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Keywords
- Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
- contraception
- contraceptive prevalence rate
- demographic dividend
- demographic transitions theory
- hidden unemployment/disguised unemployment
- human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- internal migration
- international migration
- low-level equilibrium population trap/Malthusian population trap
- Malthusian perspective
- maternal and child health
- migration
- neo-Malthusian perspective
- population density
- population policies
- proximate determinants
- rural–urban migration
- seasonal migration
- sub-fecundity
- total fertility rate (TFR)
- unemployment rate
- urbanization
Nowadays it is — to a certain extent — popular to criticize international tourism to third world countries. These criticisms may base on widely divergent aspects of the…
Abstract
Nowadays it is — to a certain extent — popular to criticize international tourism to third world countries. These criticisms may base on widely divergent aspects of the phenomenon, ranging from for instance the economic impact to the environmental impact or the psychological impact. Without implicitly suggesting that the non‐economic effects of international tourism in developing countries are unimportant we will concentrate in the following on the economic impact. The reason for this is twofold: