1 minute read

Mega Changes

Labor and Employment, and Technical Education and Skills Development Authority also provided their respective interventions to participants.

Progress is impossible without change. It’s something that the former rebels and members of communist organizations in Bukidnon province, know very well. It takes grit and hard work through these initiatives. This is the mark that there is unity at the end, and it brings serenity to our region.

Advertisement

Philippines’ economic growth from 2020 - to 2021 resumes to aggravate than how it should be in 2019. It was as if we woke up knowing that poverty had already enveloped us. We may simply ask ourselves, how can one of Asia’s fastest-growing economies falter? Is it necessary to blame everything for the pandemic?

Poor Governance.

Abandoned responsibilities. Unemployed people. Decreasing salaries. The Philippines’ economy is on the verge of collapsing. Early signs of economic recovery were held back by an increase in COVID-19 infections and the reintroduction of more stringent quarantine regulations. Is the Philippines back to being a sick man? before the epidemic, not to mention the debt repayments that occurred during the dictatorship. settling for another method.

2022 PRESIDENTIAL APIRANTS’ AGRICUTURE DEVELOPMENT PLANS

by

Fritzi Mae Gapuz

While the election is just around the corner, what should we potentially expect on the desk for the next agriculture development plans?

The Philippines’ economy is resilient and strong—we have maintained our agriculture, livestock, and livelihood through the economic downturn and prosperity, and in moments of a health crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic. By voting for the candidates of our choice, we can continue to uphold and improve our economy’s core functions and values.

“How can it be that we have been investing many billions in agribusiness for many years and the area has not helped farmers advance up the income ladder?” borrowed more to support pandemicrelated initiatives.

Financial Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua explained why the Depart- ment of Agriculture (DA) budget plan was reduced from 2020 to 2021.

This article is from: