Abstract

Innovation talents, as a most active and important resource in innovation activities, are receiving increasing attention in the enhancement of innovation capability. It seems that areas with strong innovation capability are more attractive to innovation talents. To explore the impact of innovation capability—measured by innovation environment input efficiency—on the distribution of innovation talent, and given the heavy-tailed distribution of talents, a quantile regression approach is adopted for Chinese data covering 2001–2015. The results show that: (a) at the country level, the innovation environment and innovation talents are surprisingly negatively related due to pre-reform special regional strategies and the immature innovation environment in China, while both innovation input and efficiency facilitates the agglomeration of innovation talent; and (b) at the regional level, some different influences on talents appear: the strongest negative impact of the innovation environment is in the areas with a low level of talents, moderate positive effects of innovation input and efficiency can be seen in areas with a medium level of talents, and significantly positive contributions from innovation input and efficiency can be seen in the areas that already have a high level of talents. The results offer some suggestions for managers and the government, which are beneficial for the guidance of the ordered flow of innovation talents and the enhancement of regional innovation capability and sustainability.

Highlights

  • China has made remarkable progress in innovation over the past decades

  • We propose Hypothesis 3 (H3)

  • In this paper, we chose the number of full-time research and development (R&D) personnel calculated from the real working time for R&D to denote the level of innovation talent (INTL)

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Summary

Introduction

China has made remarkable progress in innovation over the past decades. the innovation development in China is unbalanced, and there is an increasing innovation capability gap between east and west, covering the differentiated scale of research and development (R&D) [1] and the unequal distribution of patents [1,2]. Innovation resources, regarded as the input or supporting conditions of innovation activities, have presented a similar unbalanced spatial pattern [3] as that of innovation capability, showing a heavy-tailed distribution. Those in the eastern provinces such as Guangdong and Jiangsu are far ahead of those in the western provinces [4]. This imbalance is not conducive to comprehensive and sustainable innovation development

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