Tourism CGE Modeling
Tourism computable general equilibrium (CGE) modeling simulates how a change in tourism — a surge in inbound visitors, a major event, a new tax, or a demand collapse — ripples through an entire economy when prices, wages, exchange rates, and resources are free to adjust. Unlike input-output analysis, which assumes fixed prices and unlimited supply, a CGE model represents producers, households, government, and the rest of the world as optimising agents linked through markets that must clear. A tourism shock therefore bids up the prices of the resources tourism uses, draws labour and capital away from other sectors, and shifts the exchange rate, so the net economy-wide effect can differ sharply from a naive multiplier. Dwyer, Forsyth and Spurr's 2004 comparison made the influential case that CGE is the preferred technique for evaluating tourism's economic effects when these adjustments matter.
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Sources
- Dwyer, L., Forsyth, P., & Spurr, R. (2004). Evaluating tourism's economic effects: new and old approaches. Tourism Management, 25(3), 307-317. DOI: 10.1016/S0261-5177(03)00131-6 ↗
- Fletcher, J. E. (1989). Input-output analysis and tourism impact studies. Annals of Tourism Research, 16(4), 514-529. DOI: 10.1016/0160-7383(89)90006-6 ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Tourism Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) Modeling. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/tourism-economics/tourism-cge-modeling
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- Tourism Input-Output AnalysisTourism Economics↔ compare
- Tourism Multiplier AnalysisTourism Economics↔ compare
- Tourism Satellite AccountTourism Economics↔ compare