Exports are generally assumed to promote long-term growth through two main channels. The first, known as the export-led growth (ELG) hypothesis, is by enhancing economy-wide efficiency. This mechanism has recently been applied to tourism services exports (the tourism-led growth, TLG, hypothesis). The second channel is the financing of imports of foreign capital goods, thus raising the level of capital formation. Although this channel turns out to be empirically important, no theoretical rigorous foundation has yet been provided. Moreover, it has never been investigated for tourism exports. This paper fills two gaps. On the theoretical side, it provides a clear justification of the role of capital good imports in the link between exports and overall economic growth. A model has been built to examine this so-called EKIG hypothesis (exports → capital good imports → growth) in which sustained economic growth is achieved by imports of foreign capital entirely financed through inbound tourism. This model highlights a mechanism of international transmission of economic growth from the tourist-generating country (the tourism services importer) to the tourist-receiving economy (the tourism services exporter) through trade and terms-of-trade movement without any technological progress, research and development (R&D) activity or accumulation of human capital in the host economy. On the empirical side, this study constitutes the first attempt to examine the role of tourism exports on economic growth through capital good imports. The authors use Johansen's cointegration approach and the multivariate Granger causality test to analyse the TKIG (tourism → capital good imports → growth) hypothesis in the Spanish economy.
There is an upsurge of literature investigating the relationship between inbound tourism expansion and economic growth with special emphasis on developing countries. Some countries -such as Spain and Italy -can be taken as examples of demonstrating such a successful trajectory. This paper provides an empirical investigation of the evolution of the Spanish and Italian economies and their respective tourism sectors from the 1950s and 1960s, respectively. This research is theoretically based on the literature on demand-based growth and the methodology adopted is that of the integration, cointegration and multivariate Granger causality tests. The results show the influencing role of inbound tourism for both economies.
Recently, the attention given to the importance of tourism in economic growth has significantly increased. However, research in this area mainly refers to international tourism and to the national level. This paper focuses on the influence of tourism on the economic growth of Spanish and Italian regions. Both international and domestic tourism are analysed and geographical location criteria are considered. Dynamic panel data techniques are applied. The results reveal that both international and domestic tourism have a significant and positive role for regional economic growth in Spain and Italy, although the pattern of these effects differs among different types of region. Copyright
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