Exactly!!! hehehehe. basin PR fraud na naman etoOriginally Posted by FK
Exactly!!! hehehehe. basin PR fraud na naman etoOriginally Posted by FK
It's all up to you on what is the real facts.. read the papers (any newspapers go directly to business section) or maybe watch the news in TV on how we are doing now (Philippines).. do your part read and be informed pero ayaw na kabahin sa kadautan ha? basin ma daghan namo dre nag abot mga opposition and any group that are againts the govenrment! kay wa gyud ayo na.
Philippine Star has become a pathetic propaganda paper of the isolated and corrupt Arroyo government. I dont read that garbage.
Another way, Im sure, to deodorize the rotten image of Gloria and her government.
Let's stop pretending. Reality is plain to see.
The increasing prices, the skyrocketing tuition fees, the graft-ridden government... and the list could go on and on...
Kani mao mas klaro nga propaganda..
Originally Posted by JoRed
Let me guess! Booting out PGMA will solve all of this right? Wow! Genius!Originally Posted by Vertical Horizon
And using this reality to convince people to join the communist? No way. I would say, way go federal. Its the way. I would be very happy that people rally on the streets and shout for federalism and for not destabilizationism.
Originally Posted by Vertical Horizon
anothering thing to realize, kung commie nata, maka post bata ug anti-commie? lol
'aby rance,
paki explika kuno 'ni kon nganong naingon ani...
Long-term capital mart continues to evade RP
Wednesday, 10 26, 2005
The local financial system had failed to make any headway in developing the domestic capital market even after 14 years of advocacy, former Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Rafael Buenaventura said yesterday.
This lack of response is at the core of the problem why long-term money continues to evade the government that can benefit from a vibrant domestic capital market enabling the financing of long-term programs with long-term money, Buenaventura said.
Buenaventura stressed this point more to encourage regulators and market players to reaffirm a collective resolve to effect a well developed capital market.
Although the Capital Market Development Council had been in existence since 1991 and while such measures as a risk-based approach to financial supervision and the adoption of a real-time settlement system or RTGS have since been in place, Buenaventura said “a lot still needs to be done.”
“Our system continues to be very uneven. The preponderance of long-term lending is coming from the banking sector and this is funded by very short-term deposits.
“'Floaters' account for the great majority of this lending and we all witnessed the burden this creates.
“The palpable absence of a deep pool of raw long-term savings makes it difficult to directly finance housing and education needs, the Capital Expenditures of Philippines Inc. and everything else in between.
“With our savings bias favoring short-term instruments, matching this with an increasing demand for long-term funds and a budget deficit that needs to be financed, it comes as no surprise that the cost of funds remains high and volatile,” Buenaventura said.
Ang masulti lang nako ani no. The government is really doing its best to stir the economy upward kay mabasa man nato sa report below nga naninguha jud sila nga ma develop ng unsa ng market market diha. And that's good news kay naa jud diay gibuhat ang gobyerno.
Originally Posted by JoRed
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