Publication: Does Tourism Induce Gentrification? Evidence From Mexico City
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This thesis is the first empirical application of the sociological concept of tourism gentrification—the phenomena where tourism changes a neighborhoods landscape and causes residential displacement. I use Mexico City as a case study to quantify the impact of tourism and remote work on consumption amenities from 2010 to 2024. Drawing from a wide range of data sources including the registry of all businesses in Mexico City, Mexican census data, and all museums and historic sites within the city, I employ two identification frameworks with three estimation strategies: an instrumental variable long difference regression, an in- strumental variable probit model, and a difference-in-difference approach. I find limited evidence that tourism shifts a neighborhoods business profile toward tourism-facing ameni- ties. Rather, I find that tourism sustains commercial activity in areas with a high presence of foreign visitors. My findings build upon the existing tourism gentrification literature through a quantitative case study of in a major city in a periphery country.