Abstract

We study the effect of political power on resource allocation for knowledge production dictated by central planning in a non-market system. Our empirical results suggest that, compared to non-connected scholars, political connected (PC) scholars have 15.7% more allocation granted by the national Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC). Variations in grant allocation is related to weaker institutional environments, less reputable universities, and hard-to-value project. Additional analysis suggests that access to the NSFC fund not only benefits individual PC scholars in terms of their research quality, but also brings more high-impact publications for their affiliated institution.

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