1. Introduction
As digital technologies continue to evolve, innovations such as 5G, big data, and artificial intelligence have become increasingly embedded in a wide range of industries, playing a pivotal role in advancing industrial modernization and supporting sustainable economic growth (
Y. Zhao et al., 2025;
Liu et al., 2024). In addition to improving resource allocation efficiency and transforming production organization, this process has stimulated growing demand for new-type digital infrastructure. Growing concerns over environmental sustainability, coupled with China’s shift toward a higher-quality growth model, have placed green and low-carbon development at the forefront of policy agendas. Green finance plays an increasingly important role in directing capital toward clean industries and promoting economic structural upgrading, serving as a crucial policy instrument for achieving the dual-carbon goals and enabling green transition (
X. Wang & Wang, 2021).
New digital infrastructure exhibits significant advantages in improving information environments, strengthening environmental governance capacity, and promoting green innovation and the development of green industries, thereby creating favorable conditions for the development of green finance (
Guo et al., 2024). However, existing research mainly relies on broad indicators such as digital economy development, smart cities, or informatization levels, and lacks focused examination of “new-type infrastructure construction” as a specific policy variable in shaping local green finance. The existing literature has devoted considerable attention to the economic consequences of new-type infrastructure, particularly its influence on regional development and productivity enhancement. (
Hu et al., 2025;
J. Feng & Qi, 2024), while the mechanisms through which such infrastructure influences green finance remain insufficiently identified. Given that green finance development is deeply shaped by regional industrial foundations, the degree of industrial upgrading, and city size, current studies remain limited in offering a structural perspective that systematically investigates the relationship between infrastructure and green finance. This study extends the existing literature by assessing the role of new digital infrastructure in shaping green finance development and by uncovering the potential pathways through which such influence is realized. Furthermore, industrial structure upgrading is incorporated into the theoretical framework and empirical model as a mediating channel to explore its structural transmission role.
This paper provides empirical evidence on how new digital infrastructure enhances cities’ capacity for green finance development, partly through industrial structure upgrading. This study contributes to the existing literature in three main respects. First, from the perspective of research focus, this study links new digital infrastructure construction with green finance development, thereby enriching the literature on the determinants of green finance in the context of digital transformation. Second, in terms of mechanism identification, the study incorporates industrial structure upgrading into the analytical framework and provides empirical evidence that the advancement of industrial structure serves as an important channel through which new digital infrastructure promotes green finance. Third, from a methodological perspective, this paper uses prefecture-level city data rather than provincial-level aggregates, allowing for a more fine-grained examination of regional differences and heterogeneous effects across cities with different economic scales, urban agglomeration characteristics, and levels of financial development.
5. Discussion
5.1. Discussion and Conclusions
Based on prefecture-level city panel data in China from 2007 to 2023, this study empirically examines the impact of new infrastructure development on green finance and the underlying mechanisms, and conducts heterogeneity analyses from the perspectives of city size, whether a city is part of an urban agglomeration, and financial development level. The empirical results show that new digital infrastructure significantly promotes the development of green finance. This finding is consistent with previous studies suggesting that digitalization and digital infrastructure can improve information transparency, reduce transaction costs, and enhance the efficiency of financial resource allocation. Different from studies using broader indicators such as the digital economy or informatization, this study focuses specifically on new digital infrastructure and provides city-level evidence on its role in promoting green finance.
The mechanism analysis confirms that industrial structure upgrading serves as a key transmission channel between new digital infrastructure and green finance. This finding suggests that digital infrastructure affects green finance not only through the financial system, but also by reshaping the real economy. By improving information flows, promoting digital transformation, and fostering service-oriented and higher-value-added industries, new digital infrastructure creates more viable green investment opportunities and strengthens demand for green financial instruments. Therefore, green finance development relies on both financial supply and the industrial foundation that supports green investment.
The heterogeneity analysis further reveals that the effect of new digital infrastructure on green finance is not uniform across cities, but varies with local development conditions. Specifically, the positive effect is more pronounced in large cities, cities outside major urban agglomerations, and cities with stronger traditional financial depth. Large cities usually possess more advanced digital infrastructure, a higher concentration of financial resources, and a larger pool of potential green investment projects, which may enable them to convert digital infrastructure advantages into green finance development more effectively. The stronger effect observed in non-urban-agglomeration cities may suggest that new digital infrastructure generates a larger marginal contribution in regions where digital and financial foundations were previously relatively weak. In addition, cities with deeper banking-based financial systems are better positioned to use digital infrastructure to improve green project identification, risk assessment, and financial resource allocation.
Overall, these findings contribute to the green finance literature by identifying new digital infrastructure as a key technological and institutional factor shaping green finance development. They further suggest that the role of digital infrastructure is neither automatic nor homogeneous across cities. Instead, its effectiveness depends on the industrial base, the depth of local financial systems, and broader regional development conditions. Accordingly, policies designed to promote green finance should not be limited to the expansion of green financial instruments. They should also emphasize the coordinated development of digital infrastructure, industrial upgrading, and local financial capacity, so that digital advantages can be more effectively transformed into green financial outcomes.
5.2. Policy Implications
This study provides several implications for government agencies and regional development strategies:
- (1)
Strengthening new digital infrastructure as a foundation for green finance development.
Governments should continue to expand the deployment of 5G networks, artificial intelligence, industrial internet, data centers, and other forms of new infrastructure, while advancing reforms in the data factor market and improving digital governance. A more comprehensive digital infrastructure enhances information transparency in green projects, reduces the risk and cost of green finance, and promotes effective capital allocation.
- (2)
Promoting regional industrial upgrading to enhance the demand and absorption capacity for green finance.
Policymakers should support the development of advanced manufacturing, green industries, and digital service sectors to expand the scope and quality of green investment projects. Encouraging green innovation and low-carbon technology adoption can strengthen enterprises’ eligibility for green financing, thereby forming a positive cycle between industrial upgrading and green finance.
- (3)
Implementing differentiated new infrastructure and green finance policies based on regional characteristics.
Since the effects are stronger in large cities, financially developed regions, and non–urban-agglomeration areas, policies must be tailored accordingly. Large cities should focus on digital governance, data sharing, and innovation in green financial products. Regions with weaker financial systems should simultaneously enhance financial service capacity like expanding local green credit and improving guarantee mechanisms to avoid a mismatch between technological foundations and financial resources. Non-agglomeration cities should leverage new infrastructure to strengthen their information and industrial bases, thereby improving their ability to attract green capital.
5.3. Limitations and Future Directions
Despite providing useful city-level evidence, this study has several limitations that suggest directions for future research:
First, the construction of the new infrastructure index can be improved. The index derived from text analysis of government work reports captures policy intensity but may be influenced by reporting preferences. Future studies could incorporate more objective physical and investment-related indicators, such as the number of 5G base stations, data center computing capacity, broadband infrastructure, and digital economy investment, to develop a more comprehensive measure of new digital infrastructure development.
Second, the green finance indicator system can be further enriched. Although the entropy-based composite index includes green credit, investment, bonds, and other components, it does not cover emerging dimensions such as ESG performance or financing for green technological innovation due to data limitations. Future work may introduce more dynamic and comprehensive green finance indicators.
Third, this study does not fully investigate micro-level mechanisms related to green technological innovation or firm behaviour. While industrial upgrading is identified as a key mediator, microfoundations such as enterprise innovation capacity, environmental governance improvements, and financing behaviour remain to be explored. Future research could incorporate firm-level data to uncover how new digital infrastructure influences green finance through innovation and governance channels.