[eng] This study aims to explore the effects of cultural, natural, and mixed World Heritage Sites (WHS)
on international tourism demand, with a particular focus on growing economies in Latin America
and the Caribbean region for the period 1995 to 2021. The study identifies the impact of Intangible
Cultural Heritage (ICH) sites on tourism flows, an area that remained under-researched in the
tourism economic literature. To that end, a gravity model for tourism demand is estimated by
applying the Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood (PPML) method. This research aims to
contribute to the literature on the relationship between tourism and heritage sites in the context of
meaningful intercultural exchange and understanding between residents of local communities and
international visitors. This exploratory research was motivated by the limited literature on the
impacts of UNESCO heritage recognition on tourism in Latin American and Caribbean economies.
In the empirical analysis, we proceeded in two stages. Firstly, we defined a gravity model with a
different set of fixed effects to estimate the effect of World Heritage Sites (cultural, natural, and
mixed) and Intangible Cultural Heritage on international tourism for a panel of all countries
worldwide. Then, in the second stage, we examine their impact on flows to the Latin America and
the Caribbean region.
The results indicate that the impact of UNESCO recognition varies depending on the type of
heritage sites. Analyzing heritage independently, our findings indicate that the effects of Cultural
Heritage positively impact tourism flows worldwide but negatively in Latin American and Caribbean
countries. However, Natural and Mixed Heritage represents a growth in tourism flow for both study
groups. In the case of Intangible Cultural Heritage, our results show that they negatively influence
tourism flows worldwide but positively in Latin American and Caribbean countries. Furthermore,
our analysis shows that Intangible Cultural Heritage has a high potential to attract tourism to Latin
America and the Caribbean countries, suggesting that the recognition of one Intangible Cultural
Heritage increases the number of international visitors by 15.82%.