Author
Abstract
Purpose - For survival and prosperity, enterprises must pursue exploitative and exploratory innovations simultaneously. To accelerate technological breakthroughs in the wind power industry, the Chinese Government has promulgated several support programs from the demand and supply sides. This study assesses the impact of different categories of innovation policies on exploitative and exploratory innovation. As women also play an increasingly important role in corporate governance, the authors also elucidate the moderating role of female executives in these relationships. Design/methodology/approach - Based on micro-data of 119 listed Chinese wind power firms during 2006–2020, this study provides a theoretical model and tests the hypotheses. Findings - Both demand-side and supply-side innovation policies significantly facilitate exploitative and exploratory innovations of in the Chinese wind power industry. Furthermore, female executives enhance the effects of these policies on exploitative innovation but negatively moderate their effects on exploratory innovation. Originality/value - Innovation is generally considered homogeneous. This is one of the first studies to evaluate the impact of different categories of innovation policies on exploitative and exploratory innovations. In addition, although the increasingly important role of women in corporate governance is acknowledged, whether and how female executives affect the effectiveness of innovation policies has not been fully explored. This study advances the understanding of the potential impact of female executives on innovation policy effectiveness.
Suggested Citation
Zihao Jiang & Jiarong Shi, 2023.
"Policy and innovation of the wind power industry in China: do female executives matter?,"
European Journal of Innovation Management, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 27(8), pages 2668-2700, April.
Handle:
RePEc:eme:ejimpp:ejim-08-2022-0449
DOI: 10.1108/EJIM-08-2022-0449
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