Showing posts with label Rose Antonio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rose Antonio. Show all posts

Friday, February 01, 2013

Business Bureaucracy 7: Penalizing Small Businesses

Last January 10 this year, a friend and a young entrepreneur, Lemuel Goltiao, posted this note in his facebook wall. He gave me permission to blog these things. 

WTF higher business tax assessment for this year! I REALLY FEEL THE GOVERNMENT'S ADDED VALUE TO MY BUSINESS! RAMDAM NA RAMDAM ANG KAUNLARAN! 7% GDP GROWTH!
7% GDP GROWTH AT THE COST OF 20% HIGHER BUSINESS TAX! RAMDAM NA RAMDAM ANG KAUNLARAN!

I commented that LGUs are often worse than the national government in business bureaucracy. That is why I am no fan of decentralization really. It should be degovernmentization.

Lem replied, "I realize that LGUs could be more tyrannical than the national government. They can arbitrarily increase business tax rates year after year without hearing the people most affected: the entrepreneurs. My gross revenue for 2012 is lower than that of 2011 but I have to pay 30% more for the renewal of my business permit. Yes, my business is registered in Quezon City, or the Philippine City of Asia according to its LGU, whatever that means."

Another friend of mine lives in one of the 8- or 10-doors townhouse in Quezon City, and the structure is owned by an official of the QC Hall business permit division. Those who can not afford the ever rising LGU fees will have to negotiate with these guys. And that's how they become rich.

In another posting last December 10, 2013, Lem also wrote this:

A few nights ago my business partner invited me to his birthday celebration and I was able to talk to his pastor who I have already met a couple of times. While waiting for the food, we discussed about our families and then our occupation. When I asked him about his work, he complained that the government has new guidelines for religious leaders who officiate weddings. The government is now asking for more paperwork, credentials, and is somewhat imposing geographical limits on officiating ministers: they can't officiate a wedding far from their church. He also complains that it's becoming harder for couples to get a marriage license (license!) due to stricter enforcement of requirements like the couple's attendance in marriage seminars and counseling. I told him that the government is making life harder for everyone and that started my "libertarian evangelism". It turns out that he's receptive to the ideas of individualism and I related it to the Christian (Protestant) faith. Before we separated that night, he somewhat acknowledged that a lot of "social problems" that we're having right now are mainly caused by government intervention on every aspect of our lives.

I shook my head when I read this. The government bureaucracies even extend their grubby fingers to how spiritual leaders and ministers would officiate weddings and other religious activities? Horrible.

Meanwhile, before I gave that talk on "Growth Amidst Bureaucracies" last night, see Presentation at Rotary Club of Manila Bay, I also gave a similar talk to my club a week earlier. Below are some slides that I showed in my talk to my club that I did not include in my presentation at the RC Manila Bay. Likewise, there were several slides there that I did not include in my talk to my club.  Just filling some gaps in the presentation here.

 





Thanks to our club leader, Peace President Rose Antonio, for the nice Certificate of Recognition. Some photos below. Many club members were not able to come that night.


Monday, August 13, 2012

Rotary Notes 5: Relief Operations in Lower Bicutan, Taguig

The recent heavy flooding in Metro Manila and other neighboring provinces resulted to some three million people who have been directly affected. Our Rotary Club of Taguig Fort Bonifacio (RI District 3830), through the efforts of President Rose Antonio, partnered with RC Makati President Reuben Valerio, in distributing food items to victims of flooding in Lower Bicutan, Taguig City, last Friday, August 10.

Upper photo: RC Makati President Reuben, clubmate Carmen Penalosa, Rose's son, President Rose, me, clubmate Eric Lucero, and Past District Governor (PDG) Sid Garcia. Most of these photos are from President Rose's camera.


We had a short chat with President Reuben. He said that for their club, money was not a problem as they received lots of cash donations from club members, also from their brother clubs abroad. District Governor-Elect (DGE) Robert Kuan for instance, received a call from his classmate DGE from an RI District in Taiwan and asked how things are in the country. His classmate simply donated $5,000 just for the relief-donations. This is one thing I like in Rotary or other voluntary charity organization, some rich individuals and Rotarians here in the country or abroad have no qualms in digging resources from their own pockets and give away to charity at zero politics, zero taxation, zero coercion involved.

There were four of us from our club, plus President Rose's son and driver. This is her pick up, full of food items for distribution. Eric's car is nice here, small but full of items for donation. I hitched a ride with him.


This is the small village in Lower Bicutan that we visited. The floodwater has not receded yet, two days after the heavy rains have stopped.


Lower photo, these children are in danger of getting leptospirosis and other water-borne diseases as the water is muddy and dirty.


The Barangay Health Worker (BHW), a city hall employee assigned to barangays to provide health and sanitation programs and services, estimated that there were less than 100 households in this area. The food packages we brought were just enough for them. Plus extra food packages for other affected families outside of this small village, delivered at the BHW office.


We were done distributing the goods in about 20 minutes. Thanks to my club, thanks to Rotary Club of Makati. We have done our small share in helping the flood affected families.

More volunteerism and civil society role, that is what we need in building a peaceful and dynamic society. Not in having more government, more coercion.
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See also:
Rotary Notes 1: Barangay Roads and Solar Panels, August 30, 2010


CSOs and State 10: The Role of Civil Society, June 15, 2010
CSOs and State 11: Rights and Responsibilities, Liberal Civil Society, July 11, 2010