Publication | Open Access
Uneven domestic tourism demand in times of pandemic
28
Citations
53
References
2022
Year
EngineeringInternational TourismAugust 2020Urban Climate ImpactEpidemiological DynamicClimate EpidemiologyShort-run ImpactCovid-19Public HealthTourism DemandClimate ChangeMeteorologyGeographyInternational TransmissionForecastingEpidemiologyClimatologyDestination MarketingGlobal HealthBusinessEconometricsDomestic Overnight StaysTourism
This study investigates the short-run impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the number of domestic overnight stays at the regional level in the summer season 2020. Official data for 65 regions in four countries are used for the analysis (Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany and Switzerland). Dynamic panel data models are employed to estimate a tourism demand equation (real GDP and price fluctuations) augmented by average temperatures. Estimation results reveal that domestic overnight stays evolve unevenly in the first summer after the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. The short-run effects show that the number of domestic overnight stays in densely populated regions decreases by 27% in July as well as in August 2020, in comparison with the same months in previous years, ceteris paribus. To the contrary, there is a surge of 27 and 10%, respectively, for sparsely populated areas in the same months. JEL: Z3, R11 and R12.
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