grabe... dumot naman ni inyo dri... kada abli nako ani nga thread inyo raman mga name ga balik2 ahaha
grabe... dumot naman ni inyo dri... kada abli nako ani nga thread inyo raman mga name ga balik2 ahaha
Huh? Sakto akong nabasa sa us aka poster diri nga ni uyon nalang ta sa mga pagpangawat sa time sa previous admin? Pagka sayop tubaga..sorry sa word pro walay lain nga word ika describe atong tubaga.
Kinsa gud intawon NORMAL nga tao mosugot ug kawat? Pastilan. Ang punto diha dili kay ni uyon kundi ang pagka ipokreto sa admin karon. Kay lage DAANg Matuwid? Kay lage honest? Unya wala na corrupt?kinsa inyo g ilad?. Nga ikaw gani mismo in angkon manka nga lisud mawala ang corruption. Kay llage .
Dili na siya mind set..kun dili mao na ang nakita nato sa atong nga politiko.mao nga lisud iwala sa atong hunahuna nga dili na sila mg corrupt labi na kung mga influential ang mga supporter nga businessman..unsa man may rason sa nga businessman nga mo support man sila ug politiko labi na ng klaro nga nodaug.unsa man labot d I nila? Naa bay mga politiko nga wala mo gamit ug kwarta during election? Naa bay mga politiko mga wala mo dawat ug supporta gikan sa mga businessman?kay sa akong tan-aw natural nga kinaiya gyud sa taw ang gusto nga mo labaw sa iyang isig kaingon..
Mao nay tubag ni NOYNOY during tha interview? Agoyyyyy paita.
Dili d I functional ang government kung naa corruption? Sayop napud..functional gihapon galling lang nay mga APAN mamo na result nga naa mga daghang REKLAMO.pro functional gihapon siya.
Kamo nalang hubag kaung HONEST ba ang Admin karon..
Kamo nalang pud hubag kung ni SABAY bata sa MATUWID na DAAN..
cge man gud ko naka kita ang mga post diri nga honest karon ang admin..in what way naka sulti mo nga honest ang admin karon? paki post ug example?
BOI sees record P350B investments this year
By Ma. Elisa P. Osorio, The Philippine Star
Posted at 10/10/2011 7:23 AM | Updated as of 10/10/2011 7:23 AM
MANILA, Philippines - The Board of Investments (BOI) expects to exceed all investment expectations and break all investment records this year as it sees capital inflows hitting P350 billion by December.
In a recent one day investment roadshow in Bukidnon, BOI Executive Director Efren V. Leano said the agency BOI was able to attract more than P2 billion worth of investment interest.
Mountain View College, a Baptist school in Bukidnon is looking at putting up a P1.2 billion hydro generator and a P300 million resort in the area. Leano said there is a lot of interest in Bukidnon especially in the area of tourism.
Although BOI, an attached agency of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), did not approve any investment applications for the month of September, the agency is already awash with applications. There was no approvals for September because BOI was in the process of creating its guidelines.
Meanwhile, the BOI has already issued its new investments guidelines making incentives stricter as firms would now have to quantify their contribution to the economy before getting the income tax holiday (ITH). Before, investors would get the full 30 percent ITH or nothing at all. This time, the ITH may be limited depending on four factors – job generation, net value added, multiplier effect and measured capacities.
DTI Undersecretary Cristino L. Panlilio said this will be good because the ITH will now be strictly confined to firms that contribute to the economy. He said most weight will be given to job generation but this does not mean that less job intensive investments like those for power will not get ITH because of the net value added component.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/72681/c...h-p0-5m-tv-set
aha..is this how MATUWID na DAAN works? indeed HONEST Admin.
MATUWID NA DAAN na bro, bsta ang ilang gpang kiha mga arroyo ug iyang mga iro... pero f iro gani n Pnoy masangkot aning mga kasoha, kalimtan lng, nya magkalisod, dli tagdon... tsk tsk tsk
Payback time na...
The amended PPP plan
The plan of Transport Secretary Manuel Roxas to let the state build all major transportation-related projects using cheaper foreign loans initially lookdc sound. But with the government’s reputation for inefficiency and bureaucracy, Mr. Roxas might as well drop his plan.
The transport secretary last week announced a P500-billion, five-year infrastructure program involving key rail, airport and seaport projects under the administration of President Benigno Aquino III. The agency plans to build most of the projects with cheap funds, notably from official development assistance loans. The mode is a deviation from the so-called Public-Private Partnership detailed by President Aquino during his first State-of-the-Nation Address, in which private sector participation was key to the implementation of the infrastructure projects.
Mr. Roxas defended his “hybrid-PPP scheme,” saying the government would be able to build the projects with “the lowest possible cost to the public” by availing itself of low-interest ODA loans and privatizing the operation and maintenance aspects once the infrastructure was completed.
“What we are trying to do in reconfiguring is to put the market risks to the private sector. The execution risks, meaning the building of the infrastructure with the low-cost money, will be on the government side,” Roxas said.
The government’s record in replicating what the private sector can adequately handle, however, is dismal. The private sector agrees that while the government can avail itself of cheaper ODA loans, there is no assurance that such infrastructure projects will be finished on schedule.
A significant delay in the construction of a toll road project because of lack of counterpart state funding to match the ODA loan releases, for one, will negate the cheaper cost of money. A delayed project, caused by bureaucracy among other things, will incur cost overruns due to inflation.
A private company, by contrast, will be a more efficient proponent because of its responsibility to stockholders. The chief executives and senior officers involved in the project will be answerable to shareholders, or the owners of the company, for any misdeed or cost overruns. The same is not true for Mr. Roxas or the government machinery.
Manila Standard Today -- The amended PPP plan -- 2011/october/10
Aquino’s flagship program still on the drawing board First Part of Three Part Series http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/73277/a...-drawing-board
Philippine economy seen to double by 2020
‘Anti-corruption drive to draw more foreign investors’
By: Ronnel W. Domingo
Philippine Daily Inquirer 1:16 am | Monday, October 10th, 2011
The Philippine economy may grow 80 percent larger within nine years as anti-corruption efforts build momentum and translate into greater foreign direct investment inflows, according to DBS Group.
In a research titled “Asia 2020,” the Singapore-based financial service group said that over the coming decade, economic growth will be respectable and trending toward 6 percent.
Such growth will depend much “on policy and whether the large labor pool and resource endowment—which include gold, nickel and copper—can be effectively tapped upon,” the paper said.
“We hold a cautiously optimistic view of the economy and expect reform to proceed at a moderate rate,” DBS added. “By 2020, GDP will (in today’s dollars) likely be 80 percent larger, and income levels 45 percent higher than at present.”
The group said that the Aquino administration has so far done a credible job in introducing reforms focused on fiscal discipline and public-private partnership (PPP) on infrastructure investments as well as population management and anti-corruption reforms.
Amid criticism that the government is not spending enough, Malacañang has limited deficit-spending to P34.5 billion in the eight months to August, or about a seventh of the P228.1 billion recorded in the same period of 2010.
Also, Malacañang expects to auction off the first of big-ticket PPP projects before yearend.
“A new structure for project approvals and implementation is being established, which should complement the launch of PPP projects,” DBS said. “Measures to counter corruption should raise investor confidence.”
DBS noted that the savings rate has grown to 18 percent from 11 percent in 2004 adding that investment is beginning to follow the same path and that GDP should follow.
“In short, the reform momentum is building, and this should translate into greater FDI inflows and complement the rising domestic savings rate already apparent in the data.
Further, DBS said the country’s young population could prove to be an advantage although the still-high birth rate remains a challenge, with an additional 19 million people seen within the next nine years.
“To some extent, resources have been spent in accommodating a rise in population at the expense of other investment, and this may have impeded GDP growth,” DBS said.
Last edited by techguys; 10-10-2011 at 01:57 PM.
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