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Featured researches published by Manuel González-Gómez.


Journal of Regional Science | 2003

Optimal Allocation of Land Between Productive Use and Recreational Use

Eduardo L. Giménez; Manuel González-Gómez

This paper is an inquiry into the optimal allocation of time and natural areas to recreational uses, which have the feature of being a pure and continuous public good. We address this issue with a comprehensive approach. A static rational general equilibrium framework is developed in which heterogeneous agents allocate land and time endowments between alternative uses. This modeling has important advantages. First, Pareto-optimal and voluntary-contribution equilibrium allocations are obtained in a unified set-up. Second, the suboptimality result of the decentralized equilibrium, the free-rider problem on the provision of this nonexcludable public good, and different mechanisms to return the economy to its first-best are analyzed. Finally, a methodological critique is made of some empirical literature, and it is suggested that our theoretical microeconomic-based structure seems to be a suitable starting point for empirical research.


Tourism Economics | 2015

Research Note: Estimating Price and Income Demand Elasticities for Spain Separately by the Major Source Markets

Marcos Álvarez-Díaz; Manuel González-Gómez; María Soledad Otero-Giráldez

The main goal of this study is to estimate the price and income elasticity of demand for tourism to Spain. This estimation is done separately for the major international source markets for Spain: Germany, the UK, Italy and the Netherlands. For this purpose, the authors use the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) approach to cointegration and the bootstrap method to construct empirical confidence intervals for each estimate. The results reveal that the tourism demand in all the countries studied has a similar income elasticity, which is approximately unitary. However, there is an important difference with regard to price elasticity: tourism demand from the UK is statistically price inelastic, but demand is elastic for the remaining countries. This finding is relevant because, first, it underlines the importance of studying the source markets separately instead of analysing an aggregate international tourism demand, and, second, it supports the need to implement different tourism policies and strategies with respect to the pricing decisions for each source market.


European Journal of Forest Research | 2015

Detecting the socioeconomic driving forces of the fire catastrophe in NW Spain

Marcos Álvarez-Díaz; Manuel González-Gómez; María Soledad Otero-Giráldez

Wildfires cause devastating environmental, social and economic effects in different regions of the world. The aim of this study was to analyze the long-run relationship between the number of ignition events and socioeconomic variables using time series data. We focus on Galicia, a region in the northwest part of the Iberian Peninsula and with one of the highest fire density and largest burned areas in Europe. Since the late 1980s, the number of forest fires has increased in Galicia and caused extensive damage to the environment, property and human life. The analysis is based on cointegration tests between variables. In order to avoid the problems related to spurious regression, the ARDL bounds testing approach was applied. The statistical evidence allows us to conclude that in the long term, the price of eucalyptus timber, the population in the primary sector and the intensity of the elections are relevant factors in explaining the start of forest fires. These three variables are found to increase the propensity of the population to start a fire that cause devastating environmental, social and economic effects.


Tourism Economics | 2001

Evaluating public management in a tourism natural area: an application to the Cíes Islands.

Manuel González-Gómez; X.M. González-Martínez; P. Polomé; A. Prada-Blanco

This paper describes the application of a cost-benefit analysis to a highly popular tourist area - the Cíes Islands. The goals of the analysis are, first, to determine the social value of the area in terms of attractiveness and, second, to evaluate public intervention in terms of the preservation of the Islands. Non-users as well as users are considered. The results indicate that there is a clear social benefit and potentially valuable information is made available to public decision makers. Taking only users into account, the cost-benefit ratio is an estimated 5.4, which is to say that for each additional monetary unit spent on conservation more than 5 monetary units are earned in terms of social benefit. Moreover, this return increases to 16.8 if users are taken into account in the valuation process.


Energy Sources Part B-economics Planning and Policy | 2017

Estimating the long-run impact of guaranteed prices on wind and solar power in Germany

Manuel González-Gómez

ABSTRACT The purpose of this study is to analyze the dynamics between the guaranteed prices introduced by pieces of legislation and the investment in new electricity-generation facilities in Germany that can be of great assistance to policymakers in planning development strategies for green electricity sources in other countries. This article uses the guaranteed price in the source markets as a proxy for market price and estimates the effects of price changes on the investment in generation facilities for renewable energy. To avoid the possible existence of spurious relationships that may arise in time series analysis, the bounds-testing approach to co-integration was applied. The long-run elasticities for the explanatory variables were obtained from the error correction model (ECM). The results indicate that guaranteed prices have a positive effect on the installed power capacity of the two renewable electricity sources: wind and solar power. Moreover, the findings are useful to governments in order to promote renewable energy and prevent negative attitudes toward renewable energies caused by increasing energy prices.


Tourism Economics | 2018

Estimating the economic impact of a political conflict on tourism: The case of the Catalan separatist challenge

Marcos Álvarez-Díaz; Manuel González-Gómez; María Soledad Otero-Giráldez

As an industry, tourism tends to be extremely responsive and vulnerable to political instabilities. Recently, a political conflict occurred in Spain, a leader in international tourism. In October 2017, the regional parliament of Catalonia asserted its independence from Spain, engendering a negative impact on the tourism sector of Catalonia. The main goal of our study is to assess the economic impact of the Catalan separatist challenge on the region’s tourism sector during the last quarter of 2017. To this end, we conducted a counterfactual analysis, based on forecasts generated by a seasonal autoregressive moving average model and an artificial neural network. The forecasts allowed us to calculate the projected number of international and domestic tourist visitors that would have travelled to Catalonia, had the separatist challenge not occurred. According to our results, the Catalan tourist sector effectively forfeited close to €200 million in revenue from the international tourism market, and around €27 million in revenue from the domestic market. These amounts differ from the economic gains attained by the other Spanish Mediterranean regions that compete with Catalonia to attract tourists.


Current Issues in Tourism | 2017

Estimating the effects of regional political climate on Russian tourists to Spain

Marcos Álvarez-Díaz; Manuel González-Gómez; María Soledad Otero-Giráldez

Regional political climate has become an increasingly significant force influencing travel behaviour in many tourist destinations. This paper attempts to address impacts of regional political stability on Russian inbound tourism into Spain within a demand model framework and using a cointegration approach. The results show that visa openness as well as political instability and civil unrest in substitute destinations attract more Russian tourists, boosting economic growth and reducing unemployment rates in Spain. On the contrary, international political confrontation results in disadvantage to Russian tourism demand to Spain.


Tourism Management | 2012

Estimating the long-run effects of socioeconomic and meteorological factors on the domestic tourism demand for Galicia (Spain)

María Soledad Otero-Giráldez; Marcos Álvarez-Díaz; Manuel González-Gómez


Tourism & Management Studies | 2012

MODELING DOMESTIC TOURISM DEMAND IN GALICIA USING THE ARDL APPROACH

Manuel González-Gómez; Marcos Álvarez-Díaz; Marisol Otero-Giráldez


Climate Research | 2010

Statistical relationships between the North Atlantic Oscillation and international tourism demand in the Balearic Islands, Spain

Marcos Álvarez-Díaz; M. S. Otero Giráldez; Manuel González-Gómez

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