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Ecosystems of doing business and living standards: a configurational analysis based on Chinese cities

Jiaxin Li (School of Economics and Management, Southeast University, Nanjing, China)
Yunzhou Du (School of Economics and Management, Southeast University, Nanjing, China)
Ning Sun (School of Economics and Management, Southeast University, Nanjing, China)
Zhimin Xie (School of Management, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications, Nanjing, China)

Chinese Management Studies

ISSN: 1750-614X

Article publication date: 17 August 2023

Issue publication date: 20 November 2024

350

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to explain the causal complexity between ecosystems of doing business and living standards based on the theoretical model of the ecosystem of doing business proposed by Li (2019) and Du et al. (2020). By integrating ecological theory, transaction cost theory and institutional logics theory, this study explored effective ecosystems of doing business that achieve high living standards and explained the interpretive mechanisms behind different ecosystems of doing business. Moreover, this study also analyzed whether there were any necessary elements that lead to high living standards and discussed how the interactions between these elements influence carrying capacity and transaction costs from government logic and market logic, thus affecting living standards.

Design/methodology/approach

In this study, fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) and necessary condition analysis (NCA) were combined to analyze the data from the 2020 China City Statistical Yearbook, covering the main socioeconomic statistical data of cities at all levels in 2019.

Findings

This study found that no individual factor of the ecosystems of doing business was necessary to achieve high living standards, but the high level of human capital, innovation capacity, financial access and market demand play a significant role in achieving high living standards. Furthermore, two effective types of ecosystems of doing business lead to high living standards, namely, market dominance (government’s “invisible hand” or “nudging hand”) and government–market logic mutualism/symbiosis (government’s “helping hand”).

Originality/value

First, this work found that individual elements were not a necessary condition for high living standards, not only in kind but also in degree, complementing fsQCA with NCA, which indicates that environmental elements can be substituted by others. Second, this study considered the complex effects and explained the mechanisms behind different ecosystems of doing business, drawing on ecological theory, transaction cost theory and institutional logics theory from a configurational perspective. This study deepened the theories’ applications in the field of living standards and further discussed the elements interactions. Third, this study introduced configurational perspective and QCA into living standards research and adopted a mixed method that combines fsQCA and NCA to analyze the causal complexity between ecosystems of doing business and people’s living standards.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: The study was supported by Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China 72233001 and General Program of National Science Foundation of China 72072030, 71672033.

Citation

Li, J., Du, Y., Sun, N. and Xie, Z. (2024), "Ecosystems of doing business and living standards: a configurational analysis based on Chinese cities", Chinese Management Studies, Vol. 18 No. 5, pp. 1302-1323. https://doi.org/10.1108/CMS-04-2022-0139

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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