“…In addition to the income effect which dominates economic impact analyses, the employment effect is another well established research area, dating back to the 1970s (e.g., Diamond, 1974Diamond, , 1977. The focus has shifted from the level of tourism employment, input-output analysis and the multiplier effect (Dwyer & Forsyth, 1998) to the quality and structure of employment (e.g., Sinclair, 1990Sinclair, , 1997, particularly the gender wage gap (e.g., Campos-Soria, Ortega-Aguaza, & Ropero-Garcia, 2009;Munoz-Bullon, 2009). These discussions provide useful policy implications in relation to poverty alleviation, labour immigration, and education (Riley & Szivas, 2009;Lillo-Bañuls & Casado-Diaz, 2010).…”