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Innovation

Home bias and China’s global standing in science

China’s emergence as the world’s leading producer of scientific publications has raised concerns about the West’s technological edge and the quality of China’s output. This column investigates the publishing phenomenon of ‘home bias’ – whereby researchers disproportionately cite papers from their own country – and finds that China exhibits the largest home bias across all major countries and in nearly every scientific field. After adjusting citation counts for home bias, the authors place China fourth globally – behind the US, the UK, and Germany – tempering the perception of China’s scientific dominance.

Over the past two decades, China has emerged as the world’s leading producer of scientific publications (Tollefson 2018, Xie and Freeman 2019, Brainard and Normile 2022). This rise has sparked concerns – particularly in the US and Europe – that Western countries are losing their long-held technological edge (The Economist 2024). These worries have been exacerbated by recent geopolitical tensions, as innovation plays a critical role not only in driving economic growth but also in military capabilities, pandemic response, and addressing climate change. In reaction, Western nations have revived industrial policies, employing such strategies as trade sanctions and industrial subsidies (Campos et al. 2023).

At the same time, China’s growing prominence in scientific research has sparked an ongoing debate about the quality and impact of its output (Huang 2018). Many rankings of researchers, universities, and countries rely heavily on citation counts to assess the influence and quality of scientific work. However, citations can be a biased measure of quality if they are driven by strategic considerations. In particular, citations often exhibit distinct geographic patterns, with researchers citing work from within their own country. In these instances, citations provide a biased measure of research quality or impact.

This issue is particularly relevant in the case of China. In a recent study analysing citation data from the top 10% of journals across 20 broad fields between 2000 and 2021, we show that China receives a striking 57.2% of its citations from other researchers based in Chinese institutions (Qiu et al. 2024). This is by far the largest share across all countries, as shown in Figure 1. 

Figure 1 Share of home citations

Figure 1 Share of home citations
Figure 1 Share of home citations

It might be tempting to interpret Figure 1 as evidence that Chinese citations are artificially inflated. After all, there is some evidence that interpersonal relationship norms (or guanxi) in China may encourage researchers to cite one another (Tang et. al 2015). However, the US also has a high ‘home citation share’, at 37.1%, and this trend is evident across all large countries in Figure 1. When researchers from the same country cite each other frequently, it may simply reflect the larger pool of potential citers within that country rather than bias. This effect, driven by country size, is particularly pronounced in China due to the country’s significant investment in its scientific sector over the past two decades. For instance, between 2000 and 2017, the number of universities and research institutions grew by 140%, while the number of scientists increased by 69% (National Bureau of Statistics of China 2017).

In Qiu et al. (2024), we propose a new method to measure home bias across countries, drawing from the literature on home bias in international trade (Santamaría et al. 2023). Specifically, our method to measure home bias uses a dartboard approach and asks: How many citations would a country receive if citations were distributed randomly – based solely on the size of both citing and cited countries – without any bias or preference for specific countries? We define ‘home bias’ as the difference between a country’s actual citations and this benchmark of expected citations.

Figure 2 Home bias in citations

Figure 2 Home bias in citations
Figure 2 Home bias in citations

In Figure 2, we present home bias in citations for the other countries in our sample. Every country demonstrates some level of home bias, but China stands out as a clear outlier, exhibiting a home bias nearly twice as large as that of other nations. Its citation counts are 42.3 percentage points larger than in the unbiased benchmark model. In comparison, the other countries with significant home bias, such as Iran and India, show a much smaller bias of 23.2 percentage points each.

China’s home bias is not a recent phenomenon. While it has been steadily increasing over the past two decades, Chinese citations already displayed a strong home bias as early as 2000, the beginning of our observation period. Neither is China’s home bias driven by any particular research field. Rather, as Figure 3 shows, China exhibits the strongest home bias in 18 out of 20 broad scientific fields.

Figure 3 Home bias in citations by field

Figure 3 Home bias in citations by field
Figure 3 Home bias in citations by field

Home bias has the potential to distort rankings that rely on citation counts. To address this issue, we apply a country-specific debiasing factor, defined as the number of benchmark home citations divided by the number of actual home citations. This adjustment enables us to recalibrate the rankings of countries based on citations, as demonstrated in Figure 4. While China ranks second behind the US in raw citations, it drops to fourth place when we apply our debiased metric, falling behind the US, the UK, and Germany. Although this is still an impressive position, our findings indicate that home bias has inflated China’s rise in the scientific league tables and distorted the perceptions of innovation policymakers.

Figure 4 Rankings of countries, correcting for home-bias

Figure 4 Rankings of countries, correcting for home-bias
Figure 4 Rankings of countries, correcting for home-bias

We believe this analysis could help temper the debate surrounding China’s rise in science and inform the economic consequences of the technological decoupling between the US and China (Jinji and Ozawa 2024, Cao et al. 2024, Goes and Bekkers 2022). For China’s leadership, our findings offer a chance to prioritise quality over quantity in scientific output. For Western nations, demonstrating that the perceived threat from China may be smaller than believed could reduce the impetus for escalating trade wars or policies designed to restrict scientific collaborations with Chinese teams.

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

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