Tourism has remained a sturdy pillar of the country’s development. Together with the overseas Filipino workers’ remittances, the two have consistently and strongly supported the nation’s socioeconomic progress.
2017 was a sort of boom year. The country played host to a series of international events, featuring the Association of Southeast Asian Nation 50th Anniversary and Leaders’ Summit, the United Nation World Tourism Organization International Conference on Tourism Statistics, the World Street Food Congress, the Madrid Fusión Manila Event, the Miss Universe Pageant and several other milestones.
A record-high 6.8 million foreign tourists came to the country, representing a 15-percent increase from the visits registered in the year before. According to the Department of Tourism, each foreign guest spent a daily average of $133 or P6,700 a day, but they stayed longer—up to a week from a previous average of three to four days.
Tourism Secretary Wanda Corazon T. Teo said that, between January and August last year, the country earned up to $3.3 billion, or P166.3 billion, worth of tourism receipts, maintaining the sector’s ranking as the third-largest contributor to the country’s GDP.
There appears even greater prospect for stronger tourism for at least two reasons.
The first is the growing leisure and traveling class of Asia. The Asean and its East Asian neighbors provide a steady stream of visitors as their incomes rise.
The second is the game-changing opening of the Philippine tourist market to mainland China. Last year the Hong Kong Trade and Investment Association and the Shenzen Stock Exchange Mission came to Manila separately accompanied by delegations of well-known brand names to explore trade and investment opportunities here. The striking theme often sounded is the country’s undiscovered beauty and refreshing people’s warmth.
Urban centers like Manila, Cebu, Baguio, Angeles, Iloilo, Bacolod, Davao and Cagayan de Oro are easily accessible and have a fair supply of accommodations and scenery.
Several expressed the hope, however, that they can go to places less traveled and seldom seen. Here lies the hideaway treasures of the Philippines: its rural life in the countryside.
And key to this is the Department of Trade and Industry-Department of Public Works and Highways convergence program Roads Leveraging Linkages for Industry and Trade. It’s the Duterte administration’s infrastructure flagship, the blueprint to match jobs and people.
Part of the funds have been budgeted. It’s the Cabinet’s turn to hasten the roads, bridges and other forms of connectivity to these new, often far-flung, destinations. Not just in the name of tourism, but more basic is to achieve inclusive growth. The concrete proposal is to improve and convert economic zones into tourism hubs.
In a country as beautiful and as bountiful as the Philippines, booming tourism, particularly in the rural areas, will make for a highly complementary, urban-rural balanced socioeconomic development.
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