Tourism and economic growth: Multi-country evidence from mixed-frequency Granger causality tests
Tourism and economic growth: Multi-country evidence from mixed-frequency Granger causality tests
This article provides new global evidence for the causal relationship between international tourist arrivals (TA) and economic growth (EG). The analysis considers 23 developing and developed countries and covers the period from January 1981 to December 2017. The causal relationship between TA and EG is determined using a bootstrap mixed-frequency Granger causality approach adopting a rolling window technique to evaluate its stability and persistency over time. Empirical results show that causality is time-varying in both the short-term and the long-term. We illustrate our results by constructing a new global connectivity index (GCI). The GCI shows that international TA remain a leading indicator for future EG in a global perspective, especially during the global financial crisis (GFC). Our findings suggest that tourism sector plays an important part in the future EG in developing countries after the GFC. Similarly, the period after the GFC is characterised by one of the highest values of the tourism-led EG in developed countries according to the GCI; however, this effect is temporal and quickly eradicates. Overall, we find that tourism sector in developing countries remains a primary contributor to future EG, which is not the case in developed countries.
1216-1239
Enilov, Martin
a33a63d6-b26a-4ab5-88bb-d92151983cde
Wang, Yuan
92bcea33-c137-4b7d-aad9-49633023dad8
1 August 2022
Enilov, Martin
a33a63d6-b26a-4ab5-88bb-d92151983cde
Wang, Yuan
92bcea33-c137-4b7d-aad9-49633023dad8
Enilov, Martin and Wang, Yuan
(2022)
Tourism and economic growth: Multi-country evidence from mixed-frequency Granger causality tests.
Tourism Economics, 28 (5), .
(doi:10.1177/1354816621990155).
Abstract
This article provides new global evidence for the causal relationship between international tourist arrivals (TA) and economic growth (EG). The analysis considers 23 developing and developed countries and covers the period from January 1981 to December 2017. The causal relationship between TA and EG is determined using a bootstrap mixed-frequency Granger causality approach adopting a rolling window technique to evaluate its stability and persistency over time. Empirical results show that causality is time-varying in both the short-term and the long-term. We illustrate our results by constructing a new global connectivity index (GCI). The GCI shows that international TA remain a leading indicator for future EG in a global perspective, especially during the global financial crisis (GFC). Our findings suggest that tourism sector plays an important part in the future EG in developing countries after the GFC. Similarly, the period after the GFC is characterised by one of the highest values of the tourism-led EG in developed countries according to the GCI; however, this effect is temporal and quickly eradicates. Overall, we find that tourism sector in developing countries remains a primary contributor to future EG, which is not the case in developed countries.
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1354816621990155
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 February 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 February 2021
Published date: 1 August 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 474882
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474882
ISSN: 1354-8166
PURE UUID: 985405bd-e221-4594-a324-af648e4188a1
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Date deposited: 06 Mar 2023 17:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:13
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Author:
Martin Enilov
Author:
Yuan Wang
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