Abstract

Confronting the dual challenges of excessive resource consumption and environmental pollution, the traditional extensive economic development pattern significantly impeded the high-quality development of the Chinese economy. Examining variations in green total factor productivity across different types of cities holds substantial practical significance for promoting coordinated regional development and facilitating the green transformation of urban economies. Panel data from 283 cities in China spanning the years 2006 to 2020 were selected for analysis. The window-Malmquist–Luenberger index model, incorporating a mixed distance function, was employed to assess changes in green total factor productivity among the sample cities. The results were then categorized and analyzed based on different city attributes. The findings indicate that (1) the variation in green total factor productivity across China’s four major regions from 2006 to 2020 is generally characterized by an initial decline followed by an increase; (2) the proportion of cities with significantly improved green total factor productivity decreases from the east to the central, western, and northeastern regions; (3) the increase in green total factor productivity is positively correlated with city size, suggesting that larger cities experience higher growth in green total factor productivity; (4) first- and second-tier cities exhibit a relatively high mean value of green total factor productivity growth, while third-, fourth-, and fifth-tier cities demonstrate relatively lower growth.

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