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Can Digital Governance Promote Urban Sustainable Development? Evidence from China’s Information Benefiting the People Pilot Program

Author

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  • Baobin Ma

    (School of Urban Economics and Public Administration, Capital University of Economics and Business, Beijing 100070, China)

  • Qing Song

    (School of Urban Economics and Public Administration, Capital University of Economics and Business, Beijing 100070, China)

Abstract

This study examines whether government-led digital governance is associated with improvements in urban sustainable development performance in the context of China’s Information Benefiting the People pilot program. Using the pilot program as a quasi-natural experiment, we estimate a difference-in-differences model based on a panel of Chinese prefecture-level cities from 2010 to 2024. Urban sustainable development performance is measured using an entropy-weight TOPSIS composite index that integrates economic development, resource-environmental quality, and social life. The results provide evidence that pilot city designation significantly improves the composite index within this specific policy setting, and the finding remains robust after PSM-DID estimation, excluding the pandemic year and municipality samples, adopting one-period lagged specifications, and controlling for concurrent digital policy programs. Channel analysis provides evidence consistent with three potential pathways: industrial structure upgrading, green innovation, and government fiscal transparency. Moreover, environmental regulation strengthens the positive effect of digital governance, suggesting institutional complementarity between regulatory pressure and digital capacity. Sub-dimension analysis shows that the overall improvement is mainly driven by social life and resource-environmental quality, whereas the economic development dimension does not show a significant response within the study period. Heterogeneity analysis further reveals stronger effects in non-resource-based cities and ordinary prefecture-level cities, indicating that the effects of digital governance reforms may depend on local structural conditions and governance capacity.

Suggested Citation

  • Baobin Ma & Qing Song, 2026. "Can Digital Governance Promote Urban Sustainable Development? Evidence from China’s Information Benefiting the People Pilot Program," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(12), pages 1-30, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:12:p:5813-:d:1961610
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