Through media, reports and other researches, tourism clearly offers excellent opportunities for economic growth such as what is shown by the foreign exchange earnings from tourism expenditures. International tourism has expanded rapidly throughout the world in recent decades. Tourism is traveling for recreational or leisure purposes or other services which supports leisure travel pursuits. Tourists, as defined by the World Tourism Organization, are those people who travel and stay in places -- not more than one consecutive year, outside their usual environment for several reasons such as leisure, business and other purposes not related to their usual activity from places which they have been to already. Hospitality industry, as a support in the tourism of the Philippines, plays a big role thorugh resorts, hotel, restaurants and even cruise ships.
Tourism can be recognized as long as people have travelled the narrative of Marco Polo in the 13th century the "grand tour" of the British aristocracy to Europe in the 18th century and the journeys of David Livingstone through Africa in the 19th century are all examples of early tourism. Thomas Cook is popularly regarded as the founder of inclusive tours with his use of a chartered train in 1841 to transport tourists from Loughborough to Leicester. Before the 1950s, tourism in Europe was mainly a domestic activity with some international travel between countries, mainly within continental Europe. In the period of recovery following World War II, a combination of circumstances provided an impetus to international travel. Among the important contributing factors were the growing number of people in employment, the increase in real disposable incomes and available leisure time, and changing social attitudes towards leisure and work. These factors combined to stimulate the latent demand for foreign travel and holidays. The emergence of specialist tour operators who organized inclusive holidays by