technological iteration. They rely more on government subsidies for exploratory innovation activities to alleviate the serious financing constraints faced by exploratory innovation. However, the acquisition of government subsidies requires application costs, and the maintenance of the latter relationship also needs to consume certain enterprise resources. In order to maintain and retain government subsidies, companies may take measures such as investing in social welfare projects to maintain government relations. This kind of behavior may be beneficial to improve social performance [30], but it takes up too many enterprise resources, making it impossible for enterprises to develop economic and environmental performance in coordination. On the other hand, exploitative innovation has no moderating effect, and government subsidies have less impact on exploitative innovation than on exploratory innovation, which seems to be like the research conclusion of Bi et al. (2017) [47]. Due to the low risk of exploitative innovation itself, enterprises are more motivated to invest in it without government subsidies. At the same time, exploitative innovation is mainly affected by the market mechanism and has external characteristics, so the government does not need to subsidize it.
- (3)
- Environmental tax has a negative moderating effect on the positive impact of exploratory innovation on sustainable entrepreneurial performance and has a negative moderating effect on the positive impact of exploitative innovation on sustainable entrepreneurial performance. This is contrary to our assumption. First, the environmental tax increases the compliance pressure of enterprises and intensifies internal financing constraints. The environmental tax does promote green innovation investment of enterprises through the “pressure effect” and “incentive effect”, but the “cost theory” theory of environmental supervision tools increases the production cost of enterprises and occupies resources such as capital and human resources required for other innovation activities. Secondly, in the various dimensions of the evaluation system of sustainable entrepreneurial performance, economic performance accounts for the largest proportion, so the positive impact of ambidextrous innovation on sustainable entrepreneurial performance is more reflected in economic performance. Environmental taxes are helpful to improve environmental performance, but to a certain extent are not conducive to the improvement of economic performance. This is more consistent with the view of Wang et al. (2020) [48], that is, environmental tax has a better effect on environmental protection than R&D innovation. Therefore, environmental taxes play a negative moderating role in the relationship between ambidextrous innovation and sustainable entrepreneurial performance.
5.2. Theoretical Implications
5.3. Managerial Implications
5.4. Research Limitations and Prospects
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Name | Symbol | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Explained variable | Sustainable entrepreneurial performance | SEP | 0.511 × operating net interest rate + 0.038 × number of employees + 0.451 × number of green patents |
Core explanatory variables | Exploratory innovation | Explor | The sum of the number of patents that have not appeared in the previous 5 years for the current patent type |
Exploitative innovation | Exploi | The sum of the number of patents that have appeared in the previous 5 years for the current patent type | |
Moderating variables | Government subsidy | GS | ln (current government subsidies + 1) |
Environmental tax | EX | The standard of environmental protection tax burden at the location of the enterprise has changed = 1, and there has been no change = 0 | |
Control variables | Firm age | Fage | ln (year of current year-year of establishment of the company) |
Firm size | Size | ln (total assets) | |
Equity nature | Equity | State-owned enterprise = 1, non-state-owned enterprise = 0 | |
Debt-to-asset ratio | Lev | Total liabilities/Total assets × 100% | |
Return on assets | Roa | Net profit/Total assets × 100% | |
Operating income growth rate | Growth | (Operating income for the current period-operating income for the previous period)/operating income for the previous period × 100% | |
Dummy variables | Year dummies | Year | The sample interval is 2010–2021, with a total of 12 years dummy variables |
Industry dummies | Industry | According to the industry code classification of China Securities Regulatory Commission, there are 13 industry dummy variables in this paper |
SEP | Explor | Exploi | GS | ET | Fage | Size | Equity | Lev | Roa | Growth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SEP | 1 | ||||||||||
Explor | 0.045 *** | 1 | |||||||||
Exploi | 0.025 * | 0.137 *** | 1 | ||||||||
GS | −0.035 *** | 0.000 | 0.009 | 1 | |||||||
ET | −0.008 | 0.023 | 0.027 | 0.062 *** | 1 | ||||||
Fage | 0.022 * | 0.014 | 0.052 *** | −0.261 *** | −0.011 | 1 | |||||
Size | 0.139 *** | 0.133 *** | 0.272 *** | −0.019 | 0.028 | 0.233 *** | 1 | ||||
Equity | 0.082 *** | 0.024 * | 0.065 *** | 0.113 *** | 0.051 *** | 0.202 *** | 0.295 *** | 1 | |||
Lev | 0.026 ** | 0.019 | 0.056 *** | −0.083 *** | 0.017 | 0.170 *** | 0.119 *** | 0.121 *** | 1 | ||
Roa | 0.011 | 0.021 | 0.013 | 0.073 *** | −0.041 ** | −0.112 *** | 0.021 | 0.002 | −0.520 *** | 1 | |
Growth | −0.002 | −0.004 | −0.003 | 0.018 | 0.051 *** | 0.0150 | 0.015 | −0.010 | 0.016 | 0.002 | 1 |
Min | −162.174 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.693 | 16.758 | 0 | 1.103 | −399.44 | −2858.916 |
Max | 119,974.6 | 750 | 5254 | 21.586 | 1 | 3.714 | 27.146 | 1 | 1049.529 | 86.31 | 450,001.6 |
Mean | 195.218 | 2.688 | 31.437 | 9.964 | 0.392 | 2.725 | 21.651 | 0.232 | 36.374 | 3.219 | 189.695 |
Sd | 2787.449 | 16.127 | 220.691 | 7.629 | 0.488 | 0.410 | 1.193 | 0.422 | 34.359 | 15.221 | 6742.193 |
Variables | (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Explor | 0.405 *** | 0.818 *** | 2.646 *** | |||
(3.35) | (3.71) | (4.26) | ||||
Exploi | 0.430 *** | 0.582 *** | 2.113 *** | |||
(3.88) | (3.80) | (3.47) | ||||
GS | −0.008 | −0.011 | ||||
(−0.69) | (−0.91) | |||||
Explor × GS | −0.631 ** | |||||
(−2.25) | ||||||
Exploi × GS | −0.195 | |||||
(−1.40) | ||||||
ET | −0.020 | −0.017 | ||||
(−0.32) | (−0.27) | |||||
Explor × ET | −1.580 * | |||||
(−1.87) | ||||||
Exploi × ET | −1.291 * | |||||
(−1.67) | ||||||
Fage | 0.061 | 0.068 | 0.060 | 0.070 | 0.367 | 0.181 |
(0.75) | (0.84) | (0.74) | (0.85) | (0.84) | (0.42) | |
Size | 0.152 *** | 0.152 *** | 0.152 *** | 0.154 *** | 0.193 *** | 0.190 *** |
(7.04) | (7.06) | (7.07) | (7.12) | (3.24) | (3.20) | |
Equity | 0.012 | 0.013 | 0.012 | 0.013 | −0.019 | −0.016 |
(0.68) | (0.71) | (0.71) | (0.74) | (−0.63) | (−0.54) | |
LEV | 0.046 *** | 0.044 *** | 0.046 *** | 0.043 *** | 0.056 | 0.051 |
(2.85) | (2.71) | (2.87) | (2.69) | (1.56) | (1.42) | |
ROA | 0.008 | 0.007 | 0.007 | 0.006 | −0.001 | 0.004 |
(0.54) | (0.47) | (0.52) | (0.46) | (−0.05) | (0.18) | |
Growth | −0.010 | −0.010 | −0.010 | −0.009 | −0.000 | 0.001 |
(−0.86) | (−0.85) | (−0.85) | (−0.83) | (−0.02) | (0.06) | |
Year | Control | Control | Control | Control | Control | Control |
Industry | Control | Control | Control | Control | Control | Control |
Constant | −0.091 | −0.094 | −0.085 | −0.087 | −0.241 | −0.117 |
(−1.03) | (−1.07) | (−0.96) | (−0.98) | (−0.80) | (−0.39) | |
Observations | 5767 | 5767 | 5767 | 5767 | 2590 | 2590 |
R-squared | 0.0671 | 0.0678 | 0.0682 | 0.0684 | 0.0288 | 0.0254 |
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Zhu, T.; Peng, H. Research on the Impact of Ambidextrous Innovation on Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance from a Policy-Oriented Perspective. Sustainability 2022, 14, 11247. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811247
Zhu T, Peng H. Research on the Impact of Ambidextrous Innovation on Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance from a Policy-Oriented Perspective. Sustainability. 2022; 14(18):11247. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811247
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhu, Tao, and Huatao Peng. 2022. "Research on the Impact of Ambidextrous Innovation on Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance from a Policy-Oriented Perspective" Sustainability 14, no. 18: 11247. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811247
APA StyleZhu, T., & Peng, H. (2022). Research on the Impact of Ambidextrous Innovation on Sustainable Entrepreneurial Performance from a Policy-Oriented Perspective. Sustainability, 14(18), 11247. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811247