This paper examines the effect of dialect distance on firm performance in underdeveloped counties within urban agglomerations, using dialect similarity as a conceptual entry point and firms as the primary unit of analysis. Drawing on a panel of 33,228 firm-year observations from underdeveloped counties from 2012 to 2015, we employ a fixed-effects model to identify the causal influence of dialect similarity on firm performance and explore the underlying mechanisms. We document several key findings: (a) greater dialect similarity significantly improves firm performance in these regions; (b) this effect is stronger among older firms and more pronounced in non-state-owned enterprises; (c) the positive impact is amplified in urban agglomerations with higher internet development, greater urban primacy, and higher per capita GDP; (d) dialect similarity enhances performance through increased sales, lower sales and financing costs, higher capital investment, and improved human capital; (e) further analysis suggests that cultural effects, rather than communication effects, drive the results. The study offers theoretical insights and policy implications for promoting common prosperity at the urban agglomeration level.
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Shaopeng Zhang
Q. Li
Shubin Wang
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Beijing Normal University
Northeast Forestry University
Southwestern University of Finance and Economics
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Zhang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c37be2b34aaaeb1a67eb42 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-026-07022-4