Uh, forget the paste used by your kids in school. Its a lousy substitute for okra.
As everybody knows, the SEC handles those pyramiding operations which offer investors a return on their investment of as much as 15 percent a month. The DTI deals with pyramiding schemes which offer commission on the recruitment of more members.
Theres a bill right now in Congress to increase the penalties for pyramiding.
Right now, the best that the SEC and the DTI can do is to revoke the companys license to operate. Criminally, pyramiding is considered a form of estafa and that means a penalty of P5,000 to P10,000 and/or imprisonment of up to five months.
Whats being built is a special training center for the Tan Yan Kee Foundation.
To be completed in a month or two, the center will offer, among other things, an interesting "bridge" module for those who have finished college and who would want to be eased (rather than thrown) into the workplace. For example, how does one deal with a situation where the newcomer is shunned by his peers in the workplace? Or how to handle sexual harassment.
The "bridge" module includes a practicum in, for starters, one of the companies owned by Lucio Tan.
By the way, the Tan Yan Kee Foundation recently got a three-year tax-exemption status from the Philippine Council for NGO Accreditation, which is currently headed by the representative from the AY Foundation.
The tax exemption means that donors to the foundation can donate more than the maximum six percent of net income mandated by the Bureau of Internal Revenue.
Boy Nazareno represents the PDIC in PNB because he was very much involved in the banks rehabilitation program.
The logic of the Espiritu father and son is that the bank had nothing to do with the investment company, never mind that the son also once served as Wincorp chairman.