Assessing the Inbound Tourism Service Quality and Competitiveness Under the Concept of Sustainable Development
Jizhong Li, Jidan HuangInbound tourism has become an important indicator of destination openness, service capacity, cultural communication, and sustainable governance. However, existing evaluations often separate visitor experience, destination competitiveness, and sustainability, making it difficult to diagnose how service quality supports long-term competitiveness. This study develops a sustainability-oriented framework for evaluating inbound tourism service quality in 10 representative Chinese cities. Nineteen indicators are organized into four dimensions: basic service provision, cultural and experiential perception, safety and emergency response, and sustainable and resilient development. A TIFN-AHP-TOPSIS model is used to integrate official statistics, public tourism information, online-review evidence, and expert judgments while retaining uncertainty and hesitation in qualitative assessments. The results show that Shanghai, Beijing, and Hangzhou form the leading tier; Shenzhen, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Sanya, and Xiamen form the balanced tier; and Xi’an and Chongqing form the potential tier. Robustness checks based on risk-preference adjustment, entropy-weighted TOPSIS, grey relational TOPSIS, and perception-indicator perturbation confirm the stability of the tier classification. The findings suggest that inbound tourism competitiveness depends not only on transport access and reception capacity but also on cultural interpretation, digital convenience, safety governance, ecological quality, and resilience. The framework provides a diagnostic tool for improving sustainable destination competitiveness.