Klaro man kaayo sabton ang content sa imong gipasukip nga news item, recommend pa for filing of charges Fair mana ang Ombudsman maminaw mana sa duha ka side.
Ila sad gi tan-aw ang argumento sa LLC officials
Wala paman siguro'y final decision
Kon duna ka diha i post kuno
sakto mo... tapak tapak ra tanan dalan deri.. labi na deri sa humay2x... ug sa uban pang bangag tapakan ra ug spalto. dpwh ani
Mario Amorez... kay taga opon jud na... lumad.. di ko sugot mo vote anang dili taga opon oi.. atot ana..
For your information:
Taguig, Marikina, Lapu-Lapu best cities for business - Yehey! News
Taguig, Marikina, Lapu-Lapu best cities for business
Manila Standard
26 May 2008 | 11:00 PM
By Roderick dela Cruz
TAGUIG, Lapu-Lapu and Marikina are the friendliest cities in the Philippines when it comes to starting a business, a report says.
The report, Doing Business in the Philippines 2008, was launched over the weekend by the International Finance Corp., a World Bank subsidiary, in partnership with the National Competitiveness Council and the Asian Institute of Management Policy Center.
The study found that Philippine cities share the same legal framework, but they differ in implementing national regulations, and that affects their competitiveness.
It says starting a business only takes 15 procedures in Taguig and Marikina, compared with 23 in Davao and 22 in Pasig and Valenzuela.
Cities could follow the example of Taguig and cut the requirements to obtain the business permit, the report said.
Or even better, why not eliminate the requirement to obtain a business permit for low-risk general commercial activities all together?
Starting a business in Lapu-Lapu costs something equivalent to 17 percent of income per capita, much smaller than 44.6 percent in Las Pias and 37.2 percent in Makati.
The report cites Davao for the ease of building a warehouse there.
If you decided to build a warehouse in Davao, dealing with all the construction-related procedures would take you 60 days, three months less than the average in Metro Manila cities and placing Davao among the worlds 10 fastest cities to complete construction-related requirements, the report said.
It cites Mandaluyong for the ease of transfer of ownership. Transferring the title of a piece of property takes only 21 days there compared with six weeks in Mandaue.
Globally, starting a business in a Philippine city takes an average 18 procedures and 35 days, and costs 27 percent of income per capita.
Thats about the same time as in Chinawhich ranked 100 out of 178 economies on the time it takes to start a businessand at a similar cost in Fiji, which is ranked 97th in the cost of starting a business.
Compared with their counterparts abroad, Philippine cities do well with respect to the time it takes to transfer the title to a piece of property, but they lag behind in the number of procedures to start a business or deal with construction licenses.
It takes on average 32 days to register property across the 21 Philippine cities that it coveredthe same as in Austria, which ranked 56th globally in this category.
By contrast, the 18 procedures required on average to start a business would put Philippine cities toward the bottom of the 178 economies ranked by the number of procedures to start a business.
The report covered three areas of regulationsstarting a business, dealing with licenses, and registering property.
Variations in city regulations, or in implementation of national regulations, can promote or constrain local business activity, the report said.
It says simple administrative reforms at the local level can make Philippine cities more competitive, both nationally and globally.
Cities can learn from each other and adopt good regulations and practices that already exist in the Philippines, said Zenaida Hernandez, one of the authors of the report.
Jesse Ang, IFC resident representative, says the report allows cities to identify opportunities for even faster progress.
The report says that if a Philippine city adopts better practices in the three areas covered, the country would rank better in the global report covering 10 topics.
By reforming these three areas alone, the ranking of the Philippines, as represented by Manila in Doing Business 2008, could improve by eight positions.
The report says cutting the time to get construction licenses and utility connections to build a warehouse to the level of Davaos two months would put the Philippines ahead of New Zealand, which is ranked no. 7 globally in this area.
City-level rankings are becoming increasingly important in a globalized world, where specific locations, rather than countries, compete for investments, said Federico Macaranas, executive director of the AIM Policy Center.
The 21 Philippine cities that the report covered are Caloocan, Las Pias, Makati, Malabon, Mandaluyong, Marikina, Muntinlupa, Navotas, Paraaque, Pasay, Pasig, Quezon City, San Juan, Taguig, Valenzuela, Tanauan, Cebu, Lapu-Lapu, Mandaue and Davao. Manila, the capital city, was measured in the global report.
Taguig, Marikina, Lapu-Lapu best cities for business - Yehey! News
Angay natong daygon si mayor Radaza sa iyang maayong pagdumala sa Lapu-Lapu nga maoy nakapahimo niini nga business friendly nga dakbayan.
Daghan nahimo nga kaayohan atong mayor sa Lapu-Lapu, kaso lang tungod sa crab mentality sa ubang tao wala nalay nahimo kong dili ang pag sige nalang og panaot. Dili mahimong one of the best cities for business in the Philippines ang atong siyudad if dili tungod sa mga plano, lihok og pangihunga sa atong mayor.
Credible kaayo ang nag conduct og study ang International Finance Corp., a World Bank subsidiary, in partnership with the National Competitiveness Council and the Asian Institute of Management Policy Center. Dili ni basta basta nga recognition, for whole Visayas and Mindanao ang Lapu-Lapu ra jud ang naka sulod.
Wa gyuy ayo ang lapulapu ron...dako kaayo ilang kita pero daghan pa gihapon ang dan nga gubaon hahay
Similar Threads |
|