Airbnb and COVID-19: SPACE-TIME vulnerability effects in six world-cities
Abstract
This study examines the COVID-19 vulnerability and subsequent market dynamics in the volatile hospitality
market worldwide, by focusing in particular on individual Airbnb bookings-data for six world-cities in various
continents over the period January 2020–August 2021. This research was done by: (i) looking into factual
survival rates of Airbnb accommodations in the period concerned; (ii) examining place-based impacts of intracity location on the economic performance of Airbnb facilities; (iii) estimating the price responses to the
pandemic by means of a hedonic price model. In our statistical analyses based on large volumes of time- and
space-varying data, multilevel logistic regression models are used to trace ‘corona survivability footprints’ and to
estimate a hedonic price-elasticity-of-demand model. The results reveal hardships for the Airbnb market as a
whole as well as a high volatility in prices in most cities. Our study highlights the vulnerability and ‘corona echoeffects’ on Airbnb markets for specific accommodation segments in several large cities in the world. It adds to the
tourism literature by testing the geographic distributional impacts of the corona pandemic on customers’ choices
regarding type and intra-urban location of Airbnb accommodations.