1. Introduction
To achieve high-quality development, it is key to optimize the industrial structure and replace old growth drivers with new ones. An up-to-date industrial framework forms the material and technical bedrock of a contemporary nation, making it critical to center economic development on the real economy. Grounded in this real economy foundation, efforts should prioritize bolstering cutting-edge manufacturing, advancing new-style industrialization, upgrading conventional sectors, expanding burgeoning industries, and proactively laying the groundwork for future industries. These steps will hasten the development of an advanced industrial system with cutting-edge manufacturing at its core.
However, there are still some obstacles to the current transformation and upgrading of China’s industrial structure, such as the urgent need to strengthen innovation transformation, insufficient digital penetration in manufacturing leading to an inverted relationship between structural progression and productivity growth (
H. Zhang, 2023), and regional disparities and coordination deficiencies in digital development that exacerbate Baumol’s disease and premature deindustrialization (
X. Chen & Xu, 2024). The bottleneck constraints are caused by the lack of “patient” capital and international technology blockades, which severely hinder technological innovation and further exacerbate the imbalance of the industrial structure (
G. Zhang, 2023). It is key to supporting high-quality economic development that promotes ISU and advances the construction of a modern industrial system.
Against the backdrop of rapid digitalization, the innovation, application, and deep integration of digital technology with the real economy provide a new engine for high-quality economic development in the new era. Data from the National Bureau of Statistics indicate that between 2020 and 2024, the share of value-added of China’s core digital economy industries in GDP increased from 7.8% to approximately 10%. However, industrial digitalization is characterized by unbalanced development. The eastern regions dominate in terms of scale, innovation capacity, and industrial transformation outcomes. In 2024, their digital industry revenue grew by 6.5% year-over-year, accounting for 73.6% of the national total. In contrast, the central, western, and northeastern regions recorded growth rates of 4.2%, 0.8%, and 2.5%, respectively. This highlights the pivotal role of the digital economy as a catalyst for ISU. However, it is crucial to recognize that the foundational status of the real economy necessitates integration as the locus of digital economic value. Without integration, the digital economy risks becoming an “air castle”. Meanwhile, the depth and breadth of such integration, as well as the degree of regional digital synergy, equally shape its enabling effects. Therefore, effectively unlocking digital dividends, promoting digital transformation in traditional real sectors, and constructing a mutually reinforcing and sustainable economic model are critical agendas for overcoming bottlenecks in industrial upgrading.
In recent years, studies on the impact of the DRI on ISU have focused on theoretical and empirical research on the role of the digital economy in ISU, as well as the theoretical elaboration of the impact of DRI on ISU. In terms of the theoretical and empirical research on the impact of the digital economy on ISU, the digital economy is considered to be new kinetic energy leading the upgrading of the industrial structure in the future (
X. Chen & Yang, 2021), which can promote the deep integration of manufacturing industry with the Internet, research and development, service industry, and new technologies, providing strong support for industrial transformation (
Jiao, 2020). Its organic integration with the service industry can continuously deepen the industrial structure of China’s economy (
X. Dong et al., 2022).
Y. Liu and Chen (
2021) and
T. Zhang and Jiang (
2022) used provincial panel data from China to investigate the promotional effect of the digital economy on ISU, as well as the mechanisms of human capital, technological innovation, factor structure, and industrial structure.
Deevi et al. (
2024) used data from 25 regions in China from 2014 to 2022 to confirm the driving effect of the digital economy on ISU, considering sustainable entrepreneurial growth as an important path to realization. However, the realization of the efficacy of the digital economy is fundamentally dependent on the supporting infrastructure provided by the real economy. The aforementioned studies are confined to the single-dimensional enabling effects of the digital economy and fail to delve into the synergistic forces generated by the dynamic process of DRI on ISU.
In terms of the theoretical impact of DRI on ISU,
Y. Liu and Xiu (
2022) systematically elaborated on the promotional effect of DRI on ISU, the number of domestic patent applications and acceptances, and investments in research and experimental development. The DRI aims to fully drive the transformation and upgrading of the real economy through the dual engines of digital technology and data elements (
Hong & Ren, 2023), which greatly encourages the leading role of enterprises in innovation-driven, employment promotion, and international competition, and is a new kinetic energy for the high-quality development of the modern industrial system (
Xia & Su, 2024). The promotion of new industrialization by DRI has the stage characteristics of innovation-driven, efficient and intensive, and internal and external linkage (
Ren & Li, 2024), and its empowerment in the digital transformation and upgrading of the manufacturing industry is reflected in flexible production and smart manufacturing (
X. Xu & Du, 2024).
The above studies have explored the impact of the digital economy and DRI on ISU, focusing on the empirical testing of the promotional effect of the digital economy on ISU at the empirical analysis level, laying the research foundation for this study. The theoretical discussion of DRI and ISU has laid a solid theoretical foundation for this study. However, few studies have extensively explored the intrinsic mechanism and realization path of DRI’s effect on ISU; additionally, whether DRI has a nonlinear impact and spatial spillover effects on ISU remains to be tested.
Therefore, this paper uses panel data from 30 Chinese provinces from 2011 to 2022, focusing on “the specific impact mechanism and path exploration of DRI on ISU”, constructing a comprehensive analysis framework to explore how the digital economy interacts with and penetrates the real economy during the DRI process, and uses fixed-effect models, panel threshold models, and spatial econometric models to explore its driving effect on the evolution of the industrial structure towards higher efficiency and optimization.
The marginal contributions of this paper include three aspects. First, from the unique perspective of “DRI”, systematically analyzing and testing the promotional effect of the DRI on ISU and the specific path mechanism. Compared with the literature focusing on the impact of the digital economy or the real economy on industrial structure, this perspective can more comprehensively reveal the synergistic effects and deep-seated reasons for the industrial structure transformation brought about by the “dual-wheel” driving effect of the integration of the two. Moreover, this paper conducts empirical tests using panel data from 30 provinces and cities across the country, providing empirical evidence for the promotion of ISU by DRI and enriching the research on the factors affecting ISU. Second, this paper explores the nonlinear relationship between DRI and ISU using the panel threshold method, finding that the impact of DRI on ISU varies with the level of development of the digital economy and the real economy, which provides a thought for synergizing the development of the digital economy and the real economy to promote ISU and provides a theoretical basis for formulating more appropriate supportive policies. Third, this paper employs a spatial panel model to examine the spatial spillover effects of DRI and ISU, confirming the spatial spillover effects of DRI and ISU, exploring the spatial transmission effects of DRI, providing a new perspective for related research, and offering policy insights for the coordination of DRI and ISU among regions.
6. Conclusions and Implications
6.1. Conclusions
This paper explores the impact, mechanism, and nonlinear impact of DRI on ISU using panel data collected from 30 Chinese provinces and cities from 2012 to 2022. The research shows that DRI has a significant positive effect on ISU. After robustness tests and endogeneity treatment, DRI still has a direct impact on ISU, further verifying the authenticity of the conclusion. In the heterogeneity analysis, this paper finds that there are differences in the impact of DRI on ISU among provinces, with the effect in the central region being significantly better than that in the eastern and western regions. DRI indirectly affects ISU through the level of consumer demand, the degree of factor distortion, and the process of marketization. In the threshold effect test, the nonlinear impact of DRI on ISU with the level of digital economy development and the scale of the real economy as threshold variables is verified; furthermore, the spatial correlation test shows that there is interaction among provinces, and ISU has spatial spillover.
6.2. Policy Implications
Based on the above findings, DRI is an important driving force for upgrading the industrial structure, and it can work by promoting consumption, correcting factor mismatch, and accelerating marketization. There also exists a threshold effect and a spatial spillover effect on DRI to empower the upgrading of the industrial structure. These results are of importance in accelerating the upgrading of the industrial structure. The main policy implications are as follows:
Firstly, promoting the development of the digital economy in multiple dimensions and accelerating the deep integration of the digital economy with the real economy. Provinces should pay attention to the construction of digital economy infrastructure such as sensor terminals, 5G networks, big data centers, artificial intelligence, etc., promote the innovation and application of digital technologies to enhance the penetration capacity of digital technologies into the real economy, and lay a solid material foundation and technological support for the in-depth fusion of the digital economy and the real economy. It is necessary to accelerate the promotion of the in-depth integration and application of data elements and digital technologies in industries to empower the digital transformation of traditional industries and stimulate their innovative vitality.
Secondly, strengthening the government’s positioning as a leader and supporter, implementing a “policy toolkit” to foster a robust DRI ecosystem. During industrial dataization, the government should provide fiscal incentives such as tax cuts and R&D super-deductions, reduce digital transformation costs, establish an inclusive yet prudent regulatory framework, promote flexible DRI while monitoring risks, build an open and shared data platform, break down the information silos, promote the reasonable flow and efficient allocation of data resources, and provide a broader development space and rich resource support for the formation and development of the modern industrial system.
Thirdly, balancing the development of the digital economy and the real economy, and expanding the path of DRI to empower the upgrading of the industrial structure. Consolidate the mechanism of the digital economy in expanding the level of social consumption demand, improving the distortion of factor allocation, promoting the marketization process and other mechanisms to promote the industrial structure, use digital technology to innovate the consumption mode, broaden the consumption path, build personalized and convenient consumption scenarios for consumers, and satisfy the growing diversified needs of consumers. Make full use of the flexibility and innovativeness of the digital economy and improve the distortion of factor allocation. The flexibility and innovation of the digital economy will be fully utilized to improve the distortion of factor allocation, so that more capital elements will be invested in the real economy and innovation activities; the dividends of the digital economy will be tapped to accelerate the marketization process, and the vitality and advantages of the socialist market economy will be better utilized, so as to promote the evolution of the industrial structure towards rationalization and advanced. Starting from policy guidance and support, industry chain integration, supply chain management, digital transformation of enterprises, and other dimensions, we will further explore the “black box” of DRI to promote the upgrading of industrial structure and inject new vitality into the construction of the modern industrial system.
Fourthly, to strengthen regional coordination, enhance the eastern region’s leading and exemplary role, reinforce the central region’s pivotal role, intensify efforts to foster a favorable economic development environment in the western region, and jointly promote industrial structure upgrading across regions. For the eastern provinces, it is crucial to fully leverage their regional advantages, reduce regional barriers, and enhance joint development and sharing with neighboring provinces in technology, resources, and human capital. For the central provinces, efforts should focus on facilitating the flow of technology, resource exchanges, and talent mobility to promote synchronized industrial upgrading across regions. As for the western provinces, the Party and the state should leverage their role as “Eastern Data, Western Computing” hub nodes to accelerate new infrastructure, such as 5G base stations and data centers, thereby enhancing digital infrastructure capabilities. Utilizing eastern digital technology spillovers, central and western regions could establish cross-regional technology transfer platforms and collaborative industrial parks, forming an innovation ecosystem of “basic R&D—application scenarios—industrial incubation”, to accelerate the construction of a modern industrial system.
In the current context of rapidly evolving digital technologies, the convergence of the digital and real economies is an inevitable trend. This presents developing countries with a new path for development through leapfrogging. As the DR-driven ISU effect becomes increasingly apparent in China, other developing countries can incorporate China’s experience to accelerate the modernization and upgrading of their industrial systems.
6.3. Research Limitations and Further Studies
This paper examines the influence of digital–physical integration on industrial structure upgrading. When developing a digital–physical integration indicator system, it is essential to take into account both the digital economy and the real economy subsystems; however, in constructing the real economy sub-indicator system, this paper mainly focuses on output, imports and exports, and social retail sales, which may not fully capture the development of the real economy. Therefore, the real economy sub-indicator system should be further enhanced, particularly by incorporating industry-related indicators.
In terms of application research on the integration of digital and real economies, this paper analyzes industrial structure upgrading at the macro level. However, whether the integration of digital and real economies affects other macroeconomic variables remains to be explored. Additionally, the mechanisms and practical effects of this integration in promoting the transformation and upgrading of enterprises, especially manufacturing enterprises, require further investigation.
Regarding the measurement of the degree of digital–physical integration, current methods are primarily confined to the macro level. Developing a subsystem for the integration of the digital economy and the real economy at the micro-enterprise level will be an important direction for future research.