Tourism, development and inequality: The case of Tanzania

Type Journal Article - Poverty & Public Policy
Title Tourism, development and inequality: The case of Tanzania
Author(s)
Volume 7
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 64-79
URL http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/routledg/cgpc/2015/00000022/00000007/art00002
Abstract
For most of the post-WWII era, scholars have attempted to understand, define, and measure
development. A large and growing body of work has in fact investigated its causes and the
consequences and has dissented as to whether tourism represents a proper determinant of growth and
development. Yet, while scholars have started investigating the contribution that tourism can make to
economic growth and development from the 1970s onward, considerably less attention has been paid
to assessing whether tourism-induced growth is pro-poor or not—that is, whether tourism-induced
growth and development contribute to the reduction of poverty and income inequality.
Building on data collected from several institutional sources and on the insights gathered in the
course of several interviews with the officials from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism,
we wish to investigate the relationship between the development of the tourism industry, economic
development, employment and income inequality in Tanzania.

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