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Research on the Effect and Mechanism of Provincial Construction Land Spatial Agglomeration Empowering Economic Resilience in China

Chengli Yan, Shunchang Zhong () and Jiao Ren
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Chengli Yan: School of Public Finance & Economics, Shanxi University of Finance and Economics, Taiyuan 030006, China
Shunchang Zhong: Institute of Resource Based Economic Transformation and Development, Shanxi University of Finance and Economics, Taiyuan 030006, China
Jiao Ren: Institute of Resource Based Economic Transformation and Development, Shanxi University of Finance and Economics, Taiyuan 030006, China

Land, 2025, vol. 14, issue 9, 1-28

Abstract: Exploring the effects and mechanisms of spatial agglomeration of construction land resources on economic resilience across Chinese provinces will provide theoretical support for governments to optimize the allocation of productive forces and enhance economic resilience through rational distribution of construction land quotas. Based on the “Structure-Conduct-Performance (SCP)” analytical framework, this paper identifies spatial agglomeration through the share of the largest city and draws on the microeconomic concept of “elasticity” that reflects the relationships between variables to construct economic resilience with spatial relationship attributes. On this basis, it utilizes China’s provincial panel data gathered since 2000 and employs fixed-effects models, mediation models, moderation models, quantile regression, and subsample regression to examine the impact mechanisms of the spatial agglomeration of construction land on economic resilience. The research finds the following: the spatial agglomeration of construction land has a positive empowering effect on economic resilience; innovation and technical efficiency are important transmission paths for the spatial agglomeration of construction land to empower economic resilience; and further research shows that the empowering effect has an inverted U-shaped process, with the promoting effect being predominant. The empowering effect increases with rising quantiles and exhibits regional heterogeneity, showing an ascending gradient from eastern to western regions. The basic law in the western region is consistent with that of the whole country, and the scale of provincial construction land will strengthen the empowering effect. The research findings can provide decision-making references for the implementation and deepening of the main functional area strategy, as well as for strengthening the concentrated allocation of construction land quotas to advantageous regions.

Keywords: construction land; resource scarcity; spatial allocation; spatial structure; spatial agglomeration; economic resilience; elasticity (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Q15 Q2 Q24 Q28 Q5 R14 R52 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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