Coordinating ecotourism development with economic growth is central to achieving sustainability in regions where natural assets are both a comparative advantage and a binding constraint. This study assesses the ecotourism economy coupling coordination in Hainan Free Trade Port (China) during 2017–2023. Building on sustainable development theory, systems theory, and the tourism-led growth hypothesis, we conceptualize three coordination pathways, industrial structure upgrading, clustering effects, and urban–rural linkages, and operationalize them through an 18-indicator evaluation system covering ecotourism and economic subsystems. Indicator weights are determined using the entropy weight method, and the coupling coordination degree model is applied to quantify the interaction intensity and coordination level. Gray Relational Analysis is further used as a robustness-oriented complement to identify the factors most associated with coordination changes. Results show that both subsystems improved overall with noticeable fluctuations: the ecotourism index rose from 0.239 to 0.719, while the economic development index increased from 0.370 to 0.610. The coupling coordination degree advanced from moderate dysregulation (0.230 in 2017) to near quality coordination (0.995 in 2023), while shock-sensitive years highlight the vulnerability of tourism-related performance. The findings suggest that improving industrial structure and strengthening tourism-related productive capacity and external connectivity are key levers for sustaining coordination without compromising ecological efficiency.
Liu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.