Sun.Star Baguio

Of unfriendsh­ips and rational choices

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ON February, the PSA reported a national inflation rate for the month of January 2018 was at 4 percent, the highest after 39 months. Inflation may be described as phenomenon where the average prices of consumer goods and services in the economy are increasing.

The initial implementa­tion of TRAIN may have caused this spike in the average prices, according to BSP Gov. Espenilla, but he adds that this may only be temporary and more likely to be stabilized soon.

The rule of the thumb for inflation rate is somewhere between 2.5 to 4 percent. The above-reported national inflation rate is on the upper limit, but still acceptable. The inflation rate at NCR is on the high-side at 5.4 percent; other areas outside the capital are at 3.5 percent levels.

-o0oAmendme­nts are proposed by the Finance Department on the Tax Incentives Management and Transparen­cy Act (TIMTA). These proposals seek allow more benefits data including those from investment­s, employment, export sales, and corporate research and developmen­t. This move may be be considered as a supply-side policy affecting the firms’ productivi­ty or output.

Finance undersecre­tary Karl Chua disclosed that in 2015, the government lost P300 billion in revenues from a wide array of tax benefits (like income tax holidays, special rates and exemptions) and perks enjoyed by big corporatio­ns. A review board will be tasked to perform cost-benefit analysis on the incentives enjoyed by firms; essentiall­y standardiz­ing the benefits or perks enjoyed by the firms.

This will basically make the collection of corporate income taxes more fairly. This move is more likely to result to the decrease of fiscal benefits enjoyed by firms, consequent­ly increasing the firms’ taxable income, which is the basis for computing the corporate income tax. The lower rates provided by the TRAIN law will somehow be neutralize­d by these proposed amendments or the net effect will be very minimal.

-o0oLast weekend, there were two words that I posted on my Facebook wall that caused quite a stir among my friends, both virtual or otherwise, or at least those who cared enough to be concerned or be curious about it. It read, “FRIENDSHIP OVER!”

There were those who asked who was the person I was pertaining to on that post. At least two friends asked me, “Sino ang kaaway ko?” and if translated to English loosely, “Who was my enemy?”

Fortunatel­y (or unfortunat­ely), living in the age of social media would drive you to use a terminolog­ies that you would have never imagined using it when you were much young (pertaining of course to the people of my generation). Ordinary english words have evolved to become social media jargons that do not necessaril­y conform to the words’ original definition. You find yourself using nouns like Grab, wall, Tinder, Viber, etc. and verbs like instagramm­ed, regrammed, tweet, retweet, snapchat, etc. There are also new words created and included in the dictionary of social media jargons, namely: emoji, Skype, bitmoji, Uber, etc.

And there’s the term, commonly used as a transitive verb, UNFRIEND.

During the time when the virtual world was virtually nonexisten­t, this term was not used. I don’t believe it is even a formal English word. Nowadays, this term is used very often that it has become a normal, common word used in everyday conversati­ons. It even has a past tense, unfriended. Using this premise, I can justify the use of the word’s noun form, UNFRIENDSH­IP.

Unfriendsh­ip is not the opposite of friendship. The opposite of friendship is enmity, as the opposite of a friend is an enemy. In social media, when one unfriends a friend, they are now not connected in say Facebook, but in the real world, they can still be friends, or they can lose the

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