The Rise of China and the Global Production of Scientific Knowledge (RFBerlin Discussion Paper No. 13/25)

Posted: 24 April 2025

Abstract

This paper examines how China’s growing research capabilities impact global research universities across scientific fields. Using bibliometric data from 1980 to 2020, we assess the effects of the “China shock” on high-impact publications, novel concepts, and citation patterns. Our analysis reveals a positive net effect in Chemistry and Engineering & Materials Science (EMS), but a negative effect in Clinical & Life Sciences (CLS). In other fields, the effects are mostly positive but imprecise. We highlight the coexistence of competition and spillover effects, with their relative strength shaped by field characteristics, such as expansion potential and the quality of China’s research.

This is Paper No. 13 in the RF Berlin Discussion Paper Series in 2025


Download this paper here: https://www.rfberlin.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/25013.pdf
JEL codes: O00
Keywords: China, bibliometric data, China shock, Chemistry and Engineering