4.6 Article

The impact of sustainable tourism indicators on destination competitiveness: the European Tourism Indicator System

Journal

JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM
Volume 31, Issue 7, Pages 1608-1630

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2021.1910281

Keywords

Destination management organisations; competitiveness; absorptive capacity; sustainable tourism indicators; dynamic capabilities; policy making

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This study aimed to evaluate the impact of sustainable tourism indicators on destination competitiveness, using the European Tourism Indicator System (ETIS) as a reference. By assessing the absorptive capacity of destination management organisations (DMOs), the study found that DMOs acquired knowledge about the importance of sustainable tourism indicators through ETIS and developed their own systems based on its principles. However, the European Commission had unrealistic expectations that DMOs or their policies would undergo significant transformation as a result of using indicators, or that indicators would be utilized to improve tourism sustainability and competitiveness.
We aimed to evaluate the impact of sustainable tourism indicators on destination competitiveness with reference to the European Tourism Indicator System (ETIS), a scheme funded by the European Commission to address the evidence gap in tourism policy making. To do this, we evaluate the absorptive capacity of destination management organisations (DMOs) to implement and use sustainable tourism indicators to make policy decisions. We provide evidence of how DMOs have acquired knowledge about the importance of sustainable tourism indicators through ETIS, and how they have assimilated it by developing their own systems based on the principles of ETIS. However, we find that the European Commission had unrealistic expectations that DMOs, or their policies, would be transformed as a result of the use of indicators, or that indicators would be exploited to improve tourism sustainability and competitiveness. We contribute to the study of policy science by showing how absorptive capacity can be used to analyse and evaluate policy interventions, despite being a linear rational approach to explaining a complex policy context.

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