Résumé
This paper studies the relationship between air transportation, tourist _ows, and subsidies to Low Cost Carriers (LCCs), a policy used by many national and local governments to stimulate tourist arrivals. To test the policy empirically, we use a two-stage empirical model. In the _rst stage, we estimate a structural model applied to air transport, and in the second stage, we link passenger arrivals to regional tourism _ows. In this way, we use exogenous shocks (subsidies to LCCs) in airline supply to analyze the causal link with tourist arrivals. This model is applied to tourist _ows from European regions to Italian regions from 2016 to 2018. Our counterfactual analyses consider two regimes for implementing subsidies to LCCs, following the literature coming from Oates (1993, 1999) contributions: a centralized, uniform policy for all regions and a decentralized policy in which subsidies are adopted by a single region. Our simulations reveal that subsidies to LCCs are e_ective in stimulating tourism, and that a centralized regime is more e_ective than a decentralized one. In fact, the latter generates externalities in regions that do not implement the subsidy, making the decentralised policy economically sub-optimal and unsustainable.
Mots-clés
Air transportation and tourism; Structural model;
Codes JEL
- R41: Transportation: Demand, Supply, and Congestion • Safety and Accidents • Transportation Noise
- R48: Government Pricing and Policy
- O18: Urban, Rural, Regional, and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure
Référence
Christian Bontemps, Gianmaria Martini et Flavio Porta, « The Effects of LCCs Subsidies on the Tourism Industry », TSE Working Paper, n° 24-1540, mai 2024.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
TSE Working Paper, n° 24-1540, mai 2024