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Taxes, Terrorism and Tourism: A Global Model of Situational Choice
Academy of Accounting and Financial Studies Journal, Special Issue: Governmental and Not for Profit Issues
  • Steven E. Moss, Georgia Southern University
  • Chuck Ryan, Georgia College and State University
  • Janet Moss, Georgia Southern University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2007
Abstract

This research studies the effects of taxes and significant terrorism events on tourism markets in the United States and Europe. Data from Las Vegas, Nevada and Mallorca, Spain are used for comparative purposes. Key events in this research are 9/11, the Madrid train bombings, and tax policy change. ARIMA models with interventions are used to empirically test for significant interventions in the time series studied. The research links situational theory and the consumer choice approach to present a heuristic that governments and tourism operators can use to help predict and mitigate the impact of taxes and terrorism on their respective entities. The research will show that terrorist events impact tourism domestically but not internationally. The research will also show that tax policy can have a more significant impact on tourism than terrorist events.

Citation Information
Steven E. Moss, Chuck Ryan and Janet Moss. "Taxes, Terrorism and Tourism: A Global Model of Situational Choice" Academy of Accounting and Financial Studies Journal, Special Issue: Governmental and Not for Profit Issues Vol. 11 Iss. Special Issue (2007) p. 13 - 26 ISSN: 1528-2635
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/steven_e_moss/65/