University of Wollongong
Browse

On the implications of tourism specialization and structural change in tourism destinations

Download (390.89 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 13:44 authored by Simone Marsiglio
We explore the relationship between tourism specialization and structural change in an endogenous growth model, analyzing its implications for both economic growth and tourist flows. We consider a two-sector economic growth model where the development of tourism activities generates a production externality and a structural change, which modifies the resources-use intensity, ultimately affecting tourist flows. We characterize the balanced growth path equilibrium and analyze under which conditions structural change may generate fast economic growth, providing a theoretical support for the empirical evidence on tourism countries. We also show that structural change may alternatively lead to stages of rejuvenation, stagnation, or decline consistently with what advanced by the tourism area life cycle hypothesis. By combining these different results, we also show that an eventual phase of decline generated by structural change does not necessarily have to be interpreted as a poor economic outcome since there might exist a bell-shaped relationship between residents' income and number of visitors.

History

Citation

Marsiglio, S. (2018). On the implications of tourism specialization and structural change in tourism destinations. Tourism Economics: the business and finance of tourism and recreation, 24 (8), 945-962.

Journal title

Tourism Economics

Volume

24

Issue

8

Pagination

945-962

Language

English

RIS ID

129981

Usage metrics

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC