Abstract
Research background: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented disruptions to the global tourism industry, resulting in significant impacts on both human and economic activities. Travel restrictions, border closures, and quarantine measures have led to a sharp decline in tourism demand, causing businesses to shut down, jobs to be lost, and economies to suffer.
Purpose of the article: This study aims to examine the correlation and causal relationship between real-time mobility data and statistical data on tourism, specifically tourism overnights, across eleven European countries during the first 14 months of the pandemic. We analyzed the short longitudinal connections between two dimensions of tourism and related activities.
Methods: Our method is to use Google and Apple's observational data to link with tourism statistical data, enabling the development of early predictive models and econometric models for tourism overnights (or other tourism indices). This approach leverages the more timely and more reliable mobility data from Google and Apple, which is published with less delay than tourism statistical data.
Findings & value added: Our findings indicate statistically significant correlations between specific mobility dimensions, such as recreation and retail, parks, and tourism statistical data, but poor or insignificant relations with workplace and transit dimensions. We have identified that leisure and recreation have a much stronger influence on tourism than the domestic and routine-named dimensions. Additionally, our neural network analysis revealed that Google Mobility Parks and Google Mobility Retail & Recreation are the best predictors for tourism, while Apple Driving and Apple Walking also show significant correlations with tourism data. The main added value of our research is that it combines observational data with statistical data, demonstrates that Google and Apple location data can be used to model tourism phenomena, and identifies specific methods to determine the extent, direction, and intensity of the relationship between mobility and tourism flows.
Publisher
Instytut Badan Gospodarczych / Institute of Economic Research
Subject
Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Economics and Econometrics
Reference61 articles.
1. Aaker, D. A., Kumar, V., & Day, G. S. (1998). Marketing research. Indianapolis: John Wiley & Sons.
2. Apple mobility database (2021). Apple makes mobility data available to aid COVID-19 efforts. Retrieved from https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2020/ 04/apple-makes-mobility-data-available-to-aid-covid-19-efforts (31.05.2021).
3. Apple mobility reports (2021). COVID 19 - Mobility Trends Reports. Retrieved from https://covid19.apple.com/mobility (31.05.2021).
4. Atalay, S., & Solmazer, G. (2021). The relationship between cultural value orienta-tions and the changes in mobility during the Covid-19 pandemic: a national-level analysis. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 578190. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.578190.
5. Bangwayo-Skeete, P. F., & Skeete, R. W. (2015). Can Google data improve the forecasting performance of tourist arrivals? Mixed-data sampling approach. Tourism Management, 46, 454–464. doi: 10.1016/j.tourman.2014.07.014.
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献