1. Introduction
In today’s economic globalization, technological progress and innovation are the driving forces of a country’s sustainable economic development. In addition to relying on its own independent research and development to achieve technological innovation and upgrading, a country can also fully absorb and use foreign advanced technology to promote industrial sustainable development through external acquisition. This is particularly important for the vast majority of developing countries, where the natural endowment of technological elements is insufficient and enterprises lack the core technologies on which to survive and thrive. OFDI enterprises obtain the spillover of advanced technologies from technologically developed countries through direct foreign investment, and realize the common upgrading of corresponding industries through localization diffusion, but in order for this process to achieve sustainable development if this is possible, the question of how OFDI enterprises, local enterprises, and government participants should make decisions needs to be explored.
In recent years, as the largest developing country, China’s outward direct investment scale has grown rapidly, and according to data from the State Administration of Foreign Exchange of China, as of the end of 2021, the outward direct investment position was about 2.6 trillion US dollars, an increase of 5.82 times that of 2011, which promoted China’s own technological upgrading, an iteration of the technological spillover effect of outward direct investment, which provided strong support for China to accelerate the sustainable development of building an innovative country. Technology diffusion refers to the spread of technology from technologically developed enterprises to technologically backward enterprises, the technological gap between different enterprises is a prerequisite of technology diffusion because the technological development level of China’s local enterprises is relatively low, the technical level of OFDI enterprises is relatively advanced, so it is important to enhance the innovative and sustainable development of local enterprises through OFDI enterprises to local enterprises to diffuse advantageous technology.
Scholars have produced rich research results on the analysis of the influencing factors of technology diffusion in subdivided fields. Rao K U et al. conducted a theoretical analysis of the diffusion of renewable energy technologies and found that the diffusion of renewable technologies is driven back by policy and incentive factors [
1]. Li Yuhua, Gao Yang and Hu Yaoying studied the influencing factors of technology diffusion in complex product systems based on the structural equation model, and found that the company’s own R&D capabilities, external environment and the complexity of the technology itself have a profound impact on technology diffusion [
2]. Oluwasola Oni et al. found that the ability of SMEs in the broadband Internet industry to recognize and understand broadband technology in the process of technology diffusion determines the diffusion of broadband technology [
3]. When the international technology gap is too large, it is difficult for “going out” enterprises to obtain new technologies through technology diffusion, and cannot achieve technology feedback on domestic enterprises; only when the TFP ratio between China and the host country is at a reasonable range can there be significant reverse technology spillovers [
4]. Huang Xaoli and Huang Xiaohua pointed out that the financial efficiency of China plays a positive role in the overflow effect of OFDI’s reverse technology. In the subregion analysis, they found that there are significant differences in the impact of financial development on technological spillovers across regions [
5].
Some scholars took into account the empirical model of the emergence of government as an influencing factor in the effect of technology diffusion, and affirmed the positive role of government. Song Yingjie and Li Zhongdong used the ordered Probit model to empirically test the influence of government on the diffusion of quality and safety technologies in agricultural products, and found that government regulation plays an active role in multiple stages of the diffusion of quality and safety technologies [
6]. When Wu Zhongsheng and Liu Qin established a competition model to analyze the impact of government behavior on the diffusion of XBRL technology, they found that government intervention can promote the diffusion of XBRL technology by improving the competitiveness of enterprises [
7]. Xiao Hanjie and Wang Hua discussed the diffusion of low-carbon environmentally friendly technologies based on the evolutionary game model, and affirmed the incentive effect of government policies on enterprise diffusion technologies [
8]. Based on SIS theory, Li Shuaichao analyzed the diffusion process of industrial clusters, affirmed that government subsidies have a positive effect on the diffusion effect of quality technology innovation, and the diffusion of quality technology innovation has a distance attenuation effect [
9].
On the topic of the sustainable development of OFDI, scholars have also conducted relevant research. Zhang Huiying and Liu Yikang believe that IP protection is conducive to achieving the sustainable development of OFDI, that brain drain due to migration has a negative effect on OFDI, and that strengthening IP protection cannot significantly reduce the negative impact of brain drain [
10]. The purpose of China’s outward investment has shifted from exploring natural resources and opening up more markets to acquiring knowledge and innovation from foreign countries [
11], and as the largest emerging market in Asia, studying its OFDI motives is of great significance to the sustainable development of OFDI in home countries [
12]. Zhang Xiaoling et al. took the manufacturing industry in the Jiangsu Province as an example to analyze the relationship between manufacturing sectors in the process of outward direct investment, and made up for the gaps in research related to the sustainable development of China’s outward direct investment from provincial data [
13]. Foreign scholars studied the intraregional interaction between outward direct investment (OFDI), export trade and economic growth; they found that there is a causal relationship between export trade and economic growth for outward direct investment [
14].
The existing literature has a role in studying the technology diffusion of OFDI enterprises and local enterprises, but there are still some problems. On the one hand, the research on the interaction between OFDI enterprises and local enterprises focuses on knowledge transfer and knowledge sharing, while there are few related studies on the sustainable development of technology diffusion, and there is little research on the passive diffusion behavior of OFDI enterprises and the passive adoption behavior of local enterprises in the process of technology diffusion sustainable development. On the other hand, the existing literature on the use of evolutionary game theory to study the interaction between OFDI enterprises and local enterprises is mostly a two-party game, which does not consider the regulating role of the government in the process of behavioral interaction, in fact, the positive incentive and negative punishment of the government are important ways to make the game evolve towards the optimal state.
The possible innovation of this paper is that by constructing a tripartite evolutionary game model, including government, OFDI firms, and domestic firms, based on the bounded rationality hypothesis, this paper studies the strategy selection evolution of the tripartite subjects in the process of the technology diffusion sustainable development game, including: (1)Based on the existing research, this paper studies the passive diffusion interaction and passive adoption behavior of OFDI firms and domestic firms in the process of technology diffusion sustainable development, which further enriches the research on the behavior interaction between OFDI firms and domestic firms; (2) This paper extends the government into the game system of technology diffusion sustainable development, analyzes the regulation effect of government behavior on both sides’ technology diffusion sustainable development, and provides corresponding countermeasures for the governance of OFDI firms’ passive diffusion behavior and domestic firms’ negative adoption behavior.
The remainder of the article is organized as follows: literature review is in
Section 2; research methodology is in
Section 3; result and figures are presented in
Section 4; finally, conclusions and policy recommendations are in
Section 5.
2. Literature Review
Under the effect of reverse technology spillover, OFDI firms have greatly upgraded their knowledge stock and structure, technological level and innovation ability comparison with domestic firms [
15,
16]. Due to the comparatively low technical level, the homogeneous competition of products is severe, which restricts the improvement of their innovation ability to a great extent [
17]. For example, the Jilin Changchun automobile industry cluster fell into an innovation dilemma due to the simple replication and imitation of technology. Domestic firms promoted by the Chint Group actively implement innovative technology to the technologically leading OFDI firms, so as to improve their technical level and innovation ability. OFDI firms, as technology advantages, have the motivation of active diffusion [
18]. Firstly, due to the technical competitiveness among OFDI firms, they must diffuse the advantageous technologies within a certain period of time in order to receive adequate compensation for the cost of technology acquisition. Secondly, the technology spillover effect also causes OFDI firms to grasp the best technology diffusion time. The domestic firms’ imitation and innovation of technology from OFDI firms is an important way to produce the technology spillover effect. Even with the protection of intellectual property rights, domestic firms can imitate the technology only by virtue of product appearance and functional information. Therefore, the full value of the advantageous technology of the OFDI firms will overflow and some will be absorbed by domestic firms, while domestic firms acquire the technology through imitation and innovation at a relatively low cost. Therefore, in order to avoid the risk of technology depreciation and technology spillover, OFDI firms will actively spread advantageous technologies to domestic firms, which is conducive to the cost compensation of OFDI firms and the technology upgrade of domestic firms, so as to form a benign cooperation mechanism [
19,
20].
However, when OFDI firms actively diffuse advantageous technologies to domestic firms, domestic firms may adopt them passively, that is, when OFDI firms actively diffuse advantageous technologies, domestic firms choose opportunistic behavior, and the harm degree of opportunistic behavior depends on the strength of property rights protection, this behavior is detrimental to the sustainability of technology diffusion activities. Therefore, there are two unsatisfactory states in the process of realizing the system optimization of the active diffusion of advantageous technologies by OFDI firms and the active adoption of advanced technologies by domestic firms. One is that OFDI firms actively diffuse while domestic firms passively adopt, and the existence of opportunistic behavior will reduce the initiative of subsequent technology diffusion of OFDI firms; the other is the passive diffusion of OFDI firms and the active adoption of domestic firms. The technology spillover effect of passive diffusion will not satisfactorily compensate for the technology acquisition cost of OFDI firms [
8]. At the same time, domestic firms cannot quickly realize technology upgrading by imitation and innovation. In this regard, the government’s behavior can regulate the behavior of OFDI firms and domestic firms. By supporting the behavior of active diffusion and positive adoption, and punishing the behavior of passive diffusion and negative adoption, we can restrict the behavior of both sides and keep the technology diffusion activities in an ideal state [
21].
Previous studies have verified the existence of reverse technology spillovers in enhancing the innovation level of OFDI firms. Arora and Lohani used national level data to verify their presence through empirical analysis [
22]. Chen, etc., found that firms in technologically backward countries can acquire innovative technology spillover from technologically advanced countries by carrying out OFDI activities [
23]. Fu Yuanhai and Chen Lishan, Sha Wenbing and Li Ying and Li Hongya believe that OFDI firms’ overseas investment layout and learning and absorbing overseas advanced technology are conducive to extending market share [
24,
25,
26]. On this basis, scholars have studied the influencing factors of OFDI’s reverse technology spillover effect. ACS, Sanders, Sivak, etc., believe that human capital, R&D output, property rights protection and absorptive capacity have heterogeneous effects on spillover effects [
27,
28]. Many scholars, such as Herzer, Li Mei and Liu Shichang, Yang Lianxing and Liu Xiaoguang, believe that national, regional and industrial differences will also influence the spillover effect [
29,
30,
31].
Through foreign direct investment activities, conglomerate corporations not only have close ties with foreign firms, but also have domestic firms as their important partners. Yang Chaojun, etc. Zhao Juan and Wei Zhimin, Mi Jie et al. believe that in order to avoid the risk of technology depreciation and technology spillover and make adequate compensation for technology acquisition costs, OFDI firms need to take the initiative to spread advantageous technologies to domestic firms [
18,
19,
20], which also provides an opportunity for the technological upgrade of domestic firms. Therefore, based on the apparent needs of both sides, this can obtain mutual benefits and win–win results as OFDI firms can spread advantageous technologies to domestic firms actively.
However, some domestic firms seem to be short-sighted. Opportunistic behavior will occur in the adoption of the advantageous technologies of OFDI firms, that is, they will not pay the price of technology transfer, and OFDI firms will pay the full price, which will lead to the short-term relationship between technology diffusion and adoption, it will reduce the initiative of the subsequent technology diffusion of OFDI firms, and also make domestic firms lose the opportunity to quickly implement a technology upgrade. Mi Jie, etc. studied the opportunistic behavior of OFDI firms and domestic firms in the process of knowledge sharing based on evolutionary game theory, and found that factors, such as the knowledge gap and the strength of property protection between the two sides, will have a significant impact on the results of knowledge sharing [
15]. Xiao Hanjie and Wang Hua studied the opportunistic behavior of technology diffusers and technology adopters in the process of cooperation, and found that government pollution regulation and internal reputation loss will influence the strategy choice of both sides [
8]. For developing countries, in order to enhance the knowledge level and innovation ability of domestic firms as soon as possible, and due to the imperfect technology diffusion system, it is inevitable that some firms may implement opportunistic behavior. Therefore, in the cooperation process of technology diffusion and adoption between OFDI firms and domestic firms, the construction of evolutionary game model needs to fully consider compensating for the technology acquisition cost of OFDI firms while avoiding the opportunistic behavior of domestic firms, so as to make the technology diffusion activities sustainable.
We discuss and arrange the existing literature to introduce the basic arguments of this paper on the basis of an induction and summary.
The existing literature is mostly based on empirical methods of studying the problems related to manufacturing OFDI firms, such as the existence and heterogeneity of the reverse technology spillover effect and their influencing factors, but the empirical methods cannot cover all research problems. In fact, the game theory in mathematical modeling has unique advantages for studying certain types of problems under this direction, and the representative problem is the strategy selection problem of finite rational subjects, for example, Zhang Cheng and Zhao Gang [
32] found that the effect of manufacturing OFDI firms’ access to reverse technology spillover depends not only on their own absorption capacity but also on their competitive and cooperative relationship with technology spillover parties. Ye Guangyu and Helipitim Abibullah [
33] found that capital-intensive and labor-intensive firms differ in their OFDI entry mode (cross-border M&A and greenfield investment) choices, and further, Helipitim Abibullah et al. [
34] found that host country capital attraction preferences also have an impact on the choice of OFDI entry strategies for firms with productivity differences. The primary contribution of this paper is to extend the game-related research on the strategy choice of manufacturing OFDI firms as finite rational subjects by constructing an evolutionary game model of three subjects, namely, government, OFDI firms and local firms, and studying the direction and extent to which the strategy choice of the three subjects is influenced by each other’s willingness and other factors, and considering the active role of government as a participation subject. It is found that the government’s strategy choice is the result of a trade-off between benefits and costs, and there is a big difference in the effect of positive and negative governance instruments, and the upper limit of financial support needs to be set on the premise that the government’s willingness to participate is not affected, while the sustainability of punitive measures is relatively stronger.
Based on the game theory approach, the research on manufacturing OFDI firms mostly focuses on two types of topics, one is the game in the process of acquiring overseas superior technology through reverse technology spillover by OFDI firms, such as the entry strategy selection and competitive cooperation game mentioned above; the second is the other strategy selection problems of OFDI firms such as the choice of what innovation strategy can be faster to absorb overseas advantageous technology, and thus, faster to achieve their own technological upgrading. Yang Chaojun et al. [
35] found that the OFDI reverse technology spillover effect, profit feedback, and R&D cost sharing effect have significant effects on the innovation path choice of manufacturing OFDI firms, and the two strategies of independent innovation and imitation innovation have their own advantages under effects with different intensity. It can be seen that there is less research on the game between manufacturing OFDI firms and local manufacturing firms in the existing literature. In a real situation, individual manufacturing firms cannot realize the technological upgrading of the manufacturing industry quickly by carrying out OFDI activities, but the cooperation between manufacturing OFDI firms and upstream and downstream firms can realize the technological upgrading of the whole industry more quickly, spreading over a whole area from one point. The most critical issue is the stable operation of the cooperation system between manufacturing OFDI firms and local manufacturing firms. Mi Jie et al. [
15] found that the necessity of knowledge sharing between OFDI enterprises and local enterprises, and the key to the sustainable operation of the knowledge-sharing mechanism lies in enhancing willingness to share knowledge, inhibiting opportunistic behavior, improving absorption, transformation capacity, and attaching importance to intellectual property protection.
Compared with knowledge sharing between manufacturing OFDI firms and local manufacturing firms, technology diffusion is a more feasible and widespread activity. OFDI firms, as technically superior parties, will only share knowledge with a small number of local enterprises that have unique technical advantages, but technology diffusion and charging corresponding consideration is a more realistic way for local firms to gain the leading technological advantage of OFDI firms. Therefore, this paper investigates the stable operation of the system of technology diffusion of OFDI firms and technology adoption system of local firms under government regulation, and the main findings also confirm this point: OFDI firms and local firms show asymmetry due to the influence of each other’s initial willingness, and local firms show more positive performance, so under both the influence of a disadvantageous position and positive attitude, paying the corresponding attention to adopting advanced technology is faster and more realistic.
Further, most of the existing literature has studied the impact of reverse technology spillover intensity or enterprise absorption capacity on the outcome of OFDI activities, but this paper innovatively combines reverse technology spillover intensity and enterprise absorption capacity to form four combinations of high and low, and finds that under high reverse technology spillover intensity and high enterprise absorption capacity, there is a cyclical movement dilemma in the technology diffusion system when the initial willingness is low. In addition, increasing the protection of property rights of OFDI firms and the punishment for opportunistic behavior of local firms can effectively break this dilemma. Finally, a series of measures are proposed to improve the operational efficiency of the technology diffusion system, such as controlling the pricing of technology transfer, increasing the protection of property rights, and establishing incentives and penalties. To sum up, this paper is an effective extension of the existing research, and some of the findings also provide some references to the stable operation of the OFDI technology diffusion system.
3. Methods
3.1. Evolutionary Game Mechanism of Technology Diffusion
In fact, there is a long-term game relationship between technological diffusion and adoption of OFDI firms and domestic firms. Due to the bounded rationality of firms and the indirect policies of the government, the game between both sides will undergo a long evolutionary process. As a dynamic game method under bounded rationality, evolutionary game theory can help one study the dynamic game behavior of bounded rational groups in the long-term evolution process and the stable state of the final convergence of the system. Therefore, this paper uses evolutionary game theory to study the evolution process of strategy selection of OFDI firms and domestic firms in technology diffusion activities. On this basis, it is of great theoretical and practical significance to analyze the evolution path and influence factors of the technology diffusion system with the participation of the government, in order to improve the efficiency of OFDI firms’ technology diffusion to domestic firms and further improve the innovation ability of domestic firms.
The technology level of OFDI-type manufacturing firms is relatively high, and the technology level of domestic-type manufacturing firms is relatively low. The former will choose to proactively or passively diffuse the superior technology due to the influence of technology competitiveness and technology spillover risk, as well as the strength of property rights protection; the latter will choose to actively or passively adopt the superior technology due to the conflict between long-term and short-term interests. In addition, factors such as initial willingness, technology spillover, absorptive capacity, transfer price, financial support and penalty strength also affect the choice of both parties, while government regulation can achieve the overall optimum of active diffusion by OFDI firms and active adoption by domestic firms. The specific evolutionary mechanism of the sustainable development of technology diffusion in manufacturing firms is shown in
Figure 1.
3.2. Proposition of Evolutionary Game Model of Technology Diffusion
In the process of technological diffusion and adoption, in addition to directly participating in OFDI firms and domestic firms, the government also plays an important role. It is motivating to adjust the behavior of both parties through financial support and punishment, so as to obtain corresponding benefits and avoid potential losses. Based on this, this paper puts forward the following propositions:
In the process of technology diffusion games, the participants are government (G), OFDI firm (M) and domestic firm (E). The government hopes to monitor the behaviors of both parties by formulating financial support and punishment policies to obtain positive social benefits and avoid negative social impacts. OFDI firms hope to realize the expected benefits of technology transfer, so as to make optimal compensation for technology acquisition costs, domestic firms hope to implement advanced technology for production under the premise of controllable technology adoption cost to obtain sufficient income.
The government’s strategy set is (participation, nonparticipation), and its probabilities are x, 1 − x; the strategy set of OFDI firms is (active diffusion, passive diffusion), and their probabilities are y, 1 − y; the strategy set of domestic firms is (positive adoption, negative adoption), and their probabilities are z, 1 − z.
The benefits of OFDI firms in non-proliferation of advantageous technologies are RM, and the benefits of domestic firms in production using original technologies are RE. The transfer price when OFDI firms actively diffuse advantageous technologies is T. The cost of acquiring technologies through foreign direct investment is CM. The property rights protection of OFDI firms when domestic firms adopt opportunistic behaviors is θ. The income obtained by domestic firms from introducing advanced technologies for production is L. The reputation loss caused by opportunistic behaviors to domestic firms is F. The technology spillover coefficient of OFDI firms in passive diffusion is α. The absorptive capacity coefficient of domestic firms is β, and the cost of independent research and development of advanced technology by domestic firms is CE, (0 < θ < 1, 0 < β < 1).
The benefit that the government does not restrict is
RG. When the government participates, the fiscal support for the passive diffusion behavior of OFDI firms is
GM, and the punishment for the passive diffusion behavior is
PM; when the government participates, the financial support for the positive adoption behavior of domestic firms is
GE, and the punishment for the negative adoption behavior is
PE. When OFDI firms actively diffuse and domestic firms actively adopt, the government will acquire positive social benefits A. When OFDI firms passively diffuse and domestic firms passively implement, the negative social impact on the government will be B and when the government does not participate, the benefits and losses of these two situations are
aA and
bB, respectively. The two situations of active diffusion and negative adoption of domestic firms by OFDI firms and passive diffusion and positive adoption of domestic firms also enhance the technology upgrading of domestic firms. However, because it is not the most efficient way, the government will neither obtain positive social performance nor cause a negative social impact, (0 < a < 1, 0 < b < 1, P < G). The model parameters settings and their meanings are shown in
Table 1.
Through
Table 1, we can intuitively see the parameters of the game mechanism for the sustainable development of technology diffusion, and participants include the government, OFDI enterprises and local enterprises. By referring to
Table 1, we can easily understand the tripartite payment formula in various states.
3.3. Construction of Income Matrix
Based on the basic assumptions of the model, this paper analyzes the different strategy choices of the three parties and obtains the tripartite game income matrix of technology diffusion between OFDI firms and domestic firms considering the government’s strategic choice, as shown in
Table 2.
3.3.1. The Ideal Game State with Government Participation
When the government chooses the participation strategy, OFDI firms choose the active diffusion strategy, and domestic firms choose the active adoption strategy, the system reaches the optimal state, the technology acquisition cost of OFDI firms is compensated satisfactorily, domestic firms obtain more benefits by introducing advanced technology for production, and the government obtains positive social benefits by means of regulation. At this time, the government’s income is , the income of OFDI firms is , and that of domestic firms is .
3.3.2. Adverse State of the Gaming System with Government Involvement—Negative Adoption
When the government chooses the participation strategy, OFDI firms choose the active diffusion policy and domestic firms choose the negative adoption strategy, the technology return income of OFDI firms cannot be fully realized, and the degree of income realization relies on OFDI firms’ strength of property right protection. Opportunistic behavior not only saves some technology introduction costs for domestic firms, but also causes losses to their reputation. The government will also punish the opportunistic behavior of domestic firms. At this time, the income of the government is , that of OFDI firms is , and that of domestic firms is .
3.3.3. Adverse State of the Gaming System with Government Involvement—Passive Diffusion
When the government chooses the participation strategy, OFDI firms choose the passive diffusion strategy, and domestic firms choose the active adoption strategy, OFDI firms will choose not to carry out technology diffusion in order to avoid the risk of opportunistic behavior by domestic firms, but it will be affected by unavoidable technology spillover, and the government will also punish behavior that is not conducive to the rapid innovation upgrading of domestic firms. Domestic firms, under the influence of absorbing OFDI firm spillover technology, will carry out technological imitation and innovation to obtain relevant benefits, which will obtain the government’s financial support. At this time, the income of the government is , that of OFDI firms is , and that of domestic firms is .
3.3.4. Worst State of the Gaming System with Government Participation
When the government chooses the participation strategy, OFDI firms choose the passive diffusion strategy and domestic firms choose the passive adoption strategy, the system reaches the worst state. The inaction of both parties will have a negative social impact on the government and will be punished by the government. At this time, the income of the government is , that of OFDI firms is and that of domestic firms is .
3.3.5. The Ideal State of the Gaming System without Government Involvement
When the government chooses the non-participation strategy, OFDI firms choose the active diffusion strategy, and domestic firms choose the active adoption strategy, the government does not provide financial support or punishment for relevant behaviors. OFDI firms and domestic firms independently choose the technology diffusion and adoption behaviors, while the government obtains certain positive social benefits due to free riding behavior. At this time, the government’s income is , the income of OFDI firms is , and that of domestic firms is .
3.3.6. Adverse State of the Gaming System under Government Non-Participation—Negative Adoption
When the government chooses the non-participation strategy, OFDI firms choose the active diffusion strategy and domestic firms choose the negative adoption strategy, due to the lack of government constraints, the enthusiasm of subsequent technology diffusion of the OFDI firms will be affected, which will also encourage the opportunistic behavior tendency of domestic firms. At this time, the income of the government is , that of OFDI firms is and that of domestic firms is .
3.3.7. Adverse State of the Gaming System under Government Non-Participation—Passive Diffusion
When the government chooses a nonparticipation strategy, OFDI firms choose the passive diffusion strategy, and domestic firms choose an active adoption strategy. Due to the lack of government financial support, it will be more difficult for domestic firms to use OFDI firm technology spillover to imitate innovation and acquire the corresponding benefits. At this time, the income of the government is , the income of OFDI firms is , and the benefits of domestic firms is .
3.3.8. Worst State of the Gaming System without Government Participation
When the government chooses the non-participation strategy, OFDI firms choose the passive diffusion strategy and domestic firms choose the negative adoption strategy; the inaction of both parties will also have a certain negative social impact on the government because the government does not carry out the relevant governance. At this time, the income of the government is , that of OFDI firms is and that of domestic firms is .
Through
Table 2, we can intuitively see the eight strategy combinations of the technology diffusion game system, including ideal state, adverse state and worst state, etc. Under different strategy combinations, the income formulas of all parties show obvious differences, indicating that the players of the game have different motivations when making strategy choices. The large difference of income formula lays a good foundation for the subsequent calculation and analysis steps in this paper.
3.4. Construction of Expected Return Function
The income expectation when the government participates
, the income expectation without participation
and the average income expectation
are, respectively:
The expected return of OFDI firms choosing active diffusion strategy in game
, the expected return of passive diffusion strategy
and the average income expectation
are, respectively:
The expected return of domestic firms choosing active adopting strategy in game
, the expected return of passive adopting strategy
and the average income expectation are, respectively:
3.5. Related Replicated Dynamic Equation
The replicated dynamic equation of the government’s choice of the “participation” strategy over time is:
The replicated dynamic equation of the OFDI firm’s choice of the “active diffusion” strategy over time is:
The replicated dynamic equation of the domestic firm’s choice of the “positive adoption” strategy over time is:
By combining Equations (10)–(12),the replicated dynamic system of government, OFDI firms and domestic firm is as follows:
Friedman and Zhang et al. proposed that the evolutionary stability strategy (ESS) of the system can be obtained by analyzing the domestic stability of the Jacobian matrix corresponding to the replicated dynamic system [
36,
37]. In this paper, by making
F(
x) =
F(
y) =
F(
z) = 0, we can obtain eight domestic equilibrium points from the system,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
.
3.6. Equilibrium Point Stability Analysis
Let us first analyze the case where the equilibrium point is
, the Jacobian matrix is:
Three eigenvalues of the matrix can be obtained, and so on. The eigenvalues of all equilibrium points can be seen in
Table 3.
Table 3 shows the eigenvalue matrix of the game system, and the calculation of the eigenvalues lays the foundation for the equilibrium point analysis below. Unlike the two-party game system that uses the determinant and trace judgment of the Jacobi matrix when doing the equilibrium point analysis, the three-party game system uses the sign of the three eigenvalues corresponding to each equilibrium point to make the judgment, which leads to the instability point, saddle point and ESS point in this paper.
In order to facilitate the symbolic analysis of eigenvalues, the following assumptions may be made:
That is, the net income brought by the government’s choice of a participation strategy is greater than that of a non-participation strategy. The net income brought by OFDI firms and domestic firms an choosing active diffusion strategy and an active adoption strategy, respectively is greater than that of a passive diffusion strategy and a passive adoption strategy, respectively.
Table 4 lists the positive and negative eigenvalues of each of the eight equilibrium points of the game system, as well as the properties of equilibrium points. It can be found that ESS appears at different equilibrium points under different circumstances.
Different situations are discussed below:
Situation 1: When and , if , the stable points of the system are and ; if , the stable points of the system are and .
Situation 2: When or , the stable point of the system is .
Situation 3: When and or and , if , the stable point of the system is ; if , the stable points of the system are and .
5. Conclusions
Coordinating the interest relationship between OFDI firms and domestic firms is very important to improve the efficiency of the technology diffusion system. Based on the bounded rationality hypothesis, this paper constructs a tripartite evolutionary game model, including government, OFDI firms, and domestic firms, and analyzes the impact of different parameters on the evolution of the strategy choices of the three parties. The results show the following.
5.1. The Government, OFDI Firms and Domestic Firms Are Impacted by Each Other’s Initial Intentions to Different Degrees
After the government’s willingness to participate rises to a certain extent, its willingness to participate is significantly positively correlated with the willingness of OFDI firms to actively spread and the willingness of domestic firms to actively adopt. However, OFDI firms and domestic firms show asymmetry under the influence of each other’s initial willingness. When OFDI firms have low willingness to actively diffuse, domestic firms also show high willingness to actively adopt at the beginning of the cooperation, while when domestic firms have low willingness to actively adopt, OFDI firms tend to choose passive diffusion strategies. Therefore, the government should upgrade its willingness to participate and strengthen the construction of relevant systems to relieve the worries of OFDI firms’ active diffusion.
5.2. Different Combinations of Technology Spillover and Absorptive Capacity Will Form Different Evolutionary Results
When the technology spillover of OFDI firms and the absorptive capacity of domestic firms exceed a certain threshold, large potential losses will stimulate OFDI firms to choose the active diffusion strategy, and the stronger the technology spillover and absorptive capacity, the more obvious the stimulating effect. At this time, the government needs to prevent the periodic movement dilemma of the technology diffusion system when the initial intention is low under the condition of high technology spillover and high absorption capacity, and strengthen the property rights protection of OFDI firms and the punishment of opportunistic behavior of domestic firms, which can effectively solve this dilemma.
5.3. Reasonable Technology Transfer Pricing and Strengthening Property Rights Protection can Improve the Efficiency of the Technological Diffusion System
Technology transfer pricing is the result of the game between the diffusing party and the adopting party. Too low and too high technology transfer pricing are not conducive to the sustainability of technology diffusion activities, and the higher the protection of property rights, the better. The government should actively perform the function of market supervision, punish unreasonable pricing, and strengthen the protection of property rights on the premise of controllable cost.
5.4. Government Financial Support and Punishment Should Be Controlled within a Reasonable Range
Financial support and punishment measures can promote technology diffusion activities, but excessive financial support will reduce the willingness of the government to participate, and eventually lead to the decline of the sustainability of technology diffusion activities. Therefore, the government needs to strengthen the punishment of passive diffusion and negative adoption, formulate diversified financial support policies on the premise of controllable participation cost, and improve the efficiency of the technology diffusion system by combining positive incentive and negative punishment.
This paper expands the relevant research of manufacturing OFDI enterprises to a certain extent. The relevant research of OFDI based on game theory mainly focuses on two kinds of scenarios; one is the choice of entry strategy of manufacturing enterprises when carrying out OFDI activities; the other is the choice of strategy of manufacturing enterprises after acquiring reverse technology spillovers, such as the choice of innovation path While there are few studies on the connection between OFDI enterprises and local enterprises, the existing literature only examines the sustainability of knowledge-sharing activities between OFDI enterprises and local enterprises. In fact, there is a large strength difference between OFDI enterprises and local enterprises. OFDI enterprises prefer to carry out knowledge-sharing activities with a small number of local enterprises with unique technological advantages, while for the rest of the local enterprises with a large number of homogeneous technologies, OFDI enterprises do not have a strong motivation for cooperation. Therefore, it is more feasible to charge the corresponding consideration for technology diffusion activities. This paper explores the sustainable development of the technology diffusion system between manufacturing OFDI enterprises and local enterprises, and further examines the important role of government regulation in it, connecting the existing literature to a certain extent, and expanding the relevant research on the game of manufacturing OFDI enterprises.
Of course, the research in this paper also has certain limitations, and some problems need to be further explored. For example, the follow-up research can use the mechanism design theory to calculate the specific numerical range of indicators such as technology diffusion pricing. In addition, the technology diffusion system may be affected by other factors or entities that are not considered in this paper. These limitations can be improved through further research in the future.
Finally, the stable operation and sustainable development of OFDI manufacturing enterprises and local enterprises’ technology diffusion system is the subject of this study. Through the above research conclusions, we can find that effective regulation with the participation of the government is an important means to achieve this goal, and the positive signals released can stimulate the good behavior of enterprises, including financial support, to a certain extent, increased punishment for violations, and regulation of technology-transfer pricing. Increasing the protection of property rights is an effective means to ensure sustainable development. At the same time, it is also necessary to pay attention to a special type of technology diffusion dilemma, namely, low willingness to participate under high spillover and high absorptive capacity, and make up for the inherent deficiencies of the system in a multi-pronged way, so as to achieve the stable operation and sustainable development of the technology diffusion system of OFDI enterprises and local enterprises in the manufacturing industry.