Tourism-Related Loans as a Driver of a Small Island Economy: A Case of Northern Cyprus
Abstract
Although the literature on the contribution of tourism to economic expansion vis-à-vis the
tourism-led growth hypothesis has been widely explored, so far, limited attention has been paid to the
specificity of the role of tourism-related loans or financial inducement in economic growth. This paper
examines the short-run and long-run relationships between bank loan disbursements to the tourism
sector and economic growth in Northern Cyprus. We structurally derive empirical equations for
co-integration and error-correction models by extending the original Solow growth model, applying
a cointegration approach that is strengthened by the autoregressive distributed lag and Granger
causality approaches to reveal important findings. The empirical findings suggest unidirectional
causality from loans disbursed to the tourism sector to economic growth in Northern Cyprus for the
period under study. Additionally, we show that tourism-related loans and human and technological
advancement all spur economic growth in the short- and long-run. These findings’ main policy
implication is that long-term complementary policies in the domestic banking system can increase the
access to financial sources for tourism enterprises and, consequently, promote tourism-led economic
growth, especially in small tourism-dependent economies where capital sources are scarce.
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