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  1. Join Date
    Jul 2007
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    57,776
    #881
    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    did your endo explain why?
    sometimes kasi, the reasoning behind it might be somewhat... off-tangent.

    US FDA does have some rules that differ from EU FDA's.

    daming sakit sa US, dahil hindi sila marunong magpaka-payat.
    my understanding is artificial sweeteners are bad. How I see it, since magkakasala ka na, todo mo na

  2. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,631
    #882
    Quote Originally Posted by _Cathy_ View Post
    my understanding is artificial sweeteners are bad. How I see it, since magkakasala ka na, todo mo na
    i agree.
    "if you're gonna sin anyway, sin big time!"

  3. Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Posts
    15,310
    #883
    postponed.. again..


  4. Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    25,276
    #884
    Quote Originally Posted by _Qwerty_ View Post
    postponed.. again..

    Style ni PDuts na ginaya ni BBM, a simple way of bribing local officials. Siyempre happy sila sa extension, more time to consolidate power and finances. It's as simple as that.

    Moreover.... wow 90M projected voters na, 20M+ na lang pala below 15yrs old sa Pinas.

    Postponing barangay, SK polls to cost additional P5 billion ? Comelec | Philstar.com

  5. Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Posts
    842
    #885
    PH supermarkets to sell sugar at P70/kilo, from a high of P90 to P110 per kilo.

    In a news release, the OPS said that owners of Robinsons Supermarket, SM Supermarket, Puregold Supermarket and S&R Membership Shopping agreed to the suggested retail price of P70 per kilo of sugar, from a high of P90 to P110 per kilo.

    This, after Executive Secretary Victor Rodriguez, on orders from President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., met with several business tycoons who dominate the supermarket business in the Philippines to discuss the sudden spike in sugar prices.

    “The President lauded the selfless response from these businessmen who are sacrificing not just their own inventory but also their projected business profits for the sake of the ordinary Filipinos at this time when the country is besieged by many problems,” said Rodriguez.

    “This is a classic display of the indomitable Filipino spirit of ‘bayanihan’ and love of country,” he added. -excerpt

  6. Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    25,276
    #886
    P1B smuggled rice unloaded in Iloilo | The Manila Times

    P20 bigas soon. Hehehe

    This administration is off to a really good start ha.

    Sent using Tsikot Forums mobile app
    Fasten your seatbelt! Or else... Driven To Thrill!

  7. Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    25,276
    #887
    Quote Originally Posted by TopEngine View Post
    PH supermarkets to sell sugar at P70/kilo, from a high of P90 to P110 per kilo.

    In a news release, the OPS said that owners of Robinsons Supermarket, SM Supermarket, Puregold Supermarket and S&R Membership Shopping agreed to the suggested retail price of P70 per kilo of sugar, from a high of P90 to P110 per kilo.

    This, after Executive Secretary Victor Rodriguez, on orders from President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., met with several business tycoons who dominate the supermarket business in the Philippines to discuss the sudden spike in sugar prices.

    “The President lauded the selfless response from these businessmen who are sacrificing not just their own inventory but also their projected business profits for the sake of the ordinary Filipinos at this time when the country is besieged by many problems,” said Rodriguez.

    “This is a classic display of the indomitable Filipino spirit of ‘bayanihan’ and love of country,” he added. -excerpt
    Good job private sector.

    Kaso till next week lang. Ano kaya long-term solution ng head ng DA? [emoji28]

    Sent using Tsikot Forums mobile app
    Fasten your seatbelt! Or else... Driven To Thrill!

  8. Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    6,501
    #888
    I guess nobody noticed how it was so quiet from Malacanan...


  9. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,631
    #889
    Quote Originally Posted by Yatta View Post
    I guess nobody noticed how it was so quiet from Malacanan...

    well,
    why shouldn't it be?

  10. Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Posts
    3,009
    #890
    What makes Ferdinand Marcos Jr presidency bearable so far? It's as if he isn't there. Parang wala lang.

  11. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,631
    #891
    "i like it when things are going fine, and no one is taking credit for it."
    i mean, this is how good government should be, in my opinion.

  12. Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,450
    #892
    Quote Originally Posted by Ry_Tower View Post
    P1B smuggled rice unloaded in Iloilo | The Manila Times

    P20 bigas soon. Hehehe

    This administration is off to a really good start ha.

    Sent using Tsikot Forums mobile app
    Contrary to what the 31M believe, smuggled goods actually causes prices to go down...kaya nga kontro jan ang local producers and legal importers...

  13. Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    25,276
    #893
    Quote Originally Posted by H1Tman View Post
    What makes Ferdinand Marcos Jr presidency bearable so far? It's as if he isn't there. Parang wala lang.
    Isama mo na si Sara, tahimik with all the DepEd bruhaha with the laptops. Mga tarps lang sa school openings ang inaatupag.

    Less talk, less work, less of everything ata means less mistake. Sinagad na din nila.

  14. Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Posts
    3,187
    #894
    Quote Originally Posted by Lew_Alcindor View Post
    Contrary to what the 31M believe, smuggled goods actually causes prices to go down...kaya nga kontro jan ang local producers and legal importers...
    Like how white onions were P90 per kilo last june, & P500 per kilo now.

  15. Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Posts
    2,551
    #895
    Quote Originally Posted by bugsmobile View Post
    Like how white onions were P90 per kilo last june, & P500 per kilo now.
    Normal yan, pag papasok ber months, onions, garlic, sili, calamansi tumataas ng sobra 300% ang presyo.

  16. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    40,599
    #896



    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  17. Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    6,501
    #897
    Quote Originally Posted by H1Tman View Post
    What makes Ferdinand Marcos Jr presidency bearable so far? It's as if he isn't there. Parang wala lang.
    There are already wags asking who is really running the show. Maybe his father was right about him after all: "BBM is too carefree & lazy".

    MANILA, Philippines — Executive Secretary Victor Rodriguez on Tuesday revealed that it was him who asked the Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) to draft an order for the proposed importation of 300,000 metric tons (MT) of sugar, but he faulted resigned Agriculture Undersecretary Leocadio Sebastian for supposedly signing the import order arbitrarily in behalf of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. without the latter’s approval.
    As the finger-pointing in the botched sugar import controversy involving the unauthorized issuance of Sugar Order (SO) No. 4 approving the importation moved to the Senate, opposition Sen. Risa Hontiveros found Rodriguez’s admission “puzzling” since Malacańang had already washed its hands off the order’s issuance.


    Read more: Rodriguez admits asking SRA to draft import order | Inquirer News
    Follow us: *inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook

  18. Join Date
    Sep 2012
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    842

  19. Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Posts
    2,275
    #899
    Quote Originally Posted by Yatta View Post
    There are already wags asking who is really running the show. Maybe his father was right about him after all: "BBM is too carefree & lazy".

    MANILA, Philippines — Executive Secretary Victor Rodriguez on Tuesday revealed that it was him who asked the Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) to draft an order for the proposed importation of 300,000 metric tons (MT) of sugar, but he faulted resigned Agriculture Undersecretary Leocadio Sebastian for supposedly signing the import order arbitrarily in behalf of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. without the latter’s approval.
    As the finger-pointing in the botched sugar import controversy involving the unauthorized issuance of Sugar Order (SO) No. 4 approving the importation moved to the Senate, opposition Sen. Risa Hontiveros found Rodriguez’s admission “puzzling” since Malacańang had already washed its hands off the order’s issuance.


    Read more: Rodriguez admits asking SRA to draft import order | Inquirer News
    Follow us: *inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook
    Damage control | Philstar.com

    Damage control
    DEMAND AND SUPPLY - Boo Chanco - The Philippine Star
    August 22, 2022 | 12:00am

    Looks like President Junior flubbed his first crisis, a really minor one if he only handled it properly. He exposed his lack of experience and know-how. Looks like his learning curve will be steep.

    He made a political decision. He should have taken time to understand the empirical data on sugar supply and quirks in the way the industry is regulated.

    In the end, Junior realized his technocrat was right and there is a need to import to alleviate a shortage already happening. To save face, the volume was reduced by half and Junior said the decision to import would be made by October after we consume stored volumes, which a politician said was around 127,000 metric tons.

    Problem is, Junior cannot just go online and order 150,000 metric tons of sugar from Lazada and it will be delivered the following day. Importing takes time from order to delivery.

    Then again, there is something quicker than Lazada. An order can be issued to release sugar stock reserved for export that no longer make business sense anyway.

    The truth is, we don’t have a good handle on what is the actual inventory despite the tight government control of sugar stocks. For one thing, they are not counting sugar in the country reserved supposedly for export even if there is a domestic shortage.

    In all the confusion, there were clumsy efforts for damage control. Consumers like me are not interested in the complexities of our sugar industry and how it is regulated. We just want to be able to buy the sugar we need at the right price.

    I checked with my neighborhood supermarket last week and yes, a kilo of white refined sugar is priced at P102. The almost 50 percent higher price than normal is proof that there is a shortage of supply, that’s the basic law of supply and demand at work.

    That the shortage is due to hoarding, is probably true to some extent. But it cannot be the whole story.

    Raiding bodegas where sacks of sugar are stored is a knee jerk damage control measure of every president to deflect blame.

    Government officials conveniently blame market price problems to hoarding. They raid bodegas and media loves that because it produces action footage. But does it help?

    Probably some stocks will flow to the market, but not enough to get prices back to normal. The big traders whose business involves manipulating the market are often well connected and will remain untouched.

    Questions arise: what happens after a raid? Are the supposedly hoarded stocks confiscated? After confiscation, how are those stocks distributed to the market? Are charges of hoarding filed and seriously prosecuted? We haven’t heard of anyone going to jail for hoarding.

    Lawyers tell me it is not an easy charge to stick because defining hoarding is very difficult. What constitutes hoarding is more an economic question.

    So, all those headline stories of Customs agents raiding bodegas are more political theater than anything else. It is part of damage control.

    It is good to know the big retailers will each sell one to two million kilos of their sugar stocks at P70/kilo until supply lasts. Another good press release until the retailers say they have no more stocks to sell.

    On the other hand, I wonder why the SRA, under then Secretary Dar, rejected the request of two sugar mills to reclassify their class A sugar to class B. That would have provided sugar for sale to the domestic market to ease the shortage.

    Since class A sugar is not counted as domestic supply, are regulators simulating a domestic shortage to justify importation? Why even allocate for class A sugar at all? This only deceives the public as if we are still in the glory days of exporting. Conversion of Class A sugar should take priority over importation.

    SRA knew as early as January this year that there would be a shortage. Why aggravate that by allocating sugar for export?

    Logic tells us that if we must allocate sugar production, priority should be domestic, then export only if there is a surplus. The attachment to the US sugar quota is a source for corruption. Some use it to buy cheap sugar from elsewhere after exporting local sugar to the US, making a killing in the process.

    With the resignations at the Sugar Regulatory Board, reconstituting it is a good opportunity for Junior to make sure steps are taken to reform its policies and end protectionism. But can the appointees break away from the past and reform the sugar industry?

    Junior needs a respected economist who will do the balancing act, the way Arsi Balisacan handled the competition commission. Better that the regulating body does not include the regulated. But that’s not the tradition in sugar regulation.

    As it is, Junior’s own economic team has expressed concern that this sugar mess will have negative repercussions spilling over to the informal economy and hurt the poor. Secretary Balisacan told economic journalists lowly vendors selling street food like banana and camote cue rely on affordable sugar prices.

    “There is a lot of employment that will be affected by soaring prices… you need to have a kind of balancing act. While we protect our farmers from headwinds, we also have to ensure that the tools we employ to protect our farmers do not harm the rest of the economy, especially that we are trying to get poverty reduced, the economy moving at a high growth trajectory,” Balisacan said.

    The supply of sugar must grow with the economy to stabilize prices, Balisacan said.

    Maybe it was a mistake for Junior to take on the agriculture portfolio, especially at this time of food crisis. The PR mileage from it is limited. The reality is, he doesn’t have the time, the experience, nor the sectoral knowledge to do a good job of it.

    The price of white onions has also gone through the roof if you can even buy any. Burger King published a meme on social media apologizing to their customers for the absence of onions in their burgers.

    Rice and sugar are two big problems. It will be difficult to balance politics and good economics in both. Junior needs someone other than himself in the line of fire so he can make his Solomonic decision later.

  20. Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    6,501
    #900
    MANILA, Philippines — President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. has asked Congress to remove the tax-exemption that manufacturers of pick-up trucks currently enjoy, heeding the advice of his predecessor to beef up public coffers amid a shrinking fiscal space.

    In a letter to Albay Rep. Joey Salceda, head of the Ways and Means Committee in the House of Representatives, Finance Secretary Benjamin Diokno said the removal of tax exemption is expected to net tax revenues of P52.6 billion from 2022 to 2026.

    Heeding Duterte's advice, Marcos wants tax exemption for pick-up trucks removed | Philstar.com

    How about an instant P203B in 2022 alone?

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