Provash Sarker

Exploring Climate Change, Green Finance, and Monetary Policy

Inflation in Tourism Sector: New Evidence From Climate and Geopolitical Spillover Effects


Journal article


Panagiotis Palaios, Provash Kumer Sarker, Flora Leventis
The international journal of tourism research, 2025

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Palaios, P., Sarker, P. K., & Leventis, F. (2025). Inflation in Tourism Sector: New Evidence From Climate and Geopolitical Spillover Effects. The International Journal of Tourism Research.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Palaios, Panagiotis, Provash Kumer Sarker, and Flora Leventis. “Inflation in Tourism Sector: New Evidence From Climate and Geopolitical Spillover Effects.” The international journal of tourism research (2025).


MLA   Click to copy
Palaios, Panagiotis, et al. “Inflation in Tourism Sector: New Evidence From Climate and Geopolitical Spillover Effects.” The International Journal of Tourism Research, 2025.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{panagiotis2025a,
  title = {Inflation in Tourism Sector: New Evidence From Climate and Geopolitical Spillover Effects},
  year = {2025},
  journal = {The international journal of tourism research},
  author = {Palaios, Panagiotis and Sarker, Provash Kumer and Leventis, Flora}
}

Abstract

Tourism is a critical sector that significantly contributes to the global economy, yet it is highly susceptible to external shocks. This paper examines the impact of geopolitical and climate shocks on tourism inflation across major European tourism destinations (1997M1–2023M12). To the best of our knowledge, no previous studies have systematically addressed how the climate and geopolitical spillover effects asymmetrically influence the transmission dynamics of tourism inflation. We perform Quantile Connectedness, TVP‐VAR extended joint connectedness, and nonparametric locally polynomial quantile regression methodologies that allow us to explain heterogeneous inflation dynamics, offering valuable insights for policymakers and stakeholders. Our results show that the information transmission of both geopolitical and climate shocks is asymmetric, but the geopolitical risk is more pronounced. Our findings have substantial policy implications, exposing the chaotic influence of the multipolar international system and climate change, thus dismantling the notion that inflation is purely an economic phenomenon.