Economic policy uncertainty and demand for international tourism: An empirical study

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (8) ◽  
pp. 1415-1430 ◽  
Author(s):  
Canh Phuc Nguyen ◽  
Christophe Schinckus ◽  
Thanh Dinh Su

The sensitivity of countries to the global macroeconomic uncertainty is directly related to the income level affecting, therefore, the demand for the outbound international tourism. Precisely, we observe that a higher economic policy uncertainty leads to more departures and more total expenditures but less expenditure per tourist – this finding is the first contribution of this article since it suggests that outbound tourism might be considered as an inferior good. In an uncertain context increasing the probability of decrease in the agents’ wealth, the population travel more but spend less money per trip suggesting that these travels are mainly made in neighbour countries. A higher uncertainty also induces a higher demand for outbound international tourism but less touristic expenditures in low- and lower-middle-income economies. These findings show the multifaceted aspect of tourism since it suggests an emigration effect that we discuss in this article.

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Gao ◽  
Sheng Zhu ◽  
Niall O’Sullivan ◽  
Meadhbh Sherman

We investigated the role of domestic and international economic uncertainty in the cross-sectional pricing of UK stocks. We considered a broad range of financial market variables in measuring financial conditions to obtain a better estimate of macroeconomic uncertainty compared to previous literature. In contrast to many earlier studies using conventional principal component analysis to estimate economic uncertainty, we constructed new economic activity and inflation uncertainty indices for the UK using a time-varying parameter factor-augmented vector autoregressive (TVP-FAVAR) model. We then estimated stock sensitivity to a range of macroeconomic uncertainty indices and economic policy uncertainty indices. The evidence suggests that economic activity uncertainty and UK economic policy uncertainty have power in explaining the cross-section of UK stock returns, while UK inflation, EU economic policy and US economic policy uncertainty factors are not priced in stock returns for the UK.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adan Yi ◽  
Menglong Yang ◽  
Yongshan Li

This paper investigates whether the macroeconomic uncertainty factors can explain and forecast China’s INE crude oil futures market volatility. We use the GARCH-MIDAS model to investigate the explaining and predicting power of the macroeconomic uncertainties. We considered various geopolitical risk (GPR) indices, economic policy uncertainty (EPU) indices, and infectious disease pandemic (IDEMV) indices in our model. The empirical results suggest that the geopolitical risk, the geopolitical act risk, the global economic policy uncertainty, the economic policy uncertainty from the United Kingdom, and the economic policy uncertainty from Japan comprehensively integrate the information contained in the rest factors, and have superior predictive powers for INE crude oil future volatility. These findings highlight the importance of the impact of macroeconomic uncertainty factors has on the crude oil futures market, and indicate that the macroeconomic uncertainties need to be considered when explaining and forecasting crude oil futures market volatility.


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