To read this content please select one of the options below:

False starts and misconceptions about tourism development: Eight considerations from the southernmost part of Africa

Franco F. Ferrario Ph.D. (P.O.Box 7521, Pretoria 0001 — S. Africa)

The Tourist Review

ISSN: 0251-3102

Article publication date: 1 January 1988

117

Abstract

‐ One of the consequences of the present long period of economic depression, which has been felt with particular severity by most Third World countries, has been a necessary critical reassessement of many development strategies. Especially in Africa, the balance sheet between efforts and results has not been very encouraging. The massive industrialization programmes and the large projects of the last three decades have neither helped to achieve a more competitive production nor have introduced widespread prosperity, as hoped. Gradually the accent is now shifting toward new “soft options”, one of which is tourism. We remember that only 15–20 years ago many African governments or international development agencies were still considering tourism as a marginal economic activity, to be left to poor nations without much prospects for industrialization. Since then much has changed and ‐ especially in the present post‐industrial economies ‐ tourism and the whole gamut of other leisure industries have become one of the most dynamic fields of expansion, even in the developing world.

Citation

Ferrario, F.F. (1988), "False starts and misconceptions about tourism development: Eight considerations from the southernmost part of Africa", The Tourist Review, Vol. 43 No. 1, pp. 23-29. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb057989

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1988, MCB UP Limited

Related articles