International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study

Theory: The literature on volume of tourism in developing nations, does not provide empirical measures necessary for rigorous hypotheses testing. While there have been ample studies on volume of tourism among developed nations, very little has been done regarding developing nations. Several theories...

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Main Author: Sinha, Sangeeta
Other Authors: Pillai, Vijayan
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of North Texas 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc3208/
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spelling ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc32082017-03-17T08:35:50Z International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study Sinha, Sangeeta Tourism -- Developing countries. international tourism tourism developing nations Theory: The literature on volume of tourism in developing nations, does not provide empirical measures necessary for rigorous hypotheses testing. While there have been ample studies on volume of tourism among developed nations, very little has been done regarding developing nations. Several theories from the dependency school, world systems and modernization offer theoretical explanations, but these explanations have not been adequately translated into empirical models, for studying the volume of tourism. Hypotheses: To improve the ability to explain volume of tourism and to identify the factors that affect the volume of tourism in developing countries, the study tests four hypotheses based on the theories of Modernization, World System and Push- Pull. Methodology: The study uses Confirmatory Factor Analysis to examine the factors that are likely to influence the volume of tourism. Shift Share analysis is also used to study regional variations in volume of tourism. Findings: The study found support for the fact that aspects of modernization are some of the most important determinants of volume of tourism. This finding has policy implications for developing nations trying to encourage tourism as an important economic sector. Shift Share analysis revealed that in the last decade Sub - Saharan Africa, East Asia Pacific and the Middle East have seen an increase in the volume of tourism compared to other developing regions of the world. University of North Texas Pillai, Vijayan Sahliyeh, Emile Sadri, Mahmoud Eve, Susan Brown Poe, Steven 2002-08 Thesis or Dissertation Text oclc: 50840881 https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc3208/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc3208 English Public Copyright Sinha, Sangeeta Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Tourism -- Developing countries.
international tourism
tourism
developing nations
spellingShingle Tourism -- Developing countries.
international tourism
tourism
developing nations
Sinha, Sangeeta
International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study
description Theory: The literature on volume of tourism in developing nations, does not provide empirical measures necessary for rigorous hypotheses testing. While there have been ample studies on volume of tourism among developed nations, very little has been done regarding developing nations. Several theories from the dependency school, world systems and modernization offer theoretical explanations, but these explanations have not been adequately translated into empirical models, for studying the volume of tourism. Hypotheses: To improve the ability to explain volume of tourism and to identify the factors that affect the volume of tourism in developing countries, the study tests four hypotheses based on the theories of Modernization, World System and Push- Pull. Methodology: The study uses Confirmatory Factor Analysis to examine the factors that are likely to influence the volume of tourism. Shift Share analysis is also used to study regional variations in volume of tourism. Findings: The study found support for the fact that aspects of modernization are some of the most important determinants of volume of tourism. This finding has policy implications for developing nations trying to encourage tourism as an important economic sector. Shift Share analysis revealed that in the last decade Sub - Saharan Africa, East Asia Pacific and the Middle East have seen an increase in the volume of tourism compared to other developing regions of the world.
author2 Pillai, Vijayan
author_facet Pillai, Vijayan
Sinha, Sangeeta
author Sinha, Sangeeta
author_sort Sinha, Sangeeta
title International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study
title_short International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study
title_full International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study
title_fullStr International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study
title_full_unstemmed International Tourism in Developing Nations: An Empirical Study
title_sort international tourism in developing nations: an empirical study
publisher University of North Texas
publishDate 2002
url https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc3208/
work_keys_str_mv AT sinhasangeeta internationaltourismindevelopingnationsanempiricalstudy
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