Weathering the pandemic storm: Inter-organizational imitation and hotel survival
No previous studies have provided insights into inter-organizational spillover in hotel market exit behaviors amidst great uncertainty. This study investigates the impact of local pandemic severity on hotel survival rates and identifies inter-organizational imitation moderating this effect. We condu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Tourism economics : the business and finance of tourism and recreation 2024-10 |
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creator | Yang, Yang Wen, Zhihong |
description | No previous studies have provided insights into inter-organizational spillover in hotel market exit behaviors amidst great uncertainty. This study investigates the impact of local pandemic severity on hotel survival rates and identifies inter-organizational imitation moderating this effect. We conduct survival analysis on a sample of 3841 hotel properties in the U.S. state of Texas. Results confirm the detrimental roles of pandemic severity on hotel survival rates. We observe a negative spillover stemming from inter-organizational imitation based on the market exits of same-class hotel peers. Results further unveil that hotels operated by third-party management companies and high-end hotels are less likely to exhibit inter-organizational imitation in their closure responses to the pandemic. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/13548166241296183 |
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This study investigates the impact of local pandemic severity on hotel survival rates and identifies inter-organizational imitation moderating this effect. We conduct survival analysis on a sample of 3841 hotel properties in the U.S. state of Texas. Results confirm the detrimental roles of pandemic severity on hotel survival rates. We observe a negative spillover stemming from inter-organizational imitation based on the market exits of same-class hotel peers. 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title | Weathering the pandemic storm: Inter-organizational imitation and hotel survival |
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