Dynamic effects of tourism shocks on innovation in an open-economy Schumpeterian growth model

C-Tier
Journal: Economic Modeling
Year: 2024
Volume: 131
Issue: C

Authors (4)

Chu, Angus C. (not in RePEc) Liao, Chih-Hsing (National Central University) Xu, Rongxin (University of Macau) Chen, Ping-Ho (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

0.251 = (α=2.01 / 4 authors) × 0.5x C-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

International travel restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic drastically reduced the number of tourists. This study explores the dynamic effects of tourism shocks in an open-economy Schumpeterian model with endogenous market structure. A tourism shock affects the economy via a reallocation effect and an employment effect. A positive tourism shock increases employment, which raises production and innovation in the short run. However, a positive tourism shock also reallocates labor from production to service for tourists, which reduces production and innovation. If leisure preference is weak, the reallocation effect dominates, and the short-run effect of positive tourism shocks on innovation is monotonically negative. If leisure preference is strong, the employment effect dominates initially, and the short-run effect of tourism shocks on innovation becomes inverted-U, which is consistent with the stylized facts that we document using cross-country data. Finally, permanent tourism shocks do not affect the steady-state innovation rate in our scale-invariant model.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:ecmode:v:131:y:2024:i:c:s0264999323004315
Journal Field
General
Author Count
4
Added to Database
2026-01-25