1. Introduction
Interconnected infrastructure is an essential foundation for sustainable economic development. As China’s economy enters the new normal, the contradiction between the continuously growing demand for public goods represented by infrastructure and the insufficient supply efficiency and quality of single government-led investment mode under downward economic pressure and fiscal constraints has profoundly changed the supply and investment mode of infrastructure. PPP has become the most important means of investing in infrastructure. By June 2021, China’s total PPP investment in infrastructure reached 15.59 trillion yuan, the largest share of which is transportation, accounting for 33.42%, or 5.21 trillion yuan. Moreover, given China’s unique national conditions, unbalanced and inadequate development among regions remains a crucial long-term problem that restricts high-quality economic development. In this context, the Chinese government anticipates that PPP will promote sustainable economic development and create a new mechanism for coordinated regional development.
Compared to single government-led investment mode, can PPP bring economic sustainability and efficiency? Does PPP have economic growth and spatial spillover effects? Are there differences in the impacts of different industries? Existing studies have made extensive evaluations on the economic consequences of PPP, but most of them are theoretical and case studies based on questionnaire surveys and other qualitative methods, while only a few take China’s data as a sample for empirical analysis on a macro scale. Some studies have directly investigated the impact of PPP on GDP and the possible influencing factors between them. Their results show that PPP has a significant positive effect on promoting economic growth [
1,
2] by enhancing the effectiveness of the implementation of fiscal and monetary policies, improving the mismatch of resources, and increasing total factor productivity [
3,
4]. Some studies in other countries have also proven that PPP is effective for economic development [
5,
6]. In addition, some studies have evaluated the economic impact of PPP from the perspective of infrastructure efficiency, showing a significant positive correlation between PPP and infrastructure efficiency in countries along the Belt and Road [
7,
8], while PPP was not shown to significantly improve the output efficiency of infrastructure in China when 245 cities from 2002 to 2015 were taken as a sample with the use of the multiperiod DID method [
9].
In terms of the spatial spillover effect, most related studies have focused more on evaluating the impact of single government, social capital, or sector-specific investment. It was found that government investment can generate economic growth and spatial spillover effects [
10], and it is a chain relationship in which private parties can improve economic performance through technological innovation [
11], which can generate a positive spatial spillover effect [
12], but may also become an obstacle to economic development [
13]. Only one cross-regional study creatively considered the spatial effect of PPP and showed that it has a direct promoting effect and an indirect spillover effect on economic growth [
14], but the sample for that study was the Belt and Road countries.
Based on the above, there are three scientific gaps worth filling. (1) Few studies have used rigorous econometric techniques to evaluate the economic consequences of PPP, and the dimensions of existing empirical studies are relatively narrow, so a comprehensive study evaluating the economic impact of PPP from the perspective of sustainable development is lacking. (2) In most studies, PPP is regarded as a policy impact that is treated as a dummy variable, so the accuracy of results needs to be verified and improved. Moreover, there is no consensus on the economic consequences of PPP, which needs further research and analysis. (3) The spatial spillover effect of PPP on regional economic development and the industrial heterogeneity of PPP are not widely discussed. It is worth enriching and extending this topic. All of these provide scope for this paper based on sample data with Chinese characteristics.
Accordingly, this paper conducts a comprehensive empirical examination of the impact of PPP on China’s sustainable economic development from the dual dimensions of efficiency evaluation and spatial spillover based on the perspective of sustainability, and further explores the industrial heterogeneity of PPP to get more detailed conclusions. The main contributions and added value are as follows: (1) the input–output efficiency of infrastructure is scientifically evaluated and the implementation effect of PPP in China is verified, which has important practical significance for further improvement and promotion of PPP; (2) the spatial effect mechanism and effect of PPP are clarified, which bridges the gaps in the existing research and represents a useful attempt to approach this issue from the spatial economic perspective; and (3) the industrial heterogeneity of PPP in economic development is explored, which provides a reference basis for the development of PPP in different fields.
The paper is organized as follows: the theoretical analysis and research hypothesis are presented in
Section 2 in order to establish the theoretical basis and empirical logic framework. The data, variables, and model used in this paper are included in
Section 3.
Section 4 presents the empirical analysis, which is the key content of this paper, including the analyses of infrastructure input–output efficiency, economic growth and spatial spillover effects, and industry heterogeneity of PPP.
Section 5 discusses and explains the results from the perspective of previous studies and working hypotheses. The last section presents the conclusion and suggestions.
2. Theoretical Analysis and Research Hypothesis
2.1. Impact of PPP on Input–Output Efficiency of Infrastructure
In economics, efficiency is the ideal maximum possible output with the same input or the ideal minimum possible input with the same output. The input–output efficiency of infrastructure evaluates the configuration state between infrastructure input and economic output within the concept of sustainable economic development. In the past, infrastructure investment was carried out by local Chinese governments, which led to monopolies. It was not until 2014 that PPP was applied on a large scale and gradually replaced single government-led investment, and the marketization of infrastructure investment gradually emerged.
According to public goods theory, in the new political economy, public good related to the national economy cannot be completely provided by a profit-maximizing market, but needs government intervention. The theory of welfare economics further points out that the government’s powerful macro control should be limited to taxes and subsidies, and the task of optimizing the allocation of market resources should be left to private parties through market competition. Against the background of the Chinese system, PPP, as a mixed semi-organizational and semi-market economic form, can improve the efficiency and optimize the structure of resource allocation in infrastructure investment and promote the input–output efficiency of infrastructure through a synergistic effect.
On the one hand, the core mechanism of PPP is to introduce market mechanisms to infrastructure provision, letting the market participate in the allocation and management of public resources, which can effectively avoid the drawback of the “grabbing hands” of local governments caused by long-term administrative monopolies [
15]; this is conducive to eliminating the inefficiency of the pattern of government-only status [
16]. On the other hand, under the organic combination of the dual efficiencies of government and market, the competitive mechanism will further guide local governments’ financial resources to other areas and weak links of people’s livelihoods, and build a mechanism for more favorable cooperation between governments and private parties. This can promote the structural adjustment of resource allocation in government financial expenditure and the participation of private parties, in order to form a long-term sustainable supply mode that pursues infrastructure quality and efficiency [
17]. Furthermore, the synergy effect of PPP is due to the complementary advantages of governments and private parties [
18]. Local governments have macroscopic control and risk resistance ability and can implement powerful policy guidance; the added value of private parties, such as knowledge, skills, management experience, and innovation, becomes more productive with cooperation. PPP can also encourage professional institutions to participate in infrastructure construction, operation, and management, thus forming a “1 + 1 + 1 > 3” performance improvement mechanism of governments, private parties, and professional institutions [
19]. Therefore, compared to the government-led single investment mode, PPP more reflects the win–win of economic and social benefits based on the synergistic effect.
Accordingly, the first research hypothesis is proposed.
Hypothesis 1A. PPP is positively correlated with the input–output efficiency of infrastructure.
Hypothesis 1B. Compared with the single government-led investment mode, PPP has a more significant promoting effect on the input–output efficiency of infrastructure.
2.2. Overall Economic Growth Effect of PPP
This paper analyzes the economic growth effect of PPP from the perspective of institutional innovation. According to the theory of institutional economics, effective institutional design is the key to ensuring and improving economic growth. Institutional innovation refers to reforming the existing system by key players in order to obtain specific benefits [
20], which includes two forms, induced and mandatory. Induced institutional innovation achieves Pareto optimality through gradual accumulation of changes under the premise of compatible interests of various stakeholders. The effectiveness of institutional innovation is reflected in the coordination of interest distribution relationships among stakeholders, enhancing the interests of some stakeholders without harming others, so as to reach a consensus on reform, which can bring the bonus effect of institutional innovation to promote economic growth [
21].
The essence of PPP is that it is an institutional design and innovation that gives full play to the respective endowment advantages of governments and private parties to carry out mutual long-term cooperation for the efficient supply of infrastructure and services. The understanding of PPP should be promoted to the level of institutional mechanisms, with the improvement of institutional efficiency as the core. The reform process of PPP in China is consistent with the logical process of institutional economics. With the transition of China’s economy, the institutional arrangement of administrative monopolies in which local governments are the sole agents carrying out infrastructure investment, construction, and operation is difficult to sustain. Various drawbacks can be found, such as shortages of fiscal funds, insufficient supply capacity, and inefficient resource distribution. At this point, PPP, as an induced institutional innovation of “gradualism” initiated by the government, not only enables better realization of the government’s public service functions, but also provides opportunities for private parties to gain economic benefits and fulfill social responsibilities, and bring more quality and inexpensive products and services to the public by giving full play to the endowment advantages of all parties through PPP’s specialized cooperation mechanism. Thus, the Pareto optimality of the “triple win” of governments, private parties, and people’s livelihoods can be achieved [
22]. Moreover, the cost of induced institutional innovation is relatively low, the social unrest is relatively small, and the intervention of local governments can make it progress more smoothly [
23].
PPP gives adequate consideration to economic efficiency and social equity, which strongly conforms to the core connotation of institutional innovation. China’s development experience has proven that PPP is key to deepening supply-side reform, introducing mixed ownership to SOEs, and innovating the mode of infrastructure investment. Therefore, it can be assumed that PPP, as an effective institutional innovation, has the overall economic benefit of promoting sustainable economic development. In addition to giving play to the “invisible hands” of the institution, PPP as an investment has a natural capital accumulation effect, thus can promote economic development. According to investment multiplier theory, PPP can drive the investment of the whole society, thus stimulating employment and consumption, and can improve the scale and quality of infrastructure provision to lay a solid foundation for industrial agglomeration.
Accordingly, the second research hypothesis is proposed.
Hypothesis 2. PPP is positively correlated with GDP, manifested as an economic growth effect.
2.3. Spatial Economic Spillover Effect and Industrial Heterogeneity of PPP
The mechanism of PPP that can exert a spatial spillover effect lies in the functional attributes of infrastructure and the spatial autocorrelation of economic development.
First, infrastructure is networked. As an important carrier of economic connections between regions, the connectivity of infrastructure can realize the spatial flow of production factors, break the market segmentation caused by the administrative division or spatial distance of regions, and connect different regions as a whole. In particular, transportation infrastructure creates an indispensable basis for guiding the distribution of productivity and the spatial distribution of the population, and also lays a solid foundation for improving the efficiency and competitiveness of regional economies. China attaches great importance to the networked economic advantages of transportation infrastructure, and has put forward the Belt and Road initiative and the strategy of building a country with a strong transportation network, which has become the “Chinese experience” that is valued worldwide.
Second, infrastructure has externalities, arising from the function of public goods. This means the social benefits of infrastructure often exceed its economic benefits, which means that infrastructure is not intended to make a profit, but to provide the necessary external conditions for the microeconomy and the necessary complementary goods for private capital, and to ensure the normal functioning of social and economic activities in a country or region. Marshall, in his book Principles of Economics, theorized about the extensive impact of infrastructure on other production units and summarized that the externalities of public goods have a spillover effect on economic growth. Pigou further distinguished and developed the theory of externality and spillover effects. The external benefit that infrastructure brings to other production units is called external economy or positive spillover, while the external effect that brings losses is called external diseconomy or negative spillover. In addition, the externalities of different types of infrastructure are heterogeneous. Transportation infrastructure not only has a direct impact on economic growth, but also has stronger externality, which has positive synergistic and spatial spillover effects [
24,
25]. Energy infrastructure is better reflected as an external economy [
26], while the new energy has a negative external economic impact in China’s developing areas [
27].
Third, the spatial dependence of economic development is one of the prerequisites for the spatial spillover effect [
28]. Spatial dependence refers to the relationships among things or social phenomena, depending on and even restricting each other in the spatial dimension. The existence of spatial dependence indicates that the occurrence and development of things or social phenomena are always influenced by other units. Economic development obviously has such spatial dependence. The economic development of different regions is not only determined by their production capacity, but also affected by the development situation of other regions, which is related to the flow of production factors and the links of communication, distribution, and consumption. It is precisely because of the spatial dependence of economic development that improving the infrastructure in one region can promote the development of that region and also have an impact on the development of other regions [
29].
Accordingly, the third research hypothesis is proposed.
Hypothesis 3A. PPP has a positive spatial spillover effect that can promote local economic development and the economic development of neighboring areas.
Hypothesis 3B. The spatial spillover effect of PPP varies by industry, and transportation PPP has a stronger economic effect and spatial spillover.
4. Empirical Analysis
4.1. Measurement and Analysis of Input–Output Efficiency of Infrastructure
Models (1)–(3) were used to measure the input–output efficiency of infrastructure in China’s 31 provinces from 2003 to 2018. Model parameter estimates are shown in
Table 3. The efficiency calculation results are shown in
Table 4.
The likelihood ratio is significant at a level of 1%, indicating that the model has good statistical properties, and γ = 0.9301, which is close to 1, indicating that the error term has a very obvious composite structure. Thus, it is necessary to use SFA instead of DEA’s simple linear programming to analyze economic data over as long as 16 years, which again confirms the reliability of the model. Furthermore, η = 0.0169 > 0, indicating that the input–output efficiency of infrastructure improves continuously, reflecting an obvious improvement trend.
The overall average input–output efficiency of infrastructure is 0.449, far below 1, which is a state of inefficiency. Despite this, from 2003 to 2018, the input–output efficiency in each province continuously improved year by year, indicating a good trend of sustainable improvement. The input–output efficiency has obvious differences in different provinces. The highest is 0.974, on average, in Guangdong, the most economically developed province, with its GDP ranking first for 30 consecutive years among all the provinces, and the lowest is 0.145 in Tibet, which is economically backward, with its GDP ranking last. It can be assumed that the input–output efficiency of infrastructure is closely related to the level of economic development.
To further investigate the regional differences in input–output efficiency, the provinces were grouped into four economic regions according to the classification criteria on socioeconomic development released by the Chinese government. The results are shown in
Table 5.
As can be seen intuitively from
Table 5, the input–output efficiency of infrastructure in different regions has obvious heterogeneity and sequencing. It generally presents a distribution trend and characteristics of decrease from east to west. The average efficiency of the eastern region, with the highest economic development, is 0.685 and that of the western region, with the lowest level of economic development, is 0.283. This again shows that the input–output efficiency of infrastructure is related to the level of economic development. These results indicate remarkable discrepancies and imbalance in regional development, which is highly consistent with China’s national conditions and economic reality.
4.2. Impact of PPP on Input–Output Efficiency of Infrastructure
Models (4) and (5) were used to test the impact of PPP and single government investment, respectively, on the input–output efficiency of infrastructure. The results are shown in
Table 6 and
Table 7.
Regardless of whether control variables are added, both PPP and single government investment are always positively correlated with the input–output efficiency of infrastructure, highlighting the economic sustainability of infrastructure investment. Hypothesis 1A can be confirmed. Compared to single government investment, PPP has a more significant effect on the input–output efficiency of infrastructure and its coefficient is larger, indicating its inherent advantage in leveraging greater investment efficiency with less capital. Hypothesis 1B can be confirmed. This also confirms that the core significance of PPP is not only to reduce the government’s financial burden, but also to improve the economic efficiency of public goods by introducing social capital and its inherent sense of competition, concept of market value investment, and market risk consciousness.
4.3. Overall Economic Growth Effect of PPP
Model (6) was used to test the overall impact of PPP on economic development. The results are shown in
Table 8.
PPP always has a significant and positive correlation with GDP, proving that it has an economic growth effect, which lays the groundwork for the following analysis of the spatial spillover effect. Hypothesis 2 can be confirmed. The coefficient of SU is always significantly positive, while the coefficient of BU is always significantly negative. This suggests that the higher the level of fiscal self-sufficiency, the stronger the ability of local governments to contribute to economic development; in contrast, an excessively high fiscal burden indicates that local governments must concentrate excessive social and financial resources, which is not conducive to stimulating market vitality and thus weakens the sustainability of economic development. The coefficient of CP is significantly positive and the coefficient of PO is significantly negative, indicating that the driving force of economic development is an improved level of human capital rather than population growth. In addition, the marketization level is positively correlated with economic development and the degree of foreign trade dependence is negatively correlated, indicating that economic development is driven by domestic market demand rather than import and export, which conforms with the latest theoretical idea of nurturing a stronger domestic market to establish China’s new development pattern.
4.4. Spatial Spillover Effect of PPP
The selection of a spatial econometric model has an important impact on the accuracy of the results. Therefore, the feasibility and reliability of model (7) was tested, as shown in
Table 9, proving that the model is appropriate for this study.
It was also necessary to test the spatial dependence of economy between regions as a prerequisite to studying the spatial effect of PPP. Moran’s I was used to measure the economic spatial autocorrelation of GDP and IE, as shown in
Table 10. The value range of Moran’s I is [−1, 1]; a value greater than 0 means positive spatial correlation, and a value less than 0 means negative correlation, and the greater the absolute value, the stronger the spatial correlation, showing a more obvious spatial agglomeration effect.
Moran’s I of GDP over the 16-year period is always significantly positive, while that of IE is not significant. This shows that economic development has obvious spatial agglomeration characteristics. Since the efficiency of infrastructure investment is not an indicator of the real economy, it is difficult to form spatial dependence between regions, which is in line with the economic reality. Therefore, GDP was taken as the explanatory variable to study the spatial spillover effect of PPP. Model (7) was used, and the results are shown in
Table 11.
The value of ρ is 0.536 and significantly positive, showing a strong regional economic agglomeration effect. In terms of the coefficients, the impact of each factor on local economic development is consistent with
Table 9. The coefficients of neighboring areas show that PPP has a positive correlation with the economic development of neighboring areas, as does CP, which indicates that both PPP infrastructure investment and human capital have a positive spatial spillover effect, manifesting external economies. PO is no longer significant, so the population size does not have a spatial spillover effect, which is in line with the economic reality. Comparing the coefficients, the three kinds of effects can more accurately measure the extent to which each factor affects economic development. Direct, indirect, and overall effects reflect the impact degree of each factor on local, neighboring, and overall economic development, respectively. This paper focuses on explaining the direct and indirect effects. The coefficients of the direct effect are more significant compared to those of the indirect effect, indicating that local economic development is driven more by self-support and the contribution of spatial spillover benefits by neighboring areas is limited. In the indirect effect, only PPP and CP are still significantly positive, which further shows that PPP infrastructure investment and human capital have stronger positive spatial spillover effects compared with other factors. Hypothesis 3A can be confirmed.
4.5. Industrial Heterogeneity of PPP
In order to arrive at more comprehensive conclusions, the industry heterogeneity of PPP was further tested, as shown in
Table 12.
After distinguishing industries, the spatial spillover effect of economic development is still significantly positive, and the economic impact of PPP has significant industrial heterogeneity. The direct, indirect, and overall effects of transportation PPP are all significantly positive, indicating that PPP investment in transportation infrastructure not only promotes local economic development, but also creates great external economic benefits for the neighboring areas. PPP improves the regional transportation infrastructure interconnection to consolidate the material carrier foundation for sustainable economic development. The direct effect of energy and water PPP is not significant, but the indirect effect is significant; that is, energy and water PPP have positive external economy. Hypothesis 3B can be confirmed. All of this highlights the extreme importance of transportation infrastructure in the development of a national economy. Transportation infrastructure has become the most important material carrier to promote the flow of economic factors between regions and improve the quality of national economic growth. Therefore, mobilizing private parties to form long-term partnerships with the government to build a modern transportation system has become the general trend in China to ensure high-quality economic development.
6. Conclusions
This paper takes data with Chinese characteristics as the research sample and empirically tests the impact of PPP on sustainable economic development based on two main research dimensions: evaluating infrastructure input–output efficiency and analyzing the spatial spillover effect. Regarding the former dimension, the input–output efficiency of infrastructure in China’s 31 provinces from 2003 to 2018 is evaluated by SFA and regional development differences are discussed. Based on this, the sustainability of infrastructure investment and the economic efficiency of PPP are analyzed and validated. Regarding the latter dimension, taking GDP as the explanatory variable, the overall economic growth effect of PPP is tested. Furthermore, based on examining the spatial autocorrelation of economy, the spatial spillover effect of PPP and its industrial heterogeneity are tested.
The results reveal that PPP indeed plays an important role in promoting sustainable economic development in China, which is manifested in the following three aspects. First, PPP is positively correlated with the input–output efficiency of infrastructure and its impact is more significant than that of single government investment, indicating that PPP in infrastructure investment can play a sustainable role by leveraging less capital to achieve greater economic benefits. Second, PPP has an overall economic growth effect and spatial spillover effect. It not only drives local economic development, but also plays a synergistic role in driving the economic development of neighboring areas to achieve sustainable regional development. Third, the impact of PPP infrastructure investment in different industries varies significantly. Transportation PPP not only has a direct economic growth effect, but also a positive spatial spillover effect. Energy and water PPP have positive economic externalities. Therefore, transportation PPP plays a stronger role in driving the economy, which is determined by the vital position of transportation infrastructure. This is in line with China’s strategy of building a country with a strong transportation network: develop the leveraging role of government investment, stimulate the vitality of social capital, drive the construction of major transportation projects with PPP, form network and integration effects, and continue to consolidate the carrier foundation for high-quality integrated regional development.
In the new era, how to make PPP realize greater efficiency for sustainable economic development and form a consensus and influence around the world has become a crucial proposition for its future development and innovation. One important aspect is to prioritize development and cooperation in the area of transport infrastructure. This involves not only the economic development of the country itself, but also the formation of effective cooperation among countries to use PPP as a bridge and to promote the interconnection of transportation infrastructure around the world, in order to lay a solid foundation and guarantee a win-win for all countries. Moreover, it is urgent and necessary to perfect the top-level design of PPP and cultivate a new value system from the perspective of coordinated regional development. Based on the main cycle of the domestic economy, we should improve regional policies and spatial layout, integrate PPP into the overall pattern of interconnected regional development, vigorously promote its development with the goal of sustainable regional development, and further introduce supporting policies and long-term cooperative mechanisms between governments and social capital. Developmental PPP has now become an important means of innovating regional development modes. Based on normative PPP operation, developmental PPP emphasizes the high-quality provision of comprehensive development and infrastructure with regional industrial layout and urbanization as the core, which becomes a new way to integrate old and new infrastructure and upgrade industries. It is still essential to test developmental PPP in practice, taking the Chinese experience as an example to be recognized in the world.