Tourism represents, within the context of up to date civilization, through its content and its role, a definite area of activity, and a segment of essential importance within the economic and social life of the majority of countries in the world. To illustrate these features, we'll present an analysis of a micro destination, highlighting all the constitutive elements of the destination and the way they interact with regional and national economic structures. The economic significance of tourism development is very large, whether it's assessed at a worldwide, national or local level. The most obvious economic significance is how briskly the tourism sector has grown globally and therefore the extent to which it impacts on the broader economy. The significance is often summed up within the following statistics: tourism provided 9% of worldwide GDP and accounted for 255 million jobs. The tourism industry is predicted to still grow by a mean 4% annually. The multiplier effect is clear during a village context where a paved road providing improved accessibility, could lead on to further growth, as in North Western Tanzania, or the event of a replacement hotel or resort on an island nation just like the Maldives. The 2008 Olympics demonstrated the importance of the tourism industry to China