Tourism specialization, growth stage, and economic growth

Author:

Sahni Herman1ORCID,Nsiah Christian1ORCID,Fayissa Bichaka2

Affiliation:

1. Baldwin Wallace University, USA

2. Middle Tennessee State University, USA

Abstract

This paper investigates the nonlinear relationship between tourism and economic growth using a balanced sample of 58 countries in three continental samples (Africa, Asia, and Latin America) for the 2003–2017 period. First, we document an asymmetric threshold effect of tourism on economic growth. By utilizing an endogenous threshold regression model, we show that a single tourism threshold cutoff exists and that tourism receipts influence growth only till the threshold cutoff point in all three continental samples; however, this influence is nonexistent past the threshold point. Second, a quantile effect decomposition shows separate marginal effects for the tourism and economic growth relationship across the growth distribution. By using an unconditional quantile regression approach, we show that compared to their regional cohorts, slow- and medium-growth African countries, slow-growth Asian countries, and medium-growth Latin American countries exhibit substantially higher economic growth benefits from tourism. We explain these empirical observations and discuss their policy implications.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference82 articles.

1. ACBF (2016) Infrastructure development and financing in sub-saharan Africa: toward a framework for capacity enhancement. African Capacity Building Foundation Occasional Paper No. 25.

2. Some Tests of Specification for Panel Data: Monte Carlo Evidence and an Application to Employment Equations

3. Time-varying linkages between tourism receipts and economic growth in a small open economy

4. Fixed Effects in Unconditional Quantile Regression

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