1. Introduction
Manufacturing serves as the core pillar of the modern economic system [
1]. Its development relies on an efficient and stable supply chain system, which acts as the core interconnected component of the global industrial chain. The supply chain system integrates multiple functional links. It connects global resource suppliers and consumer markets as a unified whole. The industrial chain system features interrelated and interdependent elements [
2]. Information transmission and resource flow within this system follow specific dynamic logic. When market demand fluctuates, demand signals transmit from downstream sales ends. They pass through logistics, production and processing links. Finally, they feed back to upstream raw material suppliers. This transmission process amplifies the lag of information response in the supply chain system.
Cross-border business adds time differences and language communication barriers. These factors increase the difficulty of information transmission in the global supply chain system [
3]. They also raise the deviation of information feedback. The above factors jointly enhance the uncertainty of the manufacturing supply chain system. They turn supply chain risks into a systemic disturbance factor that restricts the development of manufacturing firms. Building a resilient supply chain system has thus become a key step for manufacturing firms to enhance their long-term competitiveness [
4]. It helps firms respond to systemic shocks flexibly and maintain stable operation in the industrial chain system.
Listed manufacturing firms are the core entities of the manufacturing industrial chain system. They have large scale, advanced technology and standardized management. Their operational behaviors not only affect their own development. They also drive the operation of the entire upstream and downstream industrial chain system. They even exert a notable impact on the national economic system. Economic globalization deepens the integration of individual firms into the global industrial chain system. Expanding overseas markets has become a core strategic choice for listed manufacturing firms [
5]. Domestic markets face saturation and fierce competition. These factors push firms to seek new profit growth points through overseas expansion [
6]. Firms usually adopt export, overseas investment and franchising to enter overseas markets [
7].
Scholars have conducted extensive research on firms’ overseas market expansion. Article [
8] first examines how entry modes, host country environments and firm capabilities affect the performance of overseas expansion. With the rise in emerging market firms, research focuses on the motivations and modes of their overseas expansion [
9,
10]. However, existing studies lack a systemic perspective in analyzing the drivers and constraints of overseas expansion. Most studies treat supply chains as an isolated operational link of firms. They fail to regard supply chain risks as a systemic disturbance that spreads through the industrial chain. For example, Ho et al. (2015) [
11] focused on the classification and direct operational impact of single-type supply chain risks, without considering the systemic spillover effect of risks across the industrial chain. Alora & Barua (2022) [
12] mainly examined the direct impact of supply chain risks on firm production efficiency, ignoring the internal transmission of risks within the firm’s system. Pham et al. (2023) [
13] conducted a literature review on supply chain risk and firm performance, but did not explore how supply chain risks transmit through internal firm elements to shape long-term strategic decisions such as overseas expansion. They also ignore the internal transmission of supply chain risks within the firm’s internal system.
This research gap is prominent in the context of the global industrial chain system’s increasing uncertainty. No study systematically reveals how supply chain risks transmit through the internal system elements of firms to inhibit overseas market expansion. This study fills the gaps. It takes Chinese A-share manufacturing firms as the research object. It constructs supply chain risk measurement indicators using textual analysis. It then builds an econometric model to test the impact of supply chain risks on firms’ overseas market expansion. It also verifies the three internal transmission mechanisms of the firm system: operating costs, financing constraints and R&D investment. In addition, this study explores the mitigating effects of overseas operational system expansion and overseas technological innovation system construction on supply chain risks. It further analyzes the heterogeneous impact of supply chain risks across different system levels, which include industrial chain system, regional market system and firm internal system.
This study adopts the general system theory founded by von Bertalanffy as the core theoretical framework, which follows four core principles: (1) wholeness: the system is an organic whole composed of interrelated and interdependent elements, and the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; (2) nested hierarchy: the system has a multi-level nested structure, in which the subsystem is embedded in the higher-level system; (3) dynamic correlation: the elements within the system interact and influence each other, and the change in one element will cause the chain reaction of other elements; (4) environmental adaptability: the system needs to interact with the external environment and adjust its internal structure to adapt to environmental disturbances. Based on this framework, we conceptualize the global industrial chain as a complex organic system, the supply chain as a core nested subsystem within the industrial chain system, and the manufacturing firm as an adaptive actor embedded in this dual system. So that the findings of this study offer critical theoretical and practical insights for operations and supply chain risk management, and are directly relevant to systematic solutions for modern supply chain risk challenges.
Theoretically, this study makes three core contributions. First, it embeds supply chain risk research within a robust system theory framework, breaking the traditional siloed perspective that treats supply chains as an isolated operational link, and advances the application of system theory in interdisciplinary supply chain risk management research. Second, it constructs a dual-layer analytical framework linking the macro industrial chain system and the micro firm internal system, revealing the dynamic transmission mechanisms of supply chain risks through three mutually reinforcing internal paths, and expanding the theoretical understanding of how systemic risks shape firm global operational strategies. Third, it provides empirical evidence for the system resilience enhancement effect of global operational subsystem optimization, enriching the theoretical research on organizational resilience building in the global industrial chain ecosystem.
Practically, this study delivers three actionable contributions. First, it develops a systematic supply chain risk measurement indicator system for manufacturing firms, which can help firms accurately identify and quantify their supply chain risk exposure in real time. Second, it proposes targeted risk mitigation strategies for firms to offset the negative impact of supply chain risks on global expansion, including broadening overseas operational scope and intensifying overseas technological innovation. Third, it provides evidence-based policy insights for industrial chain system governance, supply chain digital transformation, and the cultivation of supply chain resilience in manufacturing firms.
3. Hypotheses Development
Based on the general system theory framework, this study regards supply chain risks as a systemic disturbance factor from the supply chain subsystem to the firm’s internal operation system. This disturbance will transmit through the dynamic interaction of core elements within the firm system, and ultimately inhibit the firm’s overseas market expansion. Firms can build a counteracting system by optimizing their overseas operation subsystem, to offset the inhibitory effect of supply chain risks. The theoretical model of the hypothesized relationships is shown in
Figure 1.
3.1. The Inhibitory Effect of Supply Chain Risks
Based on the system theory, the supply chain system is a core subsystem nested within the firm’s operation system, and its stable operation is the prerequisite for the firm’s normal operation and strategic expansion. The outbreak of supply chain risks is a systemic disturbance to the firm’s entire operation system, which will disrupt the stability of the firm’s internal operation, damage its resource allocation capacity, and weaken its competitiveness in overseas markets.
On the one hand, supply chain risks will increase the uncertainty of the firm’s operation, making it difficult for the firm to maintain stable production and operation, and unable to guarantee the continuous supply of products for overseas markets. On the other hand, supply chain risks will consume a large amount of the firm’s resources and management attention, making the firm unable to invest sufficient resources in overseas market expansion. Therefore, this study proposes the baseline hypothesis:
Hypothesis 1. Higher supply chain risks significantly inhibit the overseas market expansion of manufacturing firms.
3.2. Transmission Mechanism: Firms’ Operating Costs
Overseas market expansion requires substantial upfront and ongoing capital input from firms. Firms need to invest in market research, branch establishment and local talent recruitment in the early stage. They also need to invest in brand building and market promotion during formal operation. Rising operating costs reduce the capital available for firms’ overseas expansion. They fail to guarantee the necessary capital input for overseas market development [
23]. Higher operating costs also force firms to raise product prices to maintain profit margins. This reduces the price competitiveness of firms in overseas markets. It makes firms lose price-sensitive consumers and hinders overseas market expansion.
The manufacturing supply chain system has more functional links and a more complex network structure than other industries. It covers procurement, production, sales and after-sales service. This complexity increases the probability of systemic accidents in the supply chain. It inevitably raises the operating costs of firms. Defective raw materials from upstream suppliers lead to unqualified products. Firms have to repurchase raw materials and rework products. This directly increases production costs. Unsmooth information transmission in the supply chain system causes the bullwhip effect [
24]. Inaccurate demand forecasting leads to either inventory shortages or overstocking. Inventory overstocking occupies firm capital and warehousing space. It increases inventory management costs and capital occupation costs.
External environmental shocks disrupt the supply chain system. Natural disasters and political conflicts cause raw material supply interruptions. Firms have to find alternative suppliers, which raises procurement costs. Logistics cost increases are driven by fuel price hikes and policy changes [
25]. Goods damage during transportation adds loss costs to firms. All these factors drive up the operating costs of manufacturing firms through the supply chain system. They further inhibit the overseas market expansion of firms.
Hypothesis 2. Supply chain risks of manufacturing firms inhibit their overseas market expansion by increasing firms’ operating costs.
3.3. Transmission Mechanism: Firms’ Financing Constraints
Financing constraints reflect the difficulty of firms in obtaining capital in the financial system. Firms with high financing constraints adopt conservative operational strategies [
23]. They lack sufficient capital to support overseas market expansion. They also have weak risk resistance capabilities. They tend to abandon high-potential but high-risk overseas projects. This limits the scope of their overseas market expansion. Overseas operation requires continuous capital input for daily production and management. Tighter financing constraints lead to tight operating capital for firms. It even causes capital chain breaks and disrupts the normal overseas operation of firms.
The complexity of the supply chain system makes firms more vulnerable to systemic chain break risks [
12]. The outbreak of supply chain risks damages the synergy between firms and their upstream and downstream partners. It even breaks cooperative relationships in the industrial chain system. Financial institutions perceive the operational risks of firms. They reduce financial support and raise financing conditions for these firms [
26]. Supply chain risk events such as product quality problems damage the corporate reputation. They lower the credit rating of firms in the financial system. This increases the financing cost and difficulty of firms.
Most manufacturing firms rely on core firm credit and accounts receivable financing in the supply chain system. This single financing channel makes firms face greater financing risks. The breakdown of cooperative relationships in the supply chain system cuts off this financing channel. It further tightens the financing constraints of firms. Supply chain risks also lead to inventory overstocking or depreciation. This reduces the value of inventory collateral. Financial institutions either refuse to accept inventory as collateral or lower the loan-to-value ratio. It limits the collateral financing capacity of firms. The transmission effect of the supply chain system makes the financial troubles of one firm affect other firms. It leads to accounts receivable recovery risks and worsens the cash flow of firms. All these factors intensify the financing constraints of manufacturing firms through the supply chain system and inhibit their overseas market expansion.
Hypothesis 3. Supply chain risks of manufacturing firms inhibit their overseas market expansion by raising firms’ financing constraints.
3.4. Transmission Mechanism: Firms’ R&D Investment
Overseas markets have diverse consumer demands based on different cultures and habits. Firms need to adjust their products and services to meet local demand. This is a prerequisite for successful overseas market expansion. R&D investment is the core knowledge capital of firms [
27]. More R&D investment enhances the independent and integrated innovation capabilities of firms. It helps firms launch new products adapted to overseas markets. It also improves the ability of firms to absorb external technologies and knowledge. It overcomes technological transfer barriers in overseas expansion.
Insufficient R&D investment makes firms unable to optimize product design for overseas markets. It leads to a mismatch between firm products and overseas market demand. Firms cannot continuously upgrade product functions to meet in-depth customer needs. This reduces the operating income of firms in existing overseas markets. It also hinders firms from entering potential overseas markets. Supply chain risks create a high-uncertainty operating environment for firms. Firms tend to allocate limited resources to short-term market competition to maintain their market position [
28]. They are reluctant to invest large amounts of capital in long-term R&D activities.
The global supply chain system is a dynamic network ecosystem with strong inertia. Changes in one link of the firm’s supply chain system easily cause mismatches with the entire industrial chain system. Firms have to invest more capital to upgrade multiple links of the supply chain system. Otherwise, they have to abandon the R&D and innovation of new products and processes. This makes it difficult for firms to carry out R&D activities smoothly. It further reduces the R&D investment of firms. Supply chain risks thus reduce the R&D investment of manufacturing firms and inhibit their overseas market expansion.
Hypothesis 4. Supply chain risks of manufacturing firms inhibit their overseas market expansion by reducing firms’ R&D investment.
3.5. Mitigation Paths: Overseas Operational Scope and Technological Innovation
Firms can build a counteracting system through two paths to offset the inhibitory effect of supply chain risks on overseas market expansion. The first path is to broaden the overseas operational scope. It forms economies of scale through vertical integration and horizontal diversification in the global market. The second path is to strengthen overseas technological innovation. It forms innovation synergy through technological and product innovation in overseas markets. Both paths optimize the firm’s overseas operation system. They reduce the dependence of firms on the domestic supply chain system. They also enhance the resilience of firms in the global supply chain system.
Broadening overseas operational scope enables firms to carry out vertical integration through overseas mergers and acquisitions and self-construction [
29]. It extends the product chain of firms to overseas customers. It shortens the response time of the overseas supply chain system. It also alleviates external financing constraints and enhances the autonomy of firms in key technologies. Horizontal diversification is realized through multi-regional layout and multi-supplier cooperation. Firms establish production bases and warehousing centers in different countries and regions. It optimizes the global resource allocation of firms. It avoids the dependence of firms on a single market or supplier in the supply chain system.
Strengthening overseas technological innovation helps firms obtain authorized patents for core technologies in overseas markets [
30]. It reduces the dependence of firms on external technologies. It also lowers the supply chain risks caused by technology supply restrictions. Firms can develop a variety of products based on overseas patents. When the supply chain of one product is disturbed, other products can maintain market share. It reduces the overall operational impact of single product supply disruptions. The above two paths jointly build a resilient overseas operation system for firms. They offset the inhibitory effect of supply chain risks on overseas market expansion.
Hypothesis 5. Broadening the overseas operational scope and strengthening overseas technological innovation can offset the inhibitory effect of supply chain risks on the overseas market expansion of manufacturing firms.
7. Discussion
The core finding of this study is that supply chain risks act as a systemic disturbance factor in the industrial chain system, which inhibits the overseas market expansion of manufacturing firms through the internal transmission of the firm’s system elements. Based on the general system theory framework, this section interprets the core findings, compares them with existing studies, and clarifies the theoretical advancement and practical value of this study.
From the perspective of system theory, the supply chain system is an important subsystem of the industrial chain system, which is closely linked with the firm’s internal operation system. The outbreak of supply chain risks is a systemic disturbance, which first affects the operational cost element of the firm’s internal system. The rise in operating costs then disturbs the financial element and leads to tighter financing constraints. Tighter financing constraints further squeeze the R&D investment element of the firm’s innovation system. The three elements interact and transmit within the firm’s internal system, and their joint effect leads to the decline of the firm’s overseas expansion capability. This finding verifies the dynamic transmission logic of system elements proposed by the general system theory, and confirms that the supply chain system and the firm’s internal system are an organic whole. Compared with existing studies that focus on the direct impact of single-type supply chain risks on firm operational performance (such as Ho et al., 2015 [
11]; Alora & Barua, 2022 [
12]), this study breaks the traditional siloed perspective, and reveals the cross-layer transmission mechanism of systemic risks from the supply chain subsystem to the firm’s internal system, which advances the application of system theory in supply chain risk management research.
The identified mitigating effects of expanded global operational reach and targeted overseas technological innovation align directly with core principles of systemic optimization in general system theory. Widening the geographic scope of overseas operations allows firms to build diversified, globally distributed operational subsystems. This structural shift reduces over-reliance on domestic supply chain networks, while spreading risk exposure across multiple regional markets and operational nodes. Intensifying overseas research and development and technological innovation efforts simultaneously optimizes firms’ global innovation subsystems. These investments enhance product portfolio diversity and core technological self-sufficiency, reducing the vulnerability of daily operations to unanticipated supply chain disruptions. These two mitigation strategies do not operate in isolation. They work in tandem to build comprehensive organizational resilience against global supply chain volatility, delivering a systemic offset to the disruptive impacts of supply chain risks. This finding complements existing research on supply chain resilience (such as Ali et al., 2025 [
3]; Alfaqiyah et al., 2025 [
4]), and provides new empirical evidence for how firms can enhance system resilience through global subsystem optimization.
Results from the heterogeneity analysis highlight the layered, hierarchical nature of systemic influence across organizational and market structures, which is consistent with the nested hierarchy principle of general system theory. The constraining impact of supply chain risks varies substantially across different levels of nested systemic frameworks. Firms with less developed global operational subsystems, marked by lower shares of overseas revenue, exhibit greater vulnerability to systemic supply chain shocks. Firms operating in regions with less mature market systems, characterized by lower levels of marketization, lack the systemic institutional support to buffer disruptions, and thus face more severe adverse impacts from supply chain risks. Firms positioned in upstream segments of the industrial chain system face higher structural rigidity in their operational models, making them more sensitive to even minor supply chain disturbances. Firms with less robust internal operational systems, including those with lower levels of current liabilities and limited digital transformation progress, have weaker inherent systemic resilience, and thus experience amplified negative effects from supply chain volatility. These findings collectively confirm that the impact of systemic disruptive factors is directly shaped by the maturity and robustness of the overarching system and its individual nested subsystems. Compared with existing research on firm internationalization (such as Luo & Tung, 2007 [
9]; Ramamurti, 2012 [
10]), this study expands the understanding of the heterogeneous constraints of emerging market firms’ overseas expansion, and provides a new theoretical explanation for the differentiated internationalization performance of firms from the perspective of system robustness.
In terms of practical implications, the findings of this study provide a systematic strategic framework for manufacturing firms to cope with supply chain risks in global expansion. Firms should not only focus on the management of single supply chain risk links, but also build comprehensive system resilience through holistic system optimization. Specifically, firms should strengthen the stability of their internal operation system by streamlining operational costs, alleviating financing constraints, and sustaining consistent R&D investment. Meanwhile, firms should actively build diversified global operational subsystems through expanding the geographic scope of their overseas footprint and deepening investment in overseas technological innovation. In addition, firms should implement differentiated risk mitigation strategies based on their own system characteristics, industrial chain position and regional institutional environment. For firms with low overseas revenue, upstream industrial chain position, low marketization regions and low digital transformation level, they should pay more attention to the prevention and mitigation of supply chain risks, and take targeted measures to enhance their system robustness.
8. Conclusions and Implications
Robust and proactive supply chain risk management plays an indispensable role in advancing firm internationalization and supporting high-quality, sustainable development across the global manufacturing industrial chain. This research develops a text-based metric to quantify supply chain risk for Chinese A-share manufacturing firms spanning the 2008 to 2022 period. It then empirically examines the causal impact of supply chain risks on firms’ overseas market expansion, alongside the internal transmission pathways that drive these effects. It further explores actionable risk mitigation strategies and heterogeneous impact patterns through the lens of system theory. The core empirical findings can be summarized as follows. Elevated supply chain risks exert a significant, negative impact on manufacturing firms’ ability to expand into global markets. This constraining effect operates through three mutually reinforcing transmission channels within firms’ internal operational systems: increased operational expenditures, tightened access to external financing, and reduced investment in research and development. Widening the geographic scope of overseas operations and deepening commitment to overseas technological innovation together enable firms to build more resilient organizational systems, directly offsetting the negative impact of supply chain risks on global expansion efforts. The constraining effect of supply chain risks is also disproportionately pronounced for specific firm subgroups. These include firms with lower overseas revenue shares, those operating in regions with limited marketization progress, firms positioned in upstream industrial chain segments, firms with lower levels of current liabilities, and those with limited advancement in digital transformation.
8.1. Theoretical Implications
This study makes three core theoretical contributions to the intersecting fields of supply chain management and firm internationalization.
First, it embeds supply chain risk research within a robust general system theory framework, breaking the traditional siloed perspective that treats supply chains as an isolated operational link, and advances the application of system theory in interdisciplinary supply chain risk management research. This study clarifies the core principles of system theory applied in the research, and constructs a nested system analytical framework of “global industrial chain system–supply chain subsystem–firm internal system”, which provides a new theoretical perspective for supply chain risk research.
Second, it constructs a dual-layered analytical framework that links the macro industrial chain system to the micro internal firm system. It unpacks the dynamic transmission mechanisms through which supply chain risks propagate across these two interconnected layers. It empirically validates the three core internal transmission channels, while confirming the mutually reinforcing nature of these pathways. This framework opens the “black box” between supply chain risks and firm long-term strategic decision-making, and expands the theoretical understanding of how systemic supply chain risks shape firms’ global operational strategies.
Third, it extends existing scholarship on organizational resilience building within the global industrial chain ecosystem. It provides robust empirical evidence that developing diversified global operational subsystems and targeted overseas innovation subsystems directly enhances firms’ ability to withstand and adapt to supply chain disruptions. This finding enriches the theoretical research on supply chain resilience, and provides a new theoretical direction for firms to cope with global supply chain volatility.
8.2. Policy and Managerial Implications
The empirical findings from this study deliver actionable practical implications for both manufacturing firms and governmental regulatory bodies, all grounded in a systemic governance perspective.
For manufacturing firms, the most effective strategy to address supply chain risks lies in holistic systemic optimization, rather than fragmented, isolated adjustments to individual operational processes. Firms should prioritize the refinement of their internal operational systems by streamlining operational costs, alleviating financing constraints, and sustaining consistent investment in research and development. They should simultaneously build out integrated global operational subsystems by expanding the geographic scope of their overseas footprint and deepening investment in overseas technological innovation. Combining these two dimensions of optimization strengthens the overall systemic resilience of firms operating within complex global supply chain networks. Firms should also formulate differentiated risk mitigation strategies based on their own system characteristics, to enhance the pertinence and effectiveness of risk management.
For governmental and regulatory bodies, policy focus should center on industrial chain system governance and regional market system optimization. Authorities should work to advance the marketization level of regional institutional systems, building robust institutional environments and efficient resource allocation mechanisms that support firm development. They should also strengthen systemic governance of the manufacturing industrial chain, support digital transformation across supply chain networks, and develop public service platforms that serve the entire industrial chain ecosystem. In addition, policymakers should design targeted, tailored policy measures for different firm subgroups. They should deliver enhanced support for firms operating in upstream industrial chain segments, those located in regions with lower marketization levels, and firms with limited progress in digital transformation. These targeted measures help these firms build greater systemic resilience against the adverse impacts of supply chain risks.
8.3. Research Limitations and Recommendations for Future Research
This study has several limitations that need to be acknowledged, which also provide clear directions for future research.
First, the research sample of this study is limited to Chinese A-share listed manufacturing firms, and the findings may be subject to the specific institutional environment and industrial development stage of China. Future research can expand the sample to manufacturing firms in other emerging economies or developed countries, to test the generalizability of the findings in different institutional contexts, and explore the heterogeneous impact of supply chain risks on firms’ overseas expansion in different countries and regions.
Second, the supply chain risk measure based on textual analysis of annual reports has potential limitations. On the one hand, there may be reporting bias in the annual report text: firm management may have the motivation to conceal or exaggerate supply chain risk information due to factors such as capital market performance and career development, which may lead to deviation between the measured risk and the actual risk. On the other hand, there may be heterogeneity in managerial disclosure practices: firms in different industries, with different sizes and different ownership may have significant differences in the disclosure norms and detail degree of supply chain risk information. In addition, there may be human factors in the construction of the keyword lexicon, which may affect the accuracy of the risk measurement. Future research can combine multiple data sources such as supply chain transaction data, logistics data and media reports to construct a more comprehensive and accurate supply chain risk measurement indicator system, to alleviate the potential measurement bias.
Third, this study mainly focuses on the firm-level transmission mechanisms and mitigation strategies, and has not fully explored the cross-firm spillover effect of supply chain risks in the industrial chain system. Future research can further explore how supply chain risks transmit between upstream and downstream firms in the industrial chain, and how the industrial chain collaborative governance can mitigate the adverse impact of supply chain risks on firms’ global expansion.
Fourth, this study examines the average effect of supply chain risks on firms’ overseas market expansion, but has not explored the heterogeneous impact of different types of supply chain risks (such as supply risk, demand risk, environmental risk). Future research can further decompose supply chain risks into different types, and explore the differential impact and transmission mechanisms of different types of risks on firms’ overseas expansion, to provide more targeted risk mitigation strategies for firms.