The role of institutional quality on tourist arrivals in leading emerging economies
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This study explores the relationship between tourist arrivals and institutional quality in leading emerging economies (Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia, and Turkey) during 1996 to 2022. By utilizing principal component analysis for dimensions of governance performance, such as voice and accountability, political stability and absence of violence/terrorism, government efectiveness, regulatory quality, rule of law, and control of corruption, this study develops a comprehensive index that enables a nuanced understanding of the collective efect of these dimensions on tourism. The results of the panel data estimations indicate that institutional quality positively afects tourist arrivals in all countries, with strong efects in Mexico, Russia, and Turkey. Additionally, the study accounts for economic growth, the real efective exchange rate, and gross fxed capital formation, all of which show that overall, tourist arrivals increase in response to economic growth, decline in response to the exchange rate, and increase in response to gross fxed capital formation, with country-specifc efects. Granger causality evidence supports these fndings, implying the need for a comprehensive policy review to encourage the tourism industry in these countries.