What goes up, won’t come down
Inflation forecasts go above regulator’s expectations this month and stocks just had their worst month since the pandemic began. On a positive note, employers pledge 1M quality jobs while Pagcor gaming revenues recover in Q1.
Twitter over world hunger
People on Twitter keep saying Elon Musk could just pay world hunger away, so he bought Twitter instead.
Change is coming, and expensive
There’s a big switch stirring up at work, our country’s potential, and the leaders who have to pay for it.
A paycheck a day keeps COVID away
As the pandemic dies down, capitalism and corporate agendas rise up.
Zero COVID = Zero Dollars
Health is wealth is a saying China wishes it could claim right now but unfortunately, it’s the complete opposite.
Burning through lives, resources, and funds
Taking a look at just how much this war is costing Russia and Ukraine, and just how much the Philippines claims it’s unbothered by it.
A war of high bills and inflation that won’t chill
The poor get poorer and the rich get… slightly less rich with the war this month.
Saying April Fools to our wallets
The Philippines stands in solidarity with the rest of the world—at least in terms of struggling to keep up with the mess that is today’s economy.
The PH has problems and taxing is a lot of them
Why does it seem like those who are most capable of paying taxes are the ones who do not want to pay taxes?
Duterte not going down without spending more of our money
Infrastructure disbursements reached a whopping P1.12 trillion in 2021, equivalent to 5.8% of the country’s economy. This includes projects implemented by the national government, infrastructure-related transfers to local governments, plus subsidies and equity injected into state-run corporations.
Build, build, build for debt, debt, debt
Talking about spending a lot of money now so that we may have a possibility of earning it all back in the future.
Running on fumes
Crying about gas prices and how daily wages are being severely outrun by the speed of inflation.
Panicking over financial news that say “Don’t panic”
We’re dealing with the spillover effects of the Russia-Ukraine conflict: rising oil prices, supply concerns, and future implications on our wallets.

