Login / Signup

Analyzing the Nexus Between Geopolitical Risk, Policy Uncertainty, and Tourist Arrivals: Evidence From the United States.

Umer ShahzadMuhammad RamzanMuhammad Ibrahim ShahBuhari DoğanAhdi Noomen Ajmi
Published in: Evaluation review (2022)
This study attempts to explore the causal linkage of the COVID-19 pandemic, economic policy uncertainty, geopolitical risk, and tourism arrivals in the United States taking data from January to November 2020. In order to analyze the above relationship, this study uses a novel time-varying granger causality test developed by Shi et al. (2018), which incorporates its three causality algorithms such as forward recursive causality, rolling causality, and recursive evolving causality. The findings from forward recursive causality could not confirm any significant causal relationship between COVID-19 and tourism, geopolitical risk (GPR) and tourism, economic policy uncertainty and tourism, and geopolitical risk and COVID-19 but found causality between economic policy uncertainty and COVID-19. The rolling window causality reported bidirectional causality between COVID-19 and tourism and unidirectional causality running from tourism to geopolitical risk. However, the recursive evolving causality identified a significant bidirectional causal relationship between all the variables. Based on the findings, policy implications for the tourism sector are provided.
Keyphrases
  • adverse drug
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • emergency department
  • electronic health record
  • deep learning
  • hiv infected
  • men who have sex with men
  • breast cancer risk