The moderating role of digitalisation in the tourism-growth nexus: evidence from small island economies

被引:3
|
作者
Seetanah, Boopen [1 ]
Fauzel, Sheereen [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Mauritius, Finance & Accounting, Reduit, Mauritius
关键词
Digitalisation; tourism development; economic growth; PARDL; FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT; COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY; PANEL COINTEGRATION; IMPACT; INFORMATION; HYPOTHESIS; CAUSALITY; EXPENDITURE; INCOME; SAMPLE;
D O I
10.1080/19407963.2023.2201888
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
An overwhelming amount of studies has investigated tourism as a driver of growth and there is a wide consensus on a positive relationship (tourism-led growth hypothesis). However, recent studies have also pointed out that the tourism-growth nexus may be conditional on certain elements like development level and infrastructure, education and human capital among others. Another factor which is believed to moderate the tourism-growth link is the level of digitalisation of the destination country and this research claims that countries with higher levels of digitalisation could benefit from increased tourism economic benefits. This study analyses the moderating role of such digitalisation in the tourism-growth link. The research uses annual panel data of 28 small island economies from 1990 to 2019 and applies panel autoregressive distributed lag (PARDL) methodology to analyse the long-run and short-run relationship among the variables. Results confirm the Tourism-led growth hypothesis in both the long run and short run, but more importantly point out that this relationship is moderated or is conditional by the level of digitalisation. In fact, the economic benefit of tourism is found to be higher with increased digitalisation level. Panel Granger Causality tests confirm the causal effect of digitalisation on tourism development as well as a bi-directional causality between tourism development and economic growth. The implications are clear that government and tourism businesses should accelerate the digitalisation process and concentrate on the concept of e-tourism to maximise its return.
引用
收藏
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Tourism-growth nexus and spatial spillovers: Evidence from Greece
    Eleftheriou, Konstantinos
    Sambracos, Evangelos
    [J]. TOURISM ECONOMICS, 2019, 25 (02) : 297 - 302
  • [2] Tourism-growth nexus in Pakistan: Evidence from ARDL bounds tests
    Jalil, Abdul
    Mahmood, Tahir
    Idrees, Muhammad
    [J]. ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2013, 35 : 185 - 191
  • [3] Tourism-Growth Nexus in the Presence of Instability
    Wang, Yonglian
    Wang, Lijun
    Pan, Changchun
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (04)
  • [4] Research note: The tourism-growth nexus in Croatia
    Payne, James E.
    Mervar, Andrea
    [J]. TOURISM ECONOMICS, 2010, 16 (04) : 1089 - 1094
  • [5] Revisiting the tourism-growth nexus: evidence from a new index for the market diversification of tourist arrivals
    Can, Muhlis
    Gozgor, Giray
    [J]. CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM, 2018, 21 (10) : 1157 - 1170
  • [6] Tourism and economic growth in the Pacific region: evidence from five small island economies
    Kumar, Ronald Ravinesh
    Stauvermann, Peter Josef
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE ASIA PACIFIC ECONOMY, 2023, 28 (03) : 894 - 921
  • [7] Tourism-growth nexus in Pacific Island Countries: A panel study on information and communication technology as a contingent factor
    Jayaraman, Tiru K.
    Makun, Keshmeer Kanewar
    [J]. TOURISM ECONOMICS, 2020, 26 (03) : 371 - 388
  • [8] Tourism-growth nexus under duress: Lebanon during the Syrian crisis
    Dibeh, Ghassan
    Fakih, Ali
    Marrouch, Walid
    [J]. TOURISM ECONOMICS, 2020, 26 (03) : 353 - 370
  • [9] Is there growth impact of tourism? Evidence from selected small island states
    Saint Akadiri, Seyi
    Akadiri, Ada Chigozie
    Alola, Uju Violet
    [J]. CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM, 2019, 22 (12) : 1480 - 1498
  • [10] ISLANDNESS AND REMOTENESS AS RESOURCES: Evidence from the tourism performance of Small Remote Island Economies (SRIES)
    Sufrauj, Shamnaaz
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TOURISM HOSPITALITY AND RECREATION, 2011, 2 (01): : 19 - 41