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Article

Quantifying the Competitiveness of Cultural Industry and Its Impacts on Chinese Economic Growth

1
Faculty of Economics, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand
2
Center of Excellence in Econometrics, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand
3
Department of Economics, Shandong University of Finance and Economics, Jinan 250014, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 21 November 2022 / Revised: 15 December 2022 / Accepted: 16 December 2022 / Published: 21 December 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Renewable Energy Consumption and Economic Growth)

Abstract

:
One potential way to promote China’s economic growth is to develop a cultural industry and enhance its competitiveness. To confirm this hypothesis, this study first utilizes the five-element diamond model, principal component analysis, and factor analysis to evaluate the competitiveness of the cultural industry in the 31 Chinese provinces during the period 2013–2019. The results reveal that the competitiveness of cultural industry in the eastern region is the strongest, followed in descending order by the central, northeastern, and western regions of China. Then, the panel regression is employed to explore the impact of the cultural industry’s competitiveness index on economic growth. The results indicate that the cultural industry’s competitiveness is positively associated with China’s economic growth. We also conduct another panel regression analysis by examining the impact of cultural industry factors on China’s economic growth to gain insight into the influence of the cultural industry components on growth. In this analysis, our results indicate that cultural industry factors, including fixed asset investment and labor, significantly play an important role in Chinese growth. This study also finds that total patent applications, the total profit of cultural enterprises, and government expenditure positively impact economic growth, but the evidence is weak. Thus, these three variables could be considered potential future driver factors. The empirical findings offer insights into strategies that the national government could implement to strengthen the cultural industry’s competitiveness as China’s new powerful driver of economic development. Compared with previous empirical studies, this research deepens the competitive cultural analysis, increases the number of observations, and lengthens the period studied.

1. Introduction

Under the integration of culture and science and technology backgrounds in the digital era, the cultural and creative industries foster income generation, exports, and employment, and have become major drivers of the economic prosperity of many countries worldwide [1]. The United Nations [2] considers the creative economy as “a significant sector and a meaningful contributor to national gross domestic product.” In 2019, China’s culture and related industries generated an added value of 4501.6 billion-yuan, accounting for 4.54% of GDP, which indicates that the cultural industry, as an emerging industry with broad prospects, is a new driving force for economic growth. The fifth plenary session of the 17th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China proposed promoting the cultural industry to become a pillar industry of the national economy. Furthermore, in the report of the Nineteenth National Congress of the Communist Party of China, General Secretary Xi Jinping emphasized that it is necessary to advance the development of the cultural industry, improve the cultural management system, and build a mechanism that integrates social and economic benefits. The cultural industry creates the possibility for optimizing industrial structure, reconstructing regional economic patterns, and accelerating the transformation of the economic development mode.
The achievements of China’s cultural industry in recent years are mainly reflected in the diverse cultural goods, cultural serviceability, reformation of the cultural system, internal cultural exploration, and external cultural communication. Li [3] pointed out that the cultural and creative industries will provide a new path for the sustainable and healthy development of the economy and society, and get the economic transformation from “Made in China” to “Created in China” realized. The latest 14th five-year plan expounded the tasks of developing advanced socialist culture and enhancing the country’s cultural soft power. The strengthening of China’s cultural soft power will dedicate to the Two Centenary Goals and the Chinese Dream of the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation [4]. The core issue of the development of the cultural industry is to improve its competitiveness [5]. The competitiveness of the cultural industry is an essential part of a country’s international competitiveness, which refers to the ability of a country or a regional cultural enterprise’s products and services to develop and occupy the market in world and obtain profits. The cultural and creative industries demonstrate a country’s economic growth and have become a critical strategy for enhancing the core competitiveness of the national economies [6]. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of the interaction between the cultural industry’s competitiveness and economic growth is crucial. The present study aims to identify the competitiveness of the cultural industry and its impact on economic growth by using a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods. Based on Porter’s five-factor diamond model, this paper constructs an evaluation index system of the cultural industry and uses principal component analysis and factor analysis to evaluate the competitiveness of the cultural industry in 31 provinces of China from 2013 to 2019. Subsequently, the panel regression models are adopted to analyze the influence of the competitiveness index and relevant factors on economic growth.
Domestic and international experts and scholars have obtained some good research outcomes on the issues of the cultural industry’s competitiveness and the relationship between the cultural industry and economic growth [7,8,9,10]. They advocated some indexes to evaluate the competitiveness of the cultural industry and analyze its characteristics. However, there is a certain subjectivity, one-sidedness, and superficiality in the selection of indicators for evaluating the competitiveness of the cultural industry. Moreover, there is little data to support the conclusion that the cultural industry’s competitiveness positively affects economic growth. This paper selects the evaluation indicators of the cultural industry’s competitiveness with a systematic, dynamic, and operable principle. By quantifying the qualitative data to obtain the cultural industry’s competitiveness index and putting it into regression analysis, the relationship between the cultural industry’s competitiveness and economic growth can be fully explained and understood. This analysis can be used by decision-makers in crafting policies around the cultural industry to give full play to its leading role in the overall economic environment and coordinate the development of various regions in China.

2. Literature Review

In recent years, research on the development of the cultural industry has mainly focused on policy and management, the influence of new technologies, workforce size, and the competitiveness of the cultural industry from the perspective of countries, regions, and enterprises. Many studies have shown that in Asian countries, such as Singapore, Japan, the Republic of Korea, and China, the policies on the cultural industry and creative industry are key to their national development and attach importance to the role of national cultural characteristics and the creativity of cultural production [11,12,13,14]. The specialization of the cultural industry is inseparable from the support of technology and talents. For example, Bujor and Avsilcai [15] explored the contribution of technology to the creative industries at the European Union level and pointed out that creative tech (IT and Software and Computer Services) can continually help them to develop and to cope with market demands. Nathan et al. [16] compared creative economies in the United States of America and the United Kingdom by using the creative trident framework and found that the UK creative economy is larger in workforce shares, while the US creative workers are more evenly dispersed across all industries. Moreover, the cultural industry’s competitiveness can affect various sectors of the economy and create shared-value benefits is no longer debatable. Michael Porter’s diamond model is the most widely used among the evaluation models of the cultural industry’s competitiveness. Harabi [17] used Porter’s diamond model to explain the economic performance of four creative industries (book publishing, music sound recording, film production, and software industries) in five Arab countries (Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon). Chen et al. [18] applied the six-element diamond model to study the competitiveness of the cultural and creative industries in China and put forward suggestive thinking on improving the competitiveness of the 18 provinces and cities along the “Belt and Road”. The competitiveness of the sub-industries of the cultural industry also attracts the attention of scholars. For instance, Einarsson [19] described the competitive position of the music industry as music being a part of the cultural and creative industries in Iceland by adopting Porter’s five forces model.
The cultural industry is expanding and reforming alongside the digital economy, which is more flexible with the downward economic pressures. Based on the understanding of the cultural industry’s commercial and ideological value, scholars and researchers have achieved certain results on the relationship between it and economic growth. Montalto, et al. [20] presented an econometric model that revealed the positive impact of the cultural and creative industries on the GDP per inhabitant, and the share of cultural employment in total employment on cultural consumption expenditure. Piergiovanni et al. [21] explored the impact of a series of factors, including creativity, intellectual property rights activities, new business formation, and the provision of amenities, on economic growth for 103 Italian provinces. Findings showed an increase in the number of firms active in the creative industries, net entry, a greater provision of leisure amenities, and the share of legal immigrants have a positive effect on regional economic growth. Daubaraitė and Startienė [22] discussed the impact of creative industries on the Lithuanian national economy by creating jobs, contributing to GDP, and enlarging exports. Correa-Quezada et al. [23] evaluated the impact of employment in creative industries on the regional and national economic growth of Ecuador. The main findings showed a significant influence of creative employment on regional production and development. In addition, domestic scholars not only further verified the promotion of economic growth by the cultural industry but also underlined the importance of investment scale, human capital, and innovation. Lu [24] found a significant positive correlation between China’s cultural industry investment and economic growth by using cointegration analysis, error correction model, Granger causality test, and vector autoregression (VAR) model. Wang and Gu [25] stated that the development of the cultural industry has significantly promoted the economic growth of the Yangtze River Delta region, and the stock of human capital and the scale of capital inflow will affect the growth effect of the cultural industry. Li and Liu [26] noticed that the cultural industry has a relatively significant impact on economic growth, especially the driving role of the tertiary industry, and emphasized the significance of cultural industry innovation to economic growth. The research on the relationship between cultural industry and economic growth has gradually attracted the attention of scholars. However, the competitiveness of a country or an industry is a complex concept that cannot be measured directly and requires extensive efforts for data collection [27,28]. As far as we are aware, there has not been a study that relates competitiveness of cultural industry and economic growth for China. Furthermore, the competitiveness of cultural industry has not been established yet, thus, this study aims to fill in this gap by building cultural industry competitiveness index (CI) using principal component analysis and factor analysis. Then, CI and other control variables are included in the panel regression analysis, which provides a more comprehensive and accurate method than using only a few indicators representing the cultural industry for investigating the impact of the cultural industry as a whole on economic growth. Moreover, the relevant factors of cultural industry are included in the second round of the panel regression analysis, which will benefit grasping the role of various factors in the economies and point out the further direction of cultural industry development and industrial structure adjustment.

3. Data

The data are retrieved from the National Bureau of Statistics of China [29], CNKI database [30], China statistical yearbooks of culture and related industries [31], China statistical yearbooks of cultural relics and tourism [32], China statistical yearbooks of the tertiary industry [33], China statistical yearbooks of science and technology [34], and provincial statistical yearbooks [35].
The research sample consists of China’s 31 provinces: Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Fujian, Jiangxi, Shandong, Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Chongqing, Sichuan, Guizhou, Yunnan, Tibet, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Ningxia, and Xinjiang. The period of the analysis covers 7 years, from 2013 to 2019. According to Porter’s five-element diamond model, the evaluation framework of China’s cultural industry’s competitiveness is constructed. Table 1 shows the index system, which contains 5 first-level indicators, 11 second-level indicators, and 15 third-level indicators.
Furthermore, the data in panel regression analysis consist of gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate, competitiveness index of cultural industry, total investment in fixed assets, number of employed persons, and the R&D expenditure input intensity. The list of variables used in this study is displayed in Table 2.

4. Research Methodology

4.1. The Competitiveness Index Calculation Method

4.1.1. Porter’s Diamond Model

Porter [36] proposed the diamond model as an analytical framework for building and enhancing the competitive advantage in particular industries. Porter suggested that factor conditions, demand conditions, related and supporting industries, and firm strategy, structure, and rivalry as a system constitute diamonds of national advantage. Moreover, the role of the government and chance also have exogenous influences on the playing field that each nation establishes and operates for its industries (Figure 1). Under the combined action of these determinants, the development of the industries’ competitiveness can be effectively promoted. According to Porter’s diamond model, the cultural industry competitiveness evaluation system is constructed, and principal component analysis and factor analysis are used to calculate the cultural industry competitiveness index (CI) in this study.

4.1.2. Principal Component Analysis

Principal component analysis is a common statistical method of dimensionality reduction, which transforms numerous variables into several new comprehensive variables and minimizes the loss of information at the same time. Generally, these new variables result from linear weighted combinations of the original variables, known as principal components. The principal components are not related to each other and account for much of the variance among the initial variables. The principal components are ordered according to the amount of variation in the original variables they explain. Therefore, the variance of the first principal component is the largest and contains the most information. The variance of the second principal component is less than that of the first, and the covariance between the second principal component and the first principal component is 0, which means that these two components are completely uncorrelated. Subsequent components can also be constructed in this way. This paper uses principal component analysis to reduce the dimension of the data space studied, and principal components are extracted for subsequent CI calculation.

4.1.3. Factor Analysis

Factor analysis is a statistical technique used to reduce the number of variables and to identify underlying representative factors, which can detect structure in relationships between relevant variables [37]. There are four basic steps for calculating the CI: assessing the suitability of the data used, determining factor extraction, rotational method, and constructing factor scores and the CI. Firstly, the Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin (KMO) Measure of Sampling Adequacy and Bartlett’s Test of Sphericity are common methods to detect whether the data are suitable for factor analysis. A KMO index close to 1.0 is considered ideal, while an index below 0.5 is not acceptable. The p-value of Bartlett’s Test of Sphericity that corresponds to the test statistic is less than some significance level (like = 0.05), which indicates that the data are suitable for factor analysis. Secondly, the method of principal component analysis is used to calculate the cumulative percentage of variance and factor load. According to the criteria of cumulative percentage of variance >85% and the characteristic root >1, factor extraction is determined. Thirdly, the factor rotation method is used to produce more interpretable and concise factors, which provides a solution for the naming and meaning of factors. The varimax rotation maximizes the sum of the variances of the factor-squared loadings and produces uncorrelated factor structures [38]. Finally, the factor score coefficient matrix is obtained by regression algorithm, which is used to calculate the score of each factor, and the CI is obtained by taking the variance contribution rate of each factor after the rotation as the weight [18]. The factor score equation can be presented as:
FS kt = p = 1 n a pt x pt
where FS kt is the kth factor score in year t, a pt is the factor score coefficient in year t, x pt is the pth initial variable in year t, and n is the number of initial variables.
The equation of the CI is presented as:
CI it = b kt FS kt
where CI it is the competitiveness index of province i in year t, b kt is the contribution rate of the variance of the kth factor in year t, and FS kt is the score of the kth factor in year t.

4.2. Panel Regression Models

This paper investigates the impact of the cultural industry’s competitiveness and relevant factors on China’s economic growth. The following two panel regression models are employed:
Model 1:
lnGDP it = θ 0 + θ 1 lnCI it + θ 2 lnInv it + θ 3 lnEP it + θ 4 lnRDE it + ε it
where GDP it is the gross domestic product growth rate of province i in year t, CI it is the competitiveness index of cultural industry of province i in year t, Inv it is total investment in fixed assets of province i in year t, EP it is the number of employed persons of province i in year t, RDE it is R&D expenditure input intensity of province i in year t, θ 0 is the intercept, θ 1 , θ 2 , θ 3 , θ 4 are the coefficients, and ε it is the error term.
Model 2:
lnGDP it = β 0 + β 1 lnX 1 it + β 2 lnX 2 it + β 3 lnX 3 it + β 4 lnX 4 it + β 5 lnX 5 it + β 6 lnX 6 it + β 7 lnX 7 it + β 8 lnX 8 it + β 9 lnX 9 it + β 10 lnX 10 it + β 11 lnX 11 it + β 12 lnX 12 it + β 13 lnX 13 it + ε it
where X1it, X2it,…, X13it are the relevant factors of the cultural industry of province i in year t. β1, β2,…, β13 are the coefficients corresponding to 13 indicators X1, X2,…, X13. β0 is the intercept, and ε it is the error term. The observations of panel data analysis involve two dimensions: a cross-sectional dimension and a time series dimension [39]. Consequently, panel data contain more information, more variability, and more efficiency to better analyze the relationship between the cultural industry’s competitiveness and economic growth. In Model 1, this paper’s most concerned independent variable is the cultural industry competitiveness index (CI), which is obtained through principal component analysis and factor analysis. The selection of other independent variables is based on the endogenous growth theory. After analyzing how CI affects China’s economic growth, there are still some deficiencies in investigating the impact of a certain indicator of cultural industry on economic growth. Therefore, the first 13 indicators in the cultural industry index system as independent variables are selected in Model 2 to discuss this issue. These 13 indicators represent the cultural industry’s relevant factors, including X1, X2, X3, X4, X5, X6, X7, X8, X9, X10, X11, X12, and X13. As X14 and X15 represent related and supporting industrial factors, they are not considered here. The negative values in X12 are replaced by 1, and their logarithm is taken.
Before setting and estimating the panel data regression model, evaluating the stationarity of the variables involved is necessary. Methods of Levin, Lin, and Chu [40] and the Augmented Dickey-Fuller [41] are used to test the null hypothesis that a unit root is present in the variables. In the panel regression analysis, F-test, Breusch-Pagan Lagrange Multiplier test, and Hausman test are used to make the selection among pooled regression model, fixed effects model, or random effects model [42,43,44].

5. Empirical Research

5.1. The Evaluation of the Competitiveness of China’s Cultural Industry

5.1.1. Data Pre-Processing

The Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin (KMO) and Bartlett’s tests are used to observe the correlation between selected variables from 2013 to 2019. The KMO values for the years from 2013 to 2019 are 0.807, 0.796, 0.833, 0.765, 0.792, 0.807 and 0.728, respectively. Moreover, Table 3 shows that all p-values of Bartlett’s sphericity test are less than 0.05 for 2013–2019, indicating that the null hypothesis is rejected. This means that the selected data are suitable for factor analysis.

5.1.2. Principal Component Analysis

We perform principal component analysis to calculate a composite competitiveness index (CI) based on the selected indicators related to China’s cultural and related industry (X1–X15). The results are reported in Table 4, and we find that the first three components are the main components according to the standard of the characteristic root greater than 1. Moreover, the cumulative contribution rates from 2013 to 2019 have reached 87.463%, 87.162%, 89.398%, 88.386%, 89.293%, 87.902%, and 85.694%, respectively, indicating the three principal components can express most of the relevant information of the original 15 variables. This paper records the labels of the three principal components as F1, F2, and F3.

5.1.3. Factor Analysis

The three principal components, F1, F2, and F3, obtained from principal component analysis can be used as the main factors in factor analysis to comprehensively evaluate the competitiveness of China’s cultural industry. Moreover, the three principal components of a certain year correspond to the comprehensive evaluation score of that year. After factor analysis, the significance of the factor load of 15 variables in the component matrix is not obvious, and it cannot give a reasonable explanation for the relationship between the three factors and variables. Through the method of orthogonal rotation of the maximum variance, Table 5 shows that the rotated component matrix from 2013 to 2019 is obtained, which can make each factor have a high load only corresponding to a few variables, and each variable has a high load only on a few factors. The main factor F1 has a larger load value on the core of the cultural industry’s competitiveness. The main factor F2 has a larger load value on the relevant resources of the cultural industry. The main factor F3 has a larger load value on the demand market of the cultural industry. Therefore, the naming of factors can be reasonably explained: F1 is the core competition factor, F2 is the resource competition factor and F3 is the demand competition factor.
Then, the factor score coefficients are substituted into Equation (1), and the scores of each main factor in 2013–2019 are obtained. Finally, taking the contribution rate of the variance of each factor as the weight, the comprehensive scores of the competitiveness of the cultural industry of 31 provinces in China from 2013 to 2019 are calculated by Equation (2), and the CI and rankings are shown in Table 6. In Table 6, it is clear that the comprehensive score reflects the competitiveness level of the cultural industry in 31 provinces of China from 2013 to 2019. If the score of a certain province is greater than 0, it indicates that its competitiveness level is above the national average level for that year.
In China, there are great differences in the competitiveness level of the cultural industry in 31 provinces, which is basically in agreement with the conclusions of many studies on China’s cultural industry competitiveness evaluation [45,46,47]. The top provinces in 2013–2019 are mostly located in eastern China, which indicates that economic development has laid the foundation for competitiveness in the cultural industry. The eastern region has considerable advantages in talent, capital, technology, and information and has a large market consumer group [48]. The cultural industry competitiveness of central and northeastern China’s provinces is at a medium level and has great development potential. There are still quite a few problems in the development of the cultural industry in the central and northeastern regions, for example, an unreasonable input–output structure, weak cultural brand awareness, lack of regional development linkage, and lack of supporting competition and management mechanisms [49,50]. In recent years, the national policy has been inclined toward western China, and its economic strength has been greatly improved. However, compared with the eastern, central, and northeastern regions, the development potential of cultural industry in western China needs to be further developed. Hu and Ma [51] pointed out that cultivating characteristic culture, improving cultural industry infrastructure construction, and breaking ethnic and religious segregation are conducive to accelerating the development of cultural industry in the western region.

5.2. Analysis of the Impact of the Competitiveness Index of Cultural Industry on China’s Economic Growth

5.2.1. Results of Panel Unit Roots Test

Table 7 reports the results of the panel unit roots test in the level variables. The null hypothesis of the Levin, Lin and Chu test and ADF tests are rejected at the 1% significance level for all variables. Therefore, all variables are stationary at the level. In addition, we also examine the correlation among the independent variables in the first analysis in order to multicollinearity problem. The result is reported in Table 8, and we observe that the independent variables are low correlated (less than 0.70). Hence, we could conclude that there is no multicollinearity in our model.

5.2.2. Model Comparison and Results

Table 9 shows the parameter estimates of the pooled regression, fixed effects model, and random effects model. In the current research, the F-test, BP-test, and Hausman test are used for selection between the pooled regression, fixed effects model, and random effects model. From Table 10, it can be seen that the fixed effects model is more suitable for this study.
According to the fixed effects model in Table 9, the competitiveness index of the cultural industry (CI) contributed to economic growth significantly (p-Value < 0.001). If the competitiveness index of the cultural industry (CI) increases by 1%, GDP will increase by 8.1024%, on average. When the cultural industry is more competitive, it will have a considerable impact on economic growth. However, it is found that the purchase of newly produced fixed capital (Inv) has a significant and negative impact on the Chinese economy. This implies that the purchase of newly produced fixed capital did not play an essential role in increasing growth levels in China during 2013–2019. It could have decreased growth. The possible reason for explaining this result is due to the low technology absorption capacity and the low level of human capital in China. This conclusion is corroborated by Curwin and Mahutga [52], who suggested that the penetration of FDI reduces economic growth in the short and long term in socialist countries. In recent years, the steady growth of China’s economy is no longer driven mainly by investment but by the development of knowledge-intensive and high-tech industries to achieve sustainable economic growth. Zhang and Yao [53] discussed the reasons that fixed asset investment had not played an important role in explaining China’s economic growth since the beginning of the 21st century.
In terms of the control variables, we find that the number of the labor force cannot help to increase GDP in China under the current situation as the demographic dividend gradually disappears. Chen [54] found that the workforce size has no significant effect on China’s economic growth but suggested that the quality of the labor force is more important. Similarly, research and development is not found to have a significant influence on economic growth

5.3. Analysis of the Impact of Cultural Industry Factors on China’s Economic Growth

In addition, to gain more information on the cultural industry ‘s impact on growth, 13 sub-competitiveness indexes of the cultural industry, presented in Table 1, are used to estimate their impacts on Chinese growth. This enables us to explore the key driver of China’s economic growth.

5.3.1. Results of Panel Unit Roots Test (Second Analysis)

Again, the panel unit root tests of LLC and ADF and correlation tests are also used to examine the stationary and correlation among 13 sub-competitiveness indexes. The results of these tests are reported in Table 11 and Table 12, respectively. The results show that all panel variables are stationary at the level, and there is weak correlation among the independent variables, as the correlations of all pairs are lower than 0.75.

5.3.2. Model Comparison and Results (Second Analysis)

The parameter estimates of the pooled regression, fixed effects model, and random effects model are shown in Table 13. The comparison method is the same as that of the previous panel regression. The results in Table 14 suggest that the fixed effects estimation is preferred and is used for the discussion. The robustness results of the fixed effects estimation is also confirmed in Table A1.
According to Table 13, the fixed effects model shows evidence that the estimated coefficients of Fixed Asset Investment in Culture (X1), labor in Cultural Enterprises (X2), Total Collections in Public Libraries (X4), Proportion of Tertiary Industry in Gross Regional Product (X5), Per Capita Consumption and Expenditure on Culture and Recreation of Nationwide Households (X6), and Users of Cable Radios and TVs (X8) are significant (p-Value < 0.10).
The results show that the labor of cultural enterprises is a driver of economic growth Indicating that an increase in investment and labor enhance growth in the long run. This should not be surprising. Research in growth theories, such as Solow growth [55] and endogenous growth theories [56], provides evidence that investment and labor are the most important long-term source of economic growth [57]. However, it seems that total cultural collections, tertiary industry, consumption and expenditure, and the number of cable radios and TVs users are not likely to boost Chinese economic growth.
According to the above results, the evolution of an industry cannot rely on only some factors, so improving industrial competitiveness and optimizing industrial structure is key to the development of China’s cultural industry. Increasing fixed investment and labor in the cultural industry not only gives full play to the potential advantages of the cultural industry but also helps to promote China’s economic growth.
Finally, when we consider other insignificant variables, we observe that Total Patent Applications Granted on Culture and Related Industries (X10), Total Profit of Cultural Enterprises (X12), and Expenditure for Culture, Sport, and Media of Regional Government Revenue (X13) show weak evidence of positive impact on the Chinese economy. Despite their insignificant effect on growth, we may view them as a potential factor in the future.

6. Conclusions

The evaluation of the competitiveness of cultural industries and its impact on Chinese economic growth remains neglected in the literature. Although Fu, Song, and He [8] and Wu, Xu, and Chen [9] have attempted to evaluate cultural industry competitiveness in Tianjin and Guifeng, there is a certain subjectivity, one-sidedness, and superficiality in the selection of indicators for evaluating the competitiveness of the cultural industry. Additionally, their evaluation is limited at the provincial level. Moreover, there is little data to support the conclusion that the cultural industry’s competitiveness positively affects economic growth. To fill this gap, this study selects the evaluation indicators of the cultural industry’s competitiveness with a systematic, dynamic, and operable principle. The present study conducts a comprehensive evaluation of the competitiveness of cultural industries in 31 provinces in China using the period 2013–2019 and also adds another research value by investigating the influence of cultural industry competitiveness, as well as its relevant factors, on economic growth in China.
The following conclusions can be drawn from the present study based on the current empirical findings. Firstly, the main outcome of this research is additional evidence that suggests a new cultural industry’s competitiveness index, which could be added to the cultural literature [58]. We find that provinces in eastern China, such as Guangdong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Shanghai, are more competitive in the cultural industry, and 31 provinces have a large gap in the competitiveness level of the cultural industry. Secondly, the competitiveness of the cultural industry is found to be an important factor in China’s economic growth, according to the fixed effects model. The result is consistent with the research of Ager and Brückner [58] and Bălan and Vasile [59], who revealed a positive impact of culture on the economic growth of the US and Romania, respectively. The second analysis of panel regression estimation shows that investment and labor in cultural industries are the key drivers of Chinese GDP growth. This implies that the investment and labor of the cultural industry are not only the key to enhancing its competitiveness but also play an influential role in economic growth. This result is in line with Solow growth [55] and endogenous growth theories [56].
However, the development of the cultural industry in China continues to have problems, such as insufficient capital investment, lack of professional talents, weak innovation ability, and imperfect management mechanisms. It is particularly urgent to accelerate industrial restructuring and upgrading. To transform the development mode of the cultural industry and cultivate its core competitiveness, an open, competitive, and orderly cultural market system needs to be established. It is necessary to give full play to the government’s public service functions to promote the prosperity of the cultural market and improve the legalization of the management of the cultural market.
The recommendations for promoting the development of China’s cultural industry are put forward from four aspects: investment and trade, technology, creativity, and talent. Firstly, enhancing the effectiveness and guidance of financial and cultural investment can attract overseas capital and other social capital into the cultural industry. China should also actively explore the international cultural market and participate in the competition to adapt to the changes in cultural consumption in the market economy. Secondly, information technology promotes the diversification of cultural product dissemination methods and the intellectualization of cultural management. To achieve the goal of the high-quality development of the cultural industry, China should improve technological innovation capabilities and expand the supply of cultural products and services. Thirdly, enhancing the innovation and competitiveness of cultural products can be possible by developing cultural and creative products with Chinese style, promoting the creative transformation of Chinese traditional culture, and thus functioning the cultural industry’s social and economic benefits. Finally, talents are the leading force for the transformation of cultural resources into cultural productivity; that is, the construction of cultural industry is essentially the construction of knowledge and high-value-added human resources products. Therefore, China should recognize the importance and urgency of cultivating artistic and managerial talents in the cultural industry. Local governments and higher education sectors should formulate talent training layout plans for the cultural industry and actively connect industrial resources to integrate learning and research with further access to the level of production and applications.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, P.M.; methodology, L.Y., P.M., J.L. and W.Y.; software, L.Y. and J.L.; validation, L.Y., P.M. and W.Y.; formal analysis, L.Y. and P.M.; investigation, L.Y., P.M. and W.Y.; resources, L.Y.; data curation, L.Y.; writing—original draft preparation, L.Y.; writing—review and editing, P.M. and W.Y. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The financial support for this work is provided by the Center of Excellence in Econometrics, Chiang Mai University and the China-ASEAN High-Quality Development Research Center in Shandong University of Finance and Economics.

Data Availability Statement

Data presented in this study are available on request from the corresponding author.

Acknowledgments

We would like to express our gratitude to Laxmi Worachai for her help and constant support to us. We would like to thank the Center of Excellence in Econometrics, Chiang Mai University and the China-ASEAN High-Quality Development Research Center in Shandong University of Finance and Economics for financial support.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

To confirm the robustness results of our study, we perform the joint test for normality on error, Modified Wald test for Heteroscedasticity, and Wooldridge Autocorrelation test. Our results are reported in Table A1 and we confirm that there are no problems of heteroscedasticity, autocorrelation, and non-normality error in our estimation results of fixed effects models in Table 9 and Table 13. In addition, we show that country and time fixed effects has a lower AIC when compared to time fixed effects and country fixed effects.
Table A1. Robustness check of fixed effects models.
Table A1. Robustness check of fixed effects models.
Robustness CheckFirst AnalysisSecond Analysis
Fixed effects (time)AIC = 3.6930AIC = 3.1254
Fixed effects (country)AIC = 3.8490AIC = 3.0192
Joint test for Normality on error term χ 2 = 2.9324 χ 2 = 1.6423
Modified Wald test for Heteroscedasticity χ 2 = 3.0024 χ 2 = 3.3001
Wooldridge Autocorrelation test F = 2.3849 F = 1.9384

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Figure 1. The Porter’s Diamond Model.
Figure 1. The Porter’s Diamond Model.
Sustainability 15 00079 g001
Table 1. China’s cultural and related industry competitiveness evaluation index.
Table 1. China’s cultural and related industry competitiveness evaluation index.
First Level IndicatorSecond Level IndicatorThird Level IndicatorUnitSource
Factor ConditionsCapital elementX1: Fixed Asset Investment in Culture, Sports and Entertainment Industry100 million yuanThe tertiary industry
Labor elementX2: Labor in Cultural EnterprisespersonCulture and related industries
Cultural elementsX3: Number of Collections in Museumspiece/setCulture and related industries
X4: Total Collections in Public Libraries10,000 copiesCulture and related industries
Demand
Conditions
Industrial structureX5: Proportion of Tertiary Industry in Gross Regional Product%Culture and related industries
Consumer behaviorX6: Per Capita Consumption and Expenditure on Culture and Recreation of Nationwide HouseholdsyuanCulture and related industries
Firm Strategy,
Structure and
Rivalry
Operations and managementX7: Number of Cultural EnterprisesnumberCulture and related industries
X8: Users of Cable Radios and TVs10,000 householdsCulture and related industries
X9: Total Assets of Cultural Market Operating Institutions1000 yuanCultural relics and tourism
Innovation capacityX10: Total Patent Applications Granted on
Culture and Related Industries
pieceCulture and related industries
ProfitabilityX11: Total Revenue of Cultural Enterprises10,000 yuanCulture and related industries
X12: Total Profit of Cultural Enterprises10,000 yuanCulture and related industries
Government Action, Opportunity and
Advantage
Fiscal expenditureX13: Expenditure for Culture, Sport and Media of Regional Government Revenue100 million yuanCulture and related industries
Related and Supporting IndustriesTourismX14: Earnings from International TourismUSD MillionCulture and related industries
Information service industryX15: Number of Regional Internet Broadband Users10,000 householdsThe tertiary industry
Notes: X2, X11, and X12 represent the sum of data related to cultural industrial enterprises, cultural wholesale and retail trades enterprises, and cultural services enterprises above the designated size, respectively. The data sources are the China statistical yearbooks, and the names are listed in the table.
Table 2. The list of panel regression variables.
Table 2. The list of panel regression variables.
VariablesDescriptionUnitSource
GDPThe year-over-year change in a region’s economic output%CNKI
CIThe competitiveness level of cultural industry in various regionsnumberown calculation
InvThe purchase of newly produced fixed capital100 million yuanNational Bureau of Statistics of China
EPThe number of people engaged in productive activities in an economy10,000 personsChina provincial statistical yearbooks
RDER&D expenditure as a percentage of gross domestic product%China statistical yearbooks of science and technology
Table 3. KMO and Bartlett test results.
Table 3. KMO and Bartlett test results.
2013201420152016201720182019
Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin Measure of Sampling Adequacy.0.8070.7960.8330.7650.7920.8070.728
Bartlett’s Test of SphericityApprox. Chi-Square722.965724.527748.146726.322727.374707.013746.092
p-Value0.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.000
Table 4. Total variance explained before and after rotation.
Table 4. Total variance explained before and after rotation.
ComponentInitial EigenvaluesExtraction Sums of Squared LoadingsRotation Sums of Squared Loadings
TotalVariance%Cumulative
%
TotalVariance%Cumulative
%
TotalVariance%Cumulative
%
201319.88365.88465.8849.88365.88465.8846.88045.86845.868
21.97613.17179.0541.97613.17179.0543.86925.79371.661
31.2618.40987.4631.2618.40987.4632.37015.80187.463
201419.84665.64365.6439.84665.64365.6437.01646.77446.774
22.06213.74979.3912.06213.74979.3913.52223.47870.253
31.1667.77087.1621.1667.77087.1622.53616.90987.162
201519.74664.97364.9739.74664.97364.9737.48449.89649.896
22.56017.06482.0372.56017.06482.0373.37622.50672.402
31.1047.36189.3981.1047.36189.3982.54916.99689.398
201619.58163.87263.8729.58163.87263.8727.23048.20248.202
22.51416.75980.6312.51416.75980.6313.04320.28968.492
31.1637.75588.3861.1637.75588.3862.98419.89488.386
201719.59263.94963.9499.59263.94963.9497.52950.19150.191
22.62217.48381.4322.62217.48381.4323.05020.33470.524
31.1797.86189.2931.1797.86189.2932.81518.76989.293
201819.37262.47762.4779.37262.47762.4777.63550.90050.900
22.56317.08979.5662.56317.08979.5662.80018.66569.566
31.2508.33687.9021.2508.33687.9022.75018.33687.902
201919.15861.05661.0569.15861.05661.0567.55550.36850.368
22.44016.27077.3262.44016.27077.3262.75818.38468.752
31.2558.36885.6941.2558.36885.6942.54116.94285.694
Table 5. Rotated component matrix.
Table 5. Rotated component matrix.
VariableComponentVariableComponentVariableComponent
123123123
2013X20.9260.2810.101X110.8250.4090.319X30.0330.8230.319
X40.6120.6110.276X120.7890.4540.337X80.6250.753−0.115
X70.8320.4270.260X140.8660.0640.278X130.4560.7450.253
X90.8480.1720.189X150.7690.575−0.173X50.185−0.0670.903
X100.8700.2910.086X10.3530.738−0.309X60.2800.2550.873
2014X20.9320.2710.102X110.8300.3790.337X30.0410.8240.346
X40.6320.5830.288X120.8100.3930.359X80.6760.707−0.111
X70.8610.4080.209X140.8750.0190.281X130.5890.6520.251
X90.5960.3300.383X150.7780.560−0.167X50.158−0.0760.903
X100.9450.1710.117X10.3670.733−0.332X60.2830.2070.877
2015X20.9480.1770.174X110.8360.4020.302X50.0270.928−0.035
X40.7400.2870.438X120.8080.4510.279X60.2600.9000.174
X70.8950.2250.325X130.6950.3580.518X90.3570.8640.064
X80.778−0.0690.595X140.8380.331−0.074X10.519−0.2850.653
X100.9500.1670.072X150.847−0.1320.481X30.0860.2440.853
2016X20.9430.1460.239X110.8310.3600.358X50.0220.944−0.033
X40.7250.2920.465X120.8240.3540.318X60.2690.8760.164
X70.8720.1690.400X130.7040.3760.487X90.4500.754−0.041
X80.751−0.0830.618X140.8380.314−0.075X10.424−0.2800.735
X100.9540.1540.088X150.745−0.1490.610X30.0530.2380.864
2017X20.9450.1260.246X110.8540.3610.312X50.0830.939−0.106
X40.7660.2570.431X120.8500.3640.250X60.2750.8770.122
X70.8700.1380.410X130.7430.4560.388X90.6190.6880.006
X80.704−0.0940.658X140.8620.253−0.067X10.317−0.3710.771
X100.9610.1100.066X150.747−0.1820.587X30.0370.3140.826
2018X20.9470.2580.069X100.9710.0300.048X150.6990.618−0.207
X40.7790.4220.237X110.8820.2360.378X10.2100.805−0.345
X70.8870.3970.083X120.8180.2020.421X30.0350.8340.321
X80.7060.648−0.097X130.7690.3710.414X50.134−0.1180.927
X90.692−0.0250.469X140.8720.0040.204X60.2740.0620.890
2019X20.9380.2590.076X100.9570.0040.013X150.6770.625−0.226
X40.8090.4010.201X110.8640.2280.410X10.1350.795−0.268
X70.8960.3300.162X120.8920.1150.355X30.0610.8350.271
X80.7010.635−0.114X130.7540.4580.321X50.095−0.1280.925
X90.617−0.0020.440X140.8540.0440.184X60.3180.0690.883
Table 6. Competitiveness index and ranking of cultural industry of 31 provinces in China, 2013–2019.
Table 6. Competitiveness index and ranking of cultural industry of 31 provinces in China, 2013–2019.
Region2013201420152016201720182019
ScoreRankScoreRankScoreRankScoreRankScoreRankScoreRankScoreRank
Eastern
China
Beijing0.7440.8040.9140.8640.8940.9040.844
Tianjin−0.2015−0.1715−0.1615−0.1615−0.2116−0.2316−0.2517
Hebei−0.1614−0.1414−0.1514−0.1513−0.1513−0.1915−0.1413
Shanghai0.6950.6850.7550.6660.7650.7150.785
Jiangsu1.4121.3921.4321.3721.2721.1721.093
Zhejiang1.0231.0431.0130.9430.9231.0031.202
Fujian0.1170.1270.1670.1480.1590.2170.1310
Shandong0.6860.6560.6760.6950.6260.5660.476
Guangdong2.1012.1012.0712.1112.2212.3112.321
Hainan−0.4727−0.5428−0.5528−0.5628−0.5328−0.5328−0.5328
Central
China
Shanxi−0.3823−0.3723−0.3621−0.3721−0.4023−0.3821−0.3821
Anhui−0.0913−0.0612−0.1212−0.1012−0.1112−0.1013−0.0712
Jiangxi−0.2717−0.2516−0.2216−0.2317−0.2417−0.2517−0.2316
Henan0.0390.0880.1180.11100.08100.02110.0311
Hubei−0.0312−0.0411−0.0611−0.0411−0.02110.12100.198
Hunan0.0390.07100.1180.1970.1870.1690.149
Western
China
Mongolia−0.2919−0.3421−0.3922−0.3922−0.3721−0.4123−0.4323
Guangxi−0.2919−0.2819−0.2918−0.3019−0.3119−0.3320−0.2920
Chongqing−0.3121−0.3120−0.3019−0.3120−0.3320−0.2618−0.2718
Sichuan0.1080.0880.03100.1290.1780.2170.217
Guizhou−0.4325−0.3622−0.4225−0.4225−0.4224−0.4324−0.4222
Yunnan−0.2717−0.2717−0.3220−0.2918−0.3018−0.2919−0.2819
Tibet−0.6030−0.6030−0.6131−0.6331−0.6331−0.6731−0.6531
Shaanxi−0.2616−0.2717−0.2717−0.1615−0.1614−0.1414−0.1413
Gansu−0.4727−0.4927−0.4727−0.4526−0.4726−0.4826−0.4927
Qinghai−0.6231−0.6131−0.6030−0.6130−0.6129−0.6430−0.6230
Ningxia−0.5829−0.5929−0.5929−0.5929−0.6129−0.6129−0.6129
Xinjiang−0.4526−0.4426−0.4526−0.4627−0.4726−0.5027−0.4826
North-
eastern
China
Liaoning0.0211−0.0713−0.1313−0.1513−0.1614−0.0812−0.2215
Jilin−0.4124−0.4225−0.4124−0.4124−0.4224−0.4324−0.4425
Heilongjiang−0.3622−0.3824−0.3922−0.3922−0.3721−0.4022−0.4323
Table 7. Results of the unit-roots test (first analysis).
Table 7. Results of the unit-roots test (first analysis).
VariableMethod
Levin, Lin & ChuADF—Fisher Chi-Square
lnGDP−99.8470 ***95.3349 ***
lnCI−23.8080 ***129.591 ***
lnInv−12.9577 ***120.158 ***
lnEP−13.3925 ***74.4365 ***
lnRDE−32.4257 ***121.615 ***
Notes: H0: Panels contain unit roots, Ha: Panels are stationary. *** denotes significance at 1% critical value.
Table 8. Results of the correlation (first analysis).
Table 8. Results of the correlation (first analysis).
lnCIlnInvlnEPlnRDE
lnCI1.0000
lnInv0.66281.0000
lnEP0.69930.62011.0000
lnRDE0.64890.49430.44721.0000
Table 9. Estimates of the pooled regression, fixed effects model, and random effects model (first analysis).
Table 9. Estimates of the pooled regression, fixed effects model, and random effects model (first analysis).
Pooled RegressionFixed EffectsRandom Effects
Constant9.2499 ***
(1.8809)
52.1326 **
(22.2890)
14.5776 ***
(2.8251)
lnCI0.9914 **
(0.4550)
8.1024 ***
(2.2233)
1.2470 *
(0.7095)
lnInv−0.0029
(0.3851)
−2.7108 ***
(0.5059)
−1.4232 ***
(0.3900)
lnEP−0.1141
(0.4154)
−2.3168
(3.1608)
0.9626 *
(0.5006)
lnRDE−1.2182 ***
(0.3061)
1.2232
(1.0602)
−0.9593 **
(0.4643)
R-squared0.07910.56490.0893
Adjusted R-squared0.06170.48320.0721
Sum squared residuals706.0317333.5361448.2363
Log-likelihood−434.4039−353.4138
Akaike info criterion4.06853.5964
Notes: ***, **, * denote significance at 1%, 5%, 10% critical value, respectively. Standard errors are in parentheses. Time and country fixed effects are considered in this analysis.
Table 10. Specification Tests (first analysis).
Table 10. Specification Tests (first analysis).
Spec. TestsStatisticTestedSelection
F-test6.7753 ***pooled regression/fixed effectsfixed effects
Breusch-Pagan359.7893 ***pooled regression/random effectsrandom effects
Hausman36.1481 ***random effects/fixed effectsfixed effects
Note: *** denotes significance at 1% critical value.
Table 11. Test results for panel unit roots (second analysis).
Table 11. Test results for panel unit roots (second analysis).
VariableMethodVariableMethod
Levin, Lin & ChuADF—Fisher Chi-SquareLevin, Lin & ChuADF—Fisher Chi-Square
lnX1−54.3690 ***93.8035 ***lnX8−608.241 ***117.162 ***
lnX2−13.1298 ***100.978 ***lnX9−34.6636 ***83.1386 **
lnX3−36.5545 ***98.4927 ***lnX10−108.700 ***145.841 ***
lnX4−30.8708 ***128.742 ***lnX11−9.41097 ***95.0712 ***
lnX5−10.6520 ***127.488 ***lnX12−26.3860 ***133.158 ***
lnX6−58.1632 ***101.275 ***lnX13−13.7596 ***100.708 ***
lnX7−3.48069 ***77.3883 *
Notes: H0: Panels contain unit roots, Ha: Panels are stationary. ***, **, * denote significance at 1%, 5%, 10% critical value, respectively.
Table 12. Results of the correlation (second analysis).
Table 12. Results of the correlation (second analysis).
lnX1lnX2lnX3lnX4lnX5lnX6lnX7lnX8lnX9lnX10lnX11lnX12lnX13
lnX11.000
lnX20.6841.000
lnX30.6570.6131.000
lnX40.5770.7050.6781.000
lnX50.6650.6170.6590.5971.000
lnX60.7070.6240.5780.6590.5581.000
lnX70.5530.7180.6880.4840.7270.4851.000
lnX80.6650.5910.5560.6470.5070.5780.5651.000
lnX9−0.1320.2180.2020.1430.2660.1180.1620.155
lnX100.2090.6370.5860.4780.5700.6150.5290.6730.5771.000
lnX110.6500.6450.4630.6740.5010.6830.7130.6930.1660.6261.000
lnX120.6710.5600.6310.6620.6370.6820.7260.699−0.0770.4670.6931.000
lnX130.4600.7860.6700.6270.6390.7390.5580.7450.4720.6940.5660.6231.000
Table 13. Results of the pooled regression, fixed effects model, and random effects model (second analysis).
Table 13. Results of the pooled regression, fixed effects model, and random effects model (second analysis).
Pooled RegressionFixed EffectsRandom Effects
Constant34.5857 ***
(4.2046)
69.4778 ***
(9.2848)
39.2223 ***
(5.1680)
lnX1−0.6355 ***
(0.2022)
0.1633 ***
(0.0452)
−0.4368 **
(0.1940)
lnX20.2817
(0.5378)
1.2162 *
(0.7326)
1.8169 ***
(0.5486)
lnX30.1448
(0.1512)
−0.1516
(0.2832)
0.0426
(0.2010)
lnX4−1.0142 ***
(0.3753)
−2.0475 **
(0.9835)
−0.9249 *
(0.5214)
lnX5−4.8332 ***
(0.9052)
−6.9455 ***
(1.4336)
−5.9944 ***
(1.0606)
lnX6−1.5476 ***
(0.3657)
−1.8289 **
(0.7387)
−1.6780 ***
(0.4801)
lnX70.5248
(0.5199)
−0.2798
(0.6546)
−0.3414
(0.5487)
lnX8−1.0532 ***
(0.3247)
−2.3706 ***
(0.5443)
−1.3267 ***
(0.3741)
lnX90.0358
(0.1471)
−0.0265
(0.1319)
−0.0317
(0.1213)
lnX100.1002
(0.1903)
0.0804
(0.2133)
0.0727
(0.1843)
lnX110.5227
(0.3291)
−0.3869
(0.4760)
−0.0558
(0.3665)
lnX120.0930 *
(0.0526)
0.0426
(0.0429)
0.0902 *
(0.0401)
lnX130.0028
(0.3367)
0.4323
(0.6071)
0.1449
(0.4421)
R-squared0.49660.79500.5556
Adjusted R-squared0.46440.74410.5272
Sum squared residuals385.9677157.1525210.6021
Log-likelihood−370.3901−272.8988
Akaike info criterion3.54272.9207
Notes: ***, **, * denote significance at 1%, 5%, 10% critical value, respectively. Standard errors are in parentheses. Time and country fixed effects are considered in this analysis.
Table 14. Specification tests in the second-panel regression model (second analysis).
Table 14. Specification tests in the second-panel regression model (second analysis).
Spec. TestStatisticTestedSelection
F-test8.3963 ***pooled regression/fixed effectsfixed effects
Breusch-Pagan110.7982 ***pooled regression/random effectsrandom effects
Hausman41.8395 ***random effects/fixed effectsfixed effects
Note: *** denotes significance at 1% critical value.
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Yao, L.; Maneejuk, P.; Yamaka, W.; Liu, J. Quantifying the Competitiveness of Cultural Industry and Its Impacts on Chinese Economic Growth. Sustainability 2023, 15, 79. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su15010079

AMA Style

Yao L, Maneejuk P, Yamaka W, Liu J. Quantifying the Competitiveness of Cultural Industry and Its Impacts on Chinese Economic Growth. Sustainability. 2023; 15(1):79. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su15010079

Chicago/Turabian Style

Yao, Linlin, Paravee Maneejuk, Woraphon Yamaka, and Jianxu Liu. 2023. "Quantifying the Competitiveness of Cultural Industry and Its Impacts on Chinese Economic Growth" Sustainability 15, no. 1: 79. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su15010079

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