Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://rda.sliit.lk/handle/123456789/1622
Title: Modelling and Forecasting Tourist Arrivals in Sri Lanka
Authors: Nagendrakumar, N.
Lokeshwara, A.A.
Gunawardana, S.A.D.C.K.
Kodikara, U.P.
Rajapaksha, R.W.N.H.
Rathnayake, K.R.M.C.S.
Keywords: Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average
Civil war
Tourism industry performance
Tourist Arrivals
Issue Date: Dec-2021
Publisher: SLIIT Business School
Series/Report no.: Vol. 01, No. 02;pp. 95-120
Abstract: The Sri Lankan tourism industry contributes significantly to economic development through diversified mechanisms of revenue generation and for creation of employment opportunities. The tourism industry is volatile and easily affected by man-made or natural catastrophes: terrorism, financial crisis, and tsunamis. The racial dispute among Sri Lankan government forces and Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam, which started in the 1980s spanned over thirty years and adversely affected the development of the tourism sector. However, with the conclusion of the ethnic strife in 2009, tourism started to boom. The objective is to estimate and forecast tourist arrivals for the tourism industry from August 2021 to August 2025. This study used monthly tourist arrivals from January 2000 to July 2021 to predict values for August 2021 to August 2025 and evaluates against the actual, based on the number of visitor arrivals. Box-Jenkins Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) was used to model the visitor arrivals to Sri Lanka by evaluating the study period and have applied the Standard ARIMA model to achieve the research purpose. Monthly tourist arrival data obtained from the Sri Lankan Tourism Development Authority and diagnostic test statistics, including autocorrelation and partial correlation, were used to examine the parameters of ARIMA. The results revealed civil was has impacted on tourist arrivals and was further noted that terrorism affected tourist arrivals negatively. In addition, the findings showed that the forecasted tourist arrivals were substantially less than the actual, which indicated that the Sri Lankan tourism industry rebounced shortly after the three-decade long civil war. Hence, this analysis highlights the potential of the Sri Lankan tourism industry to recover rapidly from shock events. Moreover, it is advantageous for policymakers, academia, society, and the government of Sri Lanka to set up the national tourism framework and also align the crisis management process effectively.
URI: http://rda.sliit.lk/handle/123456789/1622
ISSN: 2682-695X
Appears in Collections:14th SLIIT Business School Students’ Research Conference (SBSSRC 2021)
Research Papers - Dept of Business
Research Papers - SLIIT Staff Publications
SLIIT Business Review

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