The net effect of the travel restriction policy on tourism demand: evidence from Greece

IF 1.5 Q2 ECONOMICS
Panagiotis E. Dimitropoulos, Lazaros Ntasis, K. Koronios
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to provide up-to-date evidence on the net effect of COVID-19 pandemic on international arrivals and occupancy rates in Greece. Analysis and forecasting point out the demand for 2020, and thus yielding more concrete evidence on the pure effect of the pandemic on the tourism industry.Design/methodology/approachMonthly observations from January 2000 to December 2020 were extracted from the Tourist Enterprises Association (SETE) for Athens, Thessaloniki, Kalamata, Rhodes, Mytilene, Santorini, Zante, Kefalonia and Crete. To model and forecast the volatility and the time trend effect of tourist arrivals individually, the study applies the autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) (p,d,q) and the error, trend, seasonality (ETS) model.FindingsEmpirical results suggested that Athens, Thessaloniki and Crete were three destinations with the worst losses in international tourist arrivals. Specifically, Athens was expecting to have (without the existence of COVID-19) more than 330,000 tourist arrivals in December 2020 while instead only 73,000 international tourists visited Athens that period. Similarly, Thessaloniki and the island of Crete lost more than 150,000 international visitors during December 2020.Originality/valueThe author’s study adds to a growing number of studies regarding the impact of COVID-19 by incorporating monthly international arrival data and occupancy rate data for the whole 2020 reflecting differences in transportation or vacation choices. Also, the authors operationalized multiple time-series forecasting models (ETS and ARIMA) for reaching more concrete forecasts and estimates on the effect of COVID-19 on the Greek tourism sector.
旅行限制政策对旅游需求的净影响:来自希腊的证据
目的本研究旨在提供新冠肺炎大流行对希腊国际入境人数和入住率净影响的最新证据。分析和预测指出了2020年的需求,从而为疫情对旅游业的纯粹影响提供了更具体的证据。设计/方法/方法2000年1月至2020年12月的月度观察结果摘自旅游企业协会(SETE)对雅典、塞萨洛尼基、卡拉马塔、罗德斯、米蒂莱内、圣托里尼、赞特、凯法洛尼亚和克里特岛的观察结果。为了对游客到达的波动性和时间趋势效应进行单独建模和预测,本研究应用了自回归综合移动平均(ARIMA)(p,d,q)和误差、趋势、季节性(ETS)模型。实证结果表明,雅典、塞萨洛尼基和克里特岛是国际游客流失最严重的三个目的地。具体而言,雅典预计(在没有新冠肺炎的情况下)2020年12月将有超过33万名游客抵达雅典,而同期只有7.3万名国际游客到访雅典。同样,塞萨洛尼基和克里特岛在2020年12月失去了超过150000名国际游客。起源/价值作者的研究结合了2020年全年的月度国际抵达数据和入住率数据,反映了交通或度假选择的差异,从而增加了越来越多关于新冠肺炎影响的研究。此外,作者运用了多个时间序列预测模型(ETS和ARIMA),以对新冠肺炎对希腊旅游业的影响进行更具体的预测和估计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
15.80%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Institutions – especially public policies – are a significant determinant of economic outcomes; entrepreneurship and enterprise development are often the channel by which public policies affect economic outcomes, and by which outcomes feed back to the policy process. The Journal of Entrepreneurship & Public Policy (JEPP) was created to encourage and disseminate quality research about these vital relationships. The ultimate aim is to improve the quality of the political discourse about entrepreneurship and development policies. JEPP publishes two issues per year and welcomes: Empirically oriented academic papers and accepts a wide variety of empirical evidence. Generally, the journal considers any analysis based on real-world circumstances and conditions that can change behaviour, legislation, or outcomes, Conceptual or theoretical papers that indicate a direction for future research, or otherwise advance the field of study, A limited number of carefully and accurately executed replication studies, Book reviews. In general, JEPP seeks high-quality articles that say something interesting about the relationships among public policy and entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship and economic development, or all three areas. Scope/Coverage: Entrepreneurship, Public policy, Public policies and behaviour of economic agents, Interjurisdictional differentials and their effects, Law and entrepreneurship, New firms; startups, Microeconomic analyses of economic development, Development planning and policy, Innovation and invention: processes and incentives, Regional economic activity: growth, development, and changes, Regional development policy.
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