1. Introduction
The Chinese “land for development” model has created a miracle of economic growth over the past few decades, as shown in
Figure 1, where a wide-caliber industrial land supply has strongly supported Chinese economic growth. However, as China’s economic growth momentum shifts and the drawbacks of uncontrolled land utilization accumulate, this development model increasingly reveals its unsustainability [
1,
2], with the decline in urban ecological resilience (UER) caused by land resource mismatch (LRM) being a typical example. The dominant perspective asserts that UER fundamentally encapsulates the ability of urban ecosystems to withstand, recover from, and adapt to unpredictable disruptions. Nonetheless, the suboptimal allocation of land resources has significantly altered the foundational physical conditions that sustain UER [
3]. Local governments in China often use planned economic means with obvious administrative intervention to suppress the price of industrial land while expanding its size, hindering the rational allocation of land through normal market transactions, which artificially creates the phenomenon of LRM [
4]. The distortion of land prices brought about by LRM will reserve room for the middle- and low-end manufacturing production activities characterized by high pollution [
5]; on the one hand, this slows down the speed of industrial upgrading and reduces the motivation of enterprises to climb towards intelligence and greening [
6]; on the other hand, it strengthens the rigid demand of the middle- and low-end industries [
7] and is not conducive to the transformation of the center of regional industries to the service industry, which ultimately has a negative impact on UER. The inappropriate allocation of land quantities can degrade the habitats of urban biota, resulting in a loss of their ecosystem service capacity [
8]. Kim et al. (2017 [
9]) also found that unreasonable land development will disrupt the balance between anthropogenic landscapes and natural landscapes, which in turn undermines the ecological resilience of seaside cities. In this context, a thorough exploration of effective strategies for optimizing LRM and enhancing UER is of paramount practical significance, as it directly contributes to improving the quality of the urban ecological environment. The digital economy (DE), with its high innovation, strong permeability, and wide coverage, has brought profound progress to government governance, industrial transformation, and enterprise production [
10,
11] and has become a possible path for the green development of the regional economy. Based on this, this study will explore the potential impact of the DE on the phenomenon of LRM, with a view to finding realistic paths to improve ecological resilience and enhance the ability to address external disturbances.
The root cause of LRM lies in the fact that the Chinese approach to land allocation is characterized by both a market economy and a planned economy, which is determined by the way in which land is granted in China.
The Regulations on Tendering, Auctioning, and Listing of State-owned Land Use Rights, promulgated by the Chinese government, stipulate that China’s public land transfer methods include listing, auctioning, and tendering, whereas agreement transfer refers to the transfer of state-owned land use rights by municipal and county land resource management departments to land users by way of an agreement, which is a transfer method that is strongly colored by government intervention. The direct cause of China’s LRM phenomenon is that the fiscal decentralization brought about by the reform of the tax system has changed the behavior of China’s local governments; i.e., corporate income tax has become a major revenue source for local governments, which have therefore become keen on cultivating their tax base by attracting foreign investment. In order to obtain construction funds, in terms of quantity, local governments have raised the supply of industrial, mining, and warehousing land in large quantities, which has been maintaining a high proportion in China, as shown in
Figure 2; in terms of price, the cost of industrial land has been artificially depressed to sustain the competitive advantage of manufacturing goods by keeping their prices at a lower level. As depicted in
Figure 3, the long-term trend reveals that the prices of industrial land in China have consistently remained subdued [
12]. Effective allocation of resources has always been the basic problem of economics research, and it has always been the cutting-edge topic of economic development [
13]; the academic research on the consequences of LRM mainly focuses on the regional industrial structure and production efficiency. On the one hand, LRM depresses the cost of land, which leads to the rough utilization of land: a large amount of industrial land is allocated to inefficient enterprises, which leads to the low-level duplication of industrial investment between regions and the ensuing overcapacity [
14]; on the other hand, the influx of inefficient enterprises constrains the operational space available to high-tech firms, thereby impeding the overall productivity growth of the city [
15]. There is also research on the impact of LRM on the urban environment showing that low-level manufacturing industries inevitably bring a large amount of energy consumption and a large amount of sulfur and nitrogen gas emissions [
16], but there is no clear idea on whether the LRM will have an impact on the city’s ability to address natural disasters, as well as how to cope with and solve the urban environmental problems caused by LRM. Based on this, this study endeavors to tackle the issue through the lens of the DE, aiming to address the extent of LRM and mitigate its detrimental effects. This approach not only presents a fresh perspective for comprehending the challenges associated with LRM but also introduces innovative strategies for local governments to effectively counteract and resolve this issue.
The focus of this study, namely the repercussions of LRM on UER, stems from the accelerating pace of urbanization, which has brought to light a range of environmental issues. The expansion of road infrastructure, for instance, introduces pollutants and external contaminants, which leads to the fragmentation of plant and animal populations. This fragmentation, in turn, results in the disintegration of landscapes, thereby posing a significant threat to ecological equilibrium [
17]. The swift expansion of open-pit mining has precipitated several adverse effects, including the reduction in vegetation cover, loss of biodiversity, and water pollution [
18]. These consequences have, in turn, resulted in a significant deterioration of ecological environments [
19] and a reduction in the primary productivity of land elements [
20]. The continuous shrinkage of coastal wetlands has become an urgent ecological problem, which not only leads to the reduction in coastal species but also exacerbates habitat fragmentation and serious ecosystem degradation [
21]. In addition, the heat island effect has become increasingly prominent as a significant environmental problem during urbanization, which has a complex impact on the precipitation patterns of the surrounding areas by altering the local climate system and increasing the vulnerability of the ecological environment [
22]. Moreover, pollutants emitted from the production activities of industrial enterprises have become a major source of air, soil, and water pollution, posing a long-term threat to the health sustainability of the ecological environment [
23]. The concept of resilience originated in the field of materials disciplines [
24] and was first used to explain why materials can withstand loads without breaking [
25]. In 1973, Holling [
26] defined resilience in his book as the ability of an ecosystem to absorb state variables driving variables and still maintain itself, and then the related research gradually extends to human ecology; the idea of resilience has also been expanded to the urban field [
27], and is proving a good analytical tool for urban systems [
28]. In this study, the induced cause of reduced ecological resilience is anchored in LRM, which is because, on the one hand, inappropriate human land use and allocation behaviors shrink the scale of resources that can provide shelter for the population from natural or man-made disasters [
29]. Evidence from China suggests that in the Poyang Lake area, people surrounded the lake to create fields, reducing the size of the lake and ultimately leading to an increase in the frequency of floods [
30]. In addition, evidence from all over the world suggests that the unchecked felling of trees reduces the ability to withstand dust storms [
31,
32,
33]. On the other hand, misbehavior itself causes disasters. Excessive industrialization leads to increased emissions [
34], greenhouse gas emissions contribute to global warming [
35], and industrial emissions degrade the urban environment [
36]. Currently, academics are taking a more mature view about urbanization’s impact on UER. However, the relationship between LRM and UER, which accompanies human activities at the same time, has been neglected for a long time. On the one hand, the mechanism between human activities and UER is complex, and quantitative research is needed to clarify the causes of UER; on the other hand, with the increasing complexity and refinement of urban management, human beings are mastering more digital means to cope with the profound changes in the relationship between human beings and geographic environments, and it is becoming imperative to conduct a targeted analysis of the interplay between urban areas and their ecological surroundings so that more operable solutions can be proposed at the planning level.
In recent times, China’s economy has entered the 4.0 era of industry, with the DE as the main driving force [
37,
38]. The DE is pivotal in driving the transition from traditional economic drivers to emerging ones [
39], and it has also achieved significant progress in optimizing the allocation of production factors and facilitating the green development of the economy [
40]. For the allocation of production factors, academics have proved that the DE can provide a docking platform for both supply and demand through big data algorithms to increase the number of flexible employment, thus optimizing the allocation of labor [
41]; the DE identifies and records the credit behavior of the “long-tailed group” through the underlying technology such as blockchain networks, mitigating information asymmetry between the financial sector and the production sector, and enhancing information security within the financial sector [
42]; however, there is no relevant research on whether and how the DE can optimize land resource allocation. The literature indicates that the DE fosters technological innovation and facilitates industrial structure upgrading, thereby contributing to the sustainable development of regions such as the Yangtze River Delta [
43]. However, there remains a lack of definitive evidence regarding whether the DE can enhance UER by optimizing the efficiency of resource allocation, particularly with respect to non-renewable land resources. Now that the world is in the key opportunity period of the new round of technological revolution, how to better manage the DE’s resource cohesion, integration, and optimization of the allocation of factors and enhance the stability of the urban ecological environment system, and the livability of the city can not only make a contribution to the theory of the DE to help green development, but also help digital policymakers to clarify future policy directions, so it is of great theoretical significance.
Based on this, this study will be based on the perspective of DE, from the perspective of improving the phenomenon of LRM and mitigating the negative impacts of LRM, to explore the “treating the symptoms” channels and “treating the root causes” channels of ecological resilience. Firstly, the empirical analysis conducted in this study confirms that LRM significantly diminishes UER, underscoring the need to address LRM. This conclusion has been validated through a series of robustness tests. Furthermore, the heterogeneity analysis reveals that the detrimental impact of LRM on UER is more pronounced in megacities, cities with high levels of economic development, and cities with lower levels of advanced industrial structure. Secondly, the development of DE can improve the phenomenon of LRM, thus improving UER, which has the effect of “treating the root causes.” Finally, the development of DE can play a moderating role in alleviating the decline of UER caused by LRM, which has the effect of “treating the symptoms.”
The research contributions of this study are as follows:
First, this study broadens the scope of research on LRM. Based on the existing body of research on LRM, this study further explores its environmental impacts. While traditional research on LRM focuses on regional industrial structure [
44], green productivity [
45], and economic growth [
46], this study innovatively combines it with urban ecological issues, revealing the phenomenon that LRM reduces UER through empirical analysis. This finding not only enriches the research perspective of the consequences of LRM but also provides new clues for understanding urban ecological problems.
Second, this study enriches the research on UER. Most considerations of UER in the existing literature have concentrated on the perspectives of population agglomeration [
47] and urbanization [
48]. This study not only pioneers the in-depth examination of LRM as a critical factor undermining UER but also explores its potential for enhancing resilience through the lens of the DE.
Third, this study comprehensively analyzes the role of the DE in mitigating the negative impacts of LRM from the perspectives of “treating the symptoms” and “treating the root causes”. First, this study explores the potential of DE in optimizing land resource allocation, which fills the gap in current research. Second, it reveals that the DE can serve as an intermediary regulatory mechanism, mitigating the impact of existing LRM on UER. The revelation of this dual-action mechanism provides a more comprehensive understanding of the application of the DE in environmental governance, which not only provides new research perspectives and theoretical support for academics but also provides valuable references for policymakers.
The research layout of this manuscript is as follows: the second part is the theoretical derivation; the third part is the research design, including data sources, variable definitions, and model design; the fourth part is the empirical analysis, including descriptive test, basic regression, and robustness test, the fifth part is the further analysis, including the “treating the root causes” channels and the “treating the symptoms” channels of DE, and the sixth part is the conclusion and recommendations.