The article analyses the evolution in
the views on development since the early 1950s up to the
present-day, and it draws attention to the spectacular
demand differentiation which has occurred in international
tourism in the Third World since the early 1970s. Subsequently
these changes in the views on development and in international
tourism demand are confronted and the consequences are
sketched for analysing the economic dimensions of Third
World tourism and assessing its developmental impact,
including the effects of globalization.