Contents

Engineering Materials Innovation in Urban Infrastructure and Its Contribution to Economic Growth: Evidence from Major Chinese Cities

Author(s): Anne Vernez Moudon1, Liang Chen1
1Deaprtment of Urban Design and planning , University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, United States
Anne Vernez Moudon
Deaprtment of Urban Design and planning , University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, United States
Liang Chen
Deaprtment of Urban Design and planning , University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, United States

Abstract

As large-scale infrastructure expansion has accelerated across China’s leading cities, the construction sector has grown quickly and the engineering materials industry has shifted from a relatively weak base toward stronger capabilities. This study develops a structured theoretical framework to clarify how engineering materials innovation operates within the construction industry, and then links this mechanism to regional growth using insights from economic growth theory. Employing a threshold regression model, the paper examines the relationship between engineering materials innovation and GDP growth in major Chinese cities. The analysis finds that the sector currently faces two key challenges: a slowing industrial growth rate and declining fixed-asset investment. Meanwhile, innovation outputs are becoming more diversified—reflected in rising diversity and ubiquity indices—though their rate of increase is moderating. Threshold regression estimates suggest that each 1% increase in engineering materials innovation is associated with a 0.099%–0.112% rise in regional GDP. Overall, the study offers a broader explanation of innovation-led economic development through the lens of engineering materials, enriches the literature on regional growth, and provides practical implications for public policy and firm-level innovation strategy.

Copyright © 2025 Anne Vernez Moudon, Liang Chen. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.