Digitalization is increasingly central to economic growth strategies, yet robust macro-level evidence on the role of SME-led e-commerce remains limited. Drawing on the Resource-Based View, this study examines how SME digitalization, internet finance, and platform-based activities influence regional economic growth in China, and how these effects depend on digital infrastructure readiness (DIR). We construct an annual panel of 30 provincial-level regions in China over 2015–2024 and estimate dynamic relationships using two-step system GMM to address endogeneity and growth persistence. The results show that SME digitalization, supply-chain efficiency, mobile payment penetration, tech-driven employment growth, platform-economy contribution, and DIR all exert statistically significant positive effects on GDP growth. Quantitatively, a 10-percentage-point increase in SME digitalization is associated with approximately 0.3-percentage-point higher regional GDP growth, while a 10-point increase in DIR corresponds to about 0.4-percentage-point higher growth. Moderation analyses reveal that DIR significantly amplifies the growth effects of e-commerce expansion, mobile payments, and digital marketing, whereas its moderating role is weaker or insignificant for cross-border payments and supply-chain efficiency. These findings reconceptualize digitalization as a coordinated bundle of complementary resources and position DIR as a critical enabling capability for translating SME digital transformation into macroeconomic growth. The study offers policy-relevant evidence for targeting infrastructure investment and digital-economy strategies in emerging platform economies.
Hao et al. (Wed,) studied this question.