How the “Absorption Processes” of Urban Innovation Contribute to Sustainable Development—A Fussy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis Based on Seventy-Two Cities in China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review and Theoretical Analysis Framework
2.1. Innovation—Sustainable Cities
2.1.1. Innovation—Connotations for Sustainable Cities
2.1.2. The Impact of the Innovation Process on Sustainable Development
2.2. Theoretical Framework and Variable Indicators
2.2.1. Theoretical Basis
2.2.2. Analytical Framework and Metrics Construction
2.3. Acquisition Dimension: Economic and Market Basis
2.4. Digestion Dimension: Innovation Management
2.5. Digestion Dimension: Innovation Platform
2.6. Conversion Dimension: R&D Funding
2.7. Conversion Dimension: Transformation of Technological Achievements
2.8. Using Dimension: Smart City
3. Research Methodology and Case Selection
3.1. FSQCA Method
3.2. Sample and Data
3.2.1. Sample Selection
3.2.2. Data Collection
4. Analysis of Data and Results
4.1. Data Analysis
4.1.1. Variable Calibration and Necessity Check
4.1.2. Truth Table and Configuration Analysis
4.2. Analysis of Results
4.2.1. Urban Innovation under High-Sustainability Conditions
4.2.2. Urban Innovation under Low-Sustainability Conditions
4.2.3. Insights from Configuration Results
4.3. Robustness Tests
5. Conclusions
5.1. Research Conclusions and Recommendations
5.2. Research Limitations and Future Research Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Views | Literatures |
---|---|
Sustainable Innovation | [15,16] |
Continuous Innovation | [20] |
Continuous Improvement | [21,22] |
Eco-innovation | [23,24] |
Green Innovation | [17,18] |
Sustainability-driven | [25] |
Variable Types | Dimensions | Variables | Variable Explanation |
---|---|---|---|
Conditional Variables (X) | Acquisition Dimension | Economic and Market Basis (EM) | Gross production value, social consumption, total exports, total imports, results calculated by weighting method (25% for each of the four indicators) |
Digestive Dimension | Innovation Management (IM) | Government policy documents and laws and regulations with the title of innovation and sustainability in the decade of 2010–2020, as well as policy documents and laws and regulations with a high degree of relevance to innovation and sustainability | |
Innovation Platform (IP) | General higher education institutions, national and provincial key laboratories, national and provincial key engineering construction management centers, national and provincial engineering technology R&D centers, national and provincial incubators, high-tech enterprises, technology-based enterprises | ||
Conversion Dimension | R&D Funding (RD) | R&D expenditure as a share of GDP | |
Transformation of Technological Achievements (TA) | Amount of technology contracts signed | ||
Using Dimension | Smart City (SC) | Smart City Ranking | |
Result Variable (Y) | Sustainable Development (SR) | China 2020 Sustainable Development Indicator System Ranking |
Category | Indicators | Weights |
---|---|---|
Economic Development (21.66%) | GDP per capita | 7.21% |
Value added to tertiary industry as a proportion of GDP | 4.85% | |
Urban registered unemployment rate | 3.64% | |
Fiscal science and technology expenditure as a percentage of GDP | 3.92% | |
GDP growth rate | 2.04% | |
Society and People’s Livelihood (31.45%) | Ratio of house price to GDP per capita | 4.91% |
Number of medical institutions per 1000 people | 10.73% | |
Social security and employment financial expenditure per capita | 3.92% | |
Ratio of students to teachers in elementary and secondary schools | 4.13% | |
Urban road area per capita | 3.27% | |
Percentage of resident population aged 0–14 | 4.49% | |
Resource Environment (15.05%) | Water resources per capita | 4.54% |
Urban green space per 10,000 people | 6.24% | |
Number of days with good air quality index | 4.27% | |
Consumption Emissions (23.78%) | Unit GDP consumption and energy consumption | 12.1% |
Unit secondary and tertiary industries added value accounted for the built-up area | 5.78% | |
Sulfur dioxide emissions per unit of gross industrial output | 3.61% | |
Wastewater emissions per unit of gross industrial output | 2.29% | |
Governance Protection (8.06%) | Centralized treatment rate of sewage treatment plants | 2.34% |
Fiscal expenditure on energy conservation and environmental protection as a proportion of GDP | 2.61% | |
General industrial solid waste comprehensive utilization rate | 2.16% | |
Harmless disposal rate of domestic waste | 0.95% |
Conditional Variables | Data Sources |
---|---|
EM | Public information and data from China City Statistical Yearbook 2020, the statistical yearbooks of each city, the official website of the Bureau of Statistics, the official website of the Development and Reform Commission, and the website of the Economic and Information Commission |
IM | Public information and data from the official government statistical websites, government bulletins, and the website of the Economic and Information Commission, as well as telephone interviews with municipal government departments |
IP | The China Science and Technology Statistical Yearbook 2020, the Science and Technology Statistical Yearbook of each city, the government gazette, the Development and Reform Commission, the Science and Technology Bureau website public information and data |
RD | The China Science and Technology Statistical Yearbook 2020, the Science and Technology Statistical Yearbook of each city, information and data made public by the websites of Science and Technology Bureau and Economic and Information Commission |
TA | Information and data made public by the China Science and Technology Statistical Yearbook 2020, the Science and Technology Statistical Yearbook of each city, government gazettes, the website of the Science and Technology Bureau |
SC | The Smart City Development Yearbook 2020, the China Green Smart City Development Think Tank Report, telephone interviews with municipal government departments |
Variables | Full Affiliation Point | Intersection Point | Fully Unaffiliated Points |
---|---|---|---|
SR (Ranking) | 10 | 50 | 100 |
EM (Mean Value Method) | 0.85 | 0.25 | 0.1 |
IM (PCS) | 1000 | 450 | 250 |
IP (PCS) | 6000 | 2500 | 1500 |
RD (%) | 3.5 | 2.3 | 1.5 |
TA (Billion) | 500 | 70 | 10 |
SC (Ranking) | 10 | 50 | 100 |
Conditional Variables | Result Variable | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
SR | ~SR | |||
Consistency | Coverage | Consistency | Coverage | |
EM | 0.756354 | 0.779169 | 0.436872 | 0.445077 |
~EM | 0.461326 | 0.453066 | 0.783240 | 0.760716 |
IM | 0.776796 | 0.792441 | 0.542179 | 0.477961 |
~IM | 0.414364 | 0.477859 | 0.651117 | 0.742593 |
IP | 0.712707 | 0.787306 | 0.390224 | 0.426305 |
~IP | 0.480663 | 0.443538 | 0.805307 | 0.734897 |
RD | 0.715470 | 0.666839 | 0.578212 | 0.532956 |
~RD | 0.498895 | 0.544632 | 0.638548 | 0.689385 |
TA | 0.850553 | 0.852215 | 0.353911 | 0.349889 |
~TA | 0.351105 | 0.355128 | 0.850000 | 0.848328 |
SC | 0.825967 | 0.854306 | 0.321508 | 0.333123 |
~SC | 0.354420 | 0.342680 | 0.860894 | 0.833046 |
Variables | Paths | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
I | II | III | IV | |
EM | ⊗ | ● | ⊗ | ⊗ |
IM | ● | ● | ⊗ | |
IP | ⊗ | ● | ● | ● |
RD | ● | ● | ⊗ | ● |
TA | ● | ⊗ | ||
SC | ||||
Consistency | 0.735945 | 0.922671 | 0.777885 | 0.650862 |
Original Coverage | 0.190608 | 0.530663 | 0.233702 | 0.125138 |
Unique Coverage | 0.0239232 | 0.367127 | 0.0828729 | 0.0256346 |
Consistency of Solution | 0.834414 | |||
Coverage of Solution | 0.663812 |
Variables | Paths | ||
---|---|---|---|
V | VI | VII | |
EM | ⊗ | ● | ⊗ |
IM | ⊗ | ● | ⊗ |
IP | ⊗ | ⊗ | |
RD | ⊗ | ● | |
TA | ⊗ | ||
SC | ⊗ | ||
Consistency | 0.82999 | 0.81391 | 0.88642 |
Original Coverage | 0.462291 | 0.483799 | 0.200559 |
Unique Coverage | 0.0624581 | 0.0582681 | 0.0459776 |
Consistency of Solution | 0.678492 | ||
Coverage of Solution | 0.792879 |
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Li, F.; Zhang, H. How the “Absorption Processes” of Urban Innovation Contribute to Sustainable Development—A Fussy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis Based on Seventy-Two Cities in China. Sustainability 2022, 14, 15569. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142315569
Li F, Zhang H. How the “Absorption Processes” of Urban Innovation Contribute to Sustainable Development—A Fussy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis Based on Seventy-Two Cities in China. Sustainability. 2022; 14(23):15569. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142315569
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Fanbo, and Hongfeng Zhang. 2022. "How the “Absorption Processes” of Urban Innovation Contribute to Sustainable Development—A Fussy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis Based on Seventy-Two Cities in China" Sustainability 14, no. 23: 15569. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142315569
APA StyleLi, F., & Zhang, H. (2022). How the “Absorption Processes” of Urban Innovation Contribute to Sustainable Development—A Fussy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis Based on Seventy-Two Cities in China. Sustainability, 14(23), 15569. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142315569