Abstract
This paper investigates the effect of
credit availability on the number of industrial enterprises' patents from the
perspective of financial geography, using the number of bank branches in the
vicinity of industrial enterprises in China as a proxy variable. The number of
patents is a proxy for the innovation output of an enterprise. The study finds
that the higher availability of credit resources, represented by the number of
bank branches in the vicinity, inhibits the innovation output of enterprises,
and this inhibitory effect is more obvious in state-owned enterprises and large
enterprises. Higher availability of credit resources leads industrial firms to
fall more easily into the resource curse trap and thus fail to gain more
innovative capabilities. This paper also provides a theoretical and data base
for China's inability to complete industrial upgrading; it provides new
evidence for the phenomenon of insufficient innovation capacity of industrial
enterprises under China's rapid economic development in recent years; and it
also provides a policy reference for financial supply reform.
Keywords: Availability of
credit resources, Innovation output, Financial geography.