will marcos invest their personal money on digital infrastructure?
btw..where are their money invested on after apo was ousted?
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Kadahilanan = Wagdu kasi
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Hindi na nga kasalanan ni BBM ito, kasalanan na talaga ng mga tao na sumusuporta sa pagiging presidente nya.
Spotted at the frontrunners rally in Pampanga today.
I knew something was fishy with the buses parked along Quirino Highway (SJDM and Calooocan) kanina umaga. Yup 56% yan.
marcos wealth is stashed mostly out of the country..marcos did not invest much in the philippines by keeping his wealth outside the country (offshore accounts)
which is better for you as a person..that marcos wealth be kept hidden outside the country or be used to fund the development of the philippines like a 4th telco to improve its digital infrastructure?
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Last edited by kisshmet; April 29th, 2022 at 11:23 PM.
indeed its a must but it requires FUNDING
there are 3 sources of funds in any country..TAXATION, PRIVATE WEALTH OF OLIGARCHS AND FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
MARCOS HAVE HIDDEN WEALTHS STASHED OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY SUBJECT TO LITIGATION IN AND OUT OF THE PHIL
MARCOS HAVE ESTATE TAX ISSUE WITH THE GOVERMENT CONSIDERING THE ESTATE LEFT BY THE LATE DICTATOR..IF THEY ARE PATROTIC INDIVIDUALS THEY WILL VOLUNTARILY PAY THOSE TAXES WITHOUT ANY OPPOSITION
UNLIKE THE OLIGARCHS MARCOS DID NOT INVEST THEIR PERSONAL WEALTH IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE COUNTRY THEY WANT TO CONTROL NOW
FOREIGN INVESTORS HAVENT FORGOTTEN THE ECONOMIC MONOPOLY IMPOSED BY THE DICTATOR IN THE COUNTRY..A RETURN TO MONOPOLY WILL DRIVE FOREIGN INVESTMENTS AWAY AND WILL BE DETRIMENTAL TO THE NATION
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Last edited by kisshmet; April 29th, 2022 at 11:24 PM.
"A President who robs you and a First Lady who robs you more." says a Japanese, on why the Philippines was so lucky!
A Marcos presidency will doom PH economy -- think tank | The Manila Times
LOCAL think tank Action for Economic Reforms warned on Friday that a Marcos presidency would spell disaster for the Philippine economy.
It said in a statement that this year's elections are a turning point for the country, and that given the global pandemic's profound social and economic impact, the next president must have concrete strategies in place to limit Covid-19 risks and support the country's economic recovery.
"Unfortunately, if polls and surveys would dictate the actual results, the country's economic future is now in terrible jeopardy. Ferdinand 'Bongbong' Marcos Jr. has led electoral surveys, and this spells trouble for everyone," AER said.
It said according to a Bloomberg survey of 28 investors and analysts, Marcos Jr. had the second lowest score of the five candidates considered, with a score of 46, compared to Vice President Ma. Leonor "Leni" Robredo, who received the highest score of 105 among the contenders.
The research organization pointed out that analysts, investors, and economists can all see red flags in a potential Marcos presidency.
poster
"The son is a much inferior version of his father, however, as Marcos Jr. has an unclear economic platform which depends on the empty rhetoric of 'unity' rather than any concrete plans or policies," AER said.
Fiscal irresponsibility and corruption, growing debt, a downgraded credit rating, decreased investment, shrinking remittances, worsening poverty, and failing economic performance are among the risks associated with a Marcos administration, it said.
"In light of all these, it is no wonder that markets and investors are apprehensive regarding Marcos Jr.'s presidential campaign," AER said.
He has avoided presidential debates and has refused to answer tough questions. This is hardly the kind of leadership that inspires trust in an uncertain economy, AER added.
A cautionary tale. Mag-ingat sa mga pangako na walang basehan sa tunay na buhay.
Bloomberg - Are you a robot?
Ahead of the November 2019 election, Sri Lankan presidential challenger Gotabaya Rajapaksa proposed sweeping tax cuts so reckless the incumbent government thought it must be a campaign gimmick.
The finance minister at the time, Mangala Samaraweera, called a briefing to assail the “dangerous” pledge to reduce the value-added tax to 8% from 15% and scrap other levies. To him, it was simple math: Sri Lanka collected relatively less revenue than nearly any other country, and its high debt load had forced it to seek cash from the International Monetary Fund.
“If these proposals are implemented like this not only will the entire country go bankrupt,” the minister warned, “but the entire country will become another Venezuela or another Greece.”
It took about 30 months for his prediction to come true, in what’s become a cautionary tale for populist leaders navigating through a world of war, disease and high inflation.
Opisyal umalma sa iniwang mga basura sa UniTeam grand rally sa Pampanga
- headline pa lang nakakadismaya na. Ganyang crowd mapapala mo kapag hakot. Walang pake.
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Fasten your seatbelt! Or else...Driven To Thrill!