And then, there are the fake P100 bills. The current ones look and feel like the real thing except that the watermark or the "invisible" picture of the countrys first president after World War II, Manuel Roxas, is crudely done. These days, the counterfeit P100 bills are being inadvertently passed on to consumers by even well-established retail outlets which check only P500 and P1,000 bills as possible fakes.
As power plants go, the investment per megawatt averages at P1 million. Tipco, which has a 10-percent market share of the newsprint business, is initially thinking of a P15-million investment.
A medium-sized bank, AUB, which is majority owned by Jacinto Ng, has tied up with the sales people of another Jack Ng company, Republic Biscuit Co. Heres how it works.
An overseas Filipino worker sends the money through an AUB correspondent bank in the city where he/she is working. After it is notified, AUB sends a text message to the OFWs beneficiary and another message to the Rebisco salesman nearest the home of the OFW beneficiary.
The Rebsico salesman, who also carries money from sales to retail outlets, detours to the home of the OFW beneficiary during the same day and advances the remittance money after both he and the OFW beneficiary show their respective text messages and the necessary IDs.
Both AUB and Rebisco then reconcile their accounts at the end of the day.
By the way, most OFW beneficiaries would rather get their money at the bank rather than delivered to their home. Heres why. The courier expects a balato or tip and, with everybody in the neighborhood knowing that the family has just received money from abroad, relatives and friends also expect to share in the largesse.