China Center Chart of the Week: Intangible investment in China has grown rapidly – but is it efficient?
The Conference Board uses cookies to improve our website, enhance your experience, and deliver relevant messages and offers about our products. Detailed information on the use of cookies on this site is provided in our cookie policy. For more information on how The Conference Board collects and uses personal data, please visit our privacy policy. By continuing to use this Site or by clicking "OK", you consent to the use of cookies. 

China Center Chart of the Week: Intangible investment in China has grown rapidly – but is it efficient?

In this first of three China Center "Charts of the Week," Conference Board economist Janet Hao examines China's intangible investments. 

Intangible investment – an important source of growth for advanced economies – refers mostly to capital expenditure beyond physical business capex (e.g. plants, machinery, etc.) in things like research, product design and marketing, software-enabled organizational capabilities, and human capital development.

China’s intangible investment share of GDP has risen swiftly over the past two decades, but despite the substantial top-line growth, it appears that overall spending on intangibles in China has largely been policy driven, rather than deriving from firm-level innovation. 

This chart shows “intangible investment” in China as a share of GDP, broken down by three categories: Software, Innovative Property and Economic Competency, as estimated by The Conference Board.


OTHER RELATED CONTENT