New trends in the growth of tourism employment in the UK in the 1990s

Authors: Thomas, Barry1; Townsend, Alan2

Source: Tourism Economics, Volume 7, Number 3, 1 September 2001 , pp. 295-310(16)

Publisher: IP Publishing Ltd

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Abstract:

New evidence on tourism employment in the UK in the 1990s shows major departures from patterns of change of the 1980s and from other sectors in the 1990s. In the 1990s the tourism sector no longer seemed to exhibit the exceptionally rapid growth that had been almost an article of faith for those who build economic development strategies around tourism. The growth in the number of tourismrelated employees became little different from the growth of employment in general, but there was significant redistribution across types of work and sub-regions. Tourism still has the highest proportion of part-time workers but, in marked contrast to many other sectors, it has now tended to move away from part-time employment. There is, however, heavy differentiation of experience across areas, and London, which dominates in absolute terms, departs radically from the general tourism pattern: it has high growth and a marked move towards part-timers. These surprising findings have implications for debates on the quality of jobs in tourism and on the role of tourism in economic development.

Document Type: Regular paper

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5367/000000001101297883

Affiliations: 1: Reader, University of Durham Business School, Mill Hill Lane, Durham DH1 3LB, UK. 2: Department of Geography, University of Durham, Science Site, Durham DH1 3LE, UK.

Publication date: 2001-09-01

More about this publication?
  • Tourism Economics, published bimonthly, is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the economics and finance of tourism worldwide. Articles address the components of the tourism product (accommodation; restaurants; merchandizing; attractions; transport; entertainment; tourist activities); and the economic organization of tourism at micro and macro levels (market structure; role of public/private sectors; community interests; strategic planning; marketing; finance; economic development).

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