2021
DOI: 10.1177/1354816621990155
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Tourism and economic growth: Multi-country evidence from mixed-frequency Granger causality tests

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-vary… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…At the empirical front, the prior findings on the unconditional effects of tourism development and governance on income inequality is growing though without controversy and inconclusiveness. For instance, prior contribution such as Enilov and Wang (2021) find evidence to support the TLG hypothesis that tourism development contributes to sustainable economic development in the developing world but not developed countries.…”
Section: Empirical Survey On Tourism Development Governance and Incom...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…At the empirical front, the prior findings on the unconditional effects of tourism development and governance on income inequality is growing though without controversy and inconclusiveness. For instance, prior contribution such as Enilov and Wang (2021) find evidence to support the TLG hypothesis that tourism development contributes to sustainable economic development in the developing world but not developed countries.…”
Section: Empirical Survey On Tourism Development Governance and Incom...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The egalitarian prospects of a well-development tourism sector, driven chiefly by the rise in social globalisation, cannot be overemphasized (Bilchitz & Glaser, 2014;Debow, 2014). Growth-wise, a thriving tourism sector can promote economic growth and poverty alleviation (Enilov & Wang, 2021;Pan & Dossou, 2020). For instance, in 2019 alone, receipts from the tourism sector accruing to African countries amounted to US$169 billion, representing an impressive 7 per cent of the continent's overall gross domestic product (World Travel and Tourism Council, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The link between tourism and growth has been a subject of the large number of empirical literature. The empirical literature reveals different aspects of the relation between tourism and economic growth, from the tourism -led growth hypothesis (TLG) (e.g., [22][23][24][25][26][27][28]), economic-driven tourism growth hypothesis (EDTG) [29][30][31] to bidirectional causality or no causal relationship at all (e.g., [26,27,[32][33][34]). Although the existing literature about the tourism-growth causal link remains mixed, those studies provide evidence on positive relation between tourism and economic growth regardless the direction of the causality.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wild bootstrap estimation results: The wild bootstrap estimation was carried out to confirm the accuracy of the VECM computed statistics ( Enilov and Wang, 2021 ). The results show that the coefficients of LNTOR, LNTORS, LNEC and LNUP are all significant at 95% confidence interval.…”
Section: Empirical Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%