High speed rail and tourism: Empirical evidence from Spain

•We evaluate how the provision of high-speed rail services affects tourism outcomes in Spain.•We find that air traffic, a strong predictor of tourist arrivals, is negatively affected by HSR.•However, HSR may have a positive (weak) direct effect on tourism but results are mixed.•Our findings add to t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inTransportation research. Part A, Policy and practice Vol. 85; pp. 174 - 185
Main Authors Albalate, Daniel, Fageda, Xavier
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.03.2016
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Summary:•We evaluate how the provision of high-speed rail services affects tourism outcomes in Spain.•We find that air traffic, a strong predictor of tourist arrivals, is negatively affected by HSR.•However, HSR may have a positive (weak) direct effect on tourism but results are mixed.•Our findings add to the existing literature on the disappointing ex-post impact evaluations of HSR. This paper evaluates how changes in the provision of high-speed rail (HSR) services affect tourism outcomes in Spain, a tourist country with the newest and longest HSR network in Europe. To do so it employs an empirical strategy based on the differences-in-differences panel data method with double fixed effects. Data are provided by Spain’s National Statistics Institute (INE) and cover 50 provinces over a 15-year time span (1998–2013). Our results provide mixed evidence about the impact of HSR accessibility on tourist outcomes. On the one hand, we find that air traffic is negatively affected by HSR and air traffic is a strong predictor of tourist arrivals. This suggests a negative indirect effect of HSR on tourist outcomes. On the other hand, HSR may have a positive (weak) direct effect on tourism. However, such result is conditioned on the measure of HSR accessibility and econometric technique used. Thus, the net effect of HSR on tourism outcomes is not consistently positive. This pattern might be attributed to a network design that does not respond to ridership needs and which has a substitution effect on air transportation, the main mode for long-distance tourist mobility.
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ISSN:0965-8564
1879-2375
DOI:10.1016/j.tra.2016.01.009