The immediate and subsequent effects of public health interventions for COVID-19 on the leisure and recreation industry

Tour Manag. 2021 Dec:87:104393. doi: 10.1016/j.tourman.2021.104393. Epub 2021 Jul 13.

Abstract

Public health interventions to combat COVID-19 can be viewed as an exogenous shock to the economy, especially for industries-such as leisure, recreation, and tourism-that rely heavily on human mobility. This study investigates whether and how exactly the economic impact of government public health policies varies over time. Focusing on the leisure and recreation industry, we use data for 131 countries/regions from February to May 2020 and employ generalized difference-in-differences models to investigate the short- and longer-term effects of public health policies. We find that stricter policies lead, on average, to an immediate 9.2-percentage-point drop in leisure and recreation participation. Even so, that industry recovers in about seven weeks after a COVID-19 outbreak in countries/regions that undertake active interventions. After thirteen weeks, leisure and recreation involvement recovers to 70% of pre-pandemic levels in a place that actively intervened but stagnates at about 40% in one that did not.

Keywords: COVID-19; Crisis management; Government response; Leisure and recreation activities; Public health interventions.