Tourism productivity under crisis conditions: A double frontier Malmquist analysis of the U.S. casino gaming industry
Asit Bandyopadhayay, Somak Dutta, Tianshu ZhengThis study examines productivity dynamics in the U.S. casino gaming industry under economic crisis conditions using a double frontier data envelopment analysis framework. While traditional Malmquist productivity index approaches rely on optimistic efficiency frontiers, such methods may overstate resilience during downturns by overlooking inefficiency expansion. Using state-level data from twelve U.S. casino markets between 2006 and 2012, this study integrates both optimistic and pessimistic DEA perspectives to construct a double frontier Malmquist productivity index. The results reveal substantial divergence between optimistic and pessimistic productivity measures, particularly during the Great Recession, with several states exhibiting inefficiency-driven productivity decline that is not captured by conventional methods. By jointly accounting for frontier advancement and inefficiency dynamics, the proposed framework provides a more comprehensive assessment of productivity change. The findings highlight the importance of dual-frontier productivity measurement for evaluating tourism resilience, crisis preparedness, and regulatory stress-testing in gaming and other tourism-related industries.