You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Saturday, April 25, 2026

EACH FOR HIMSELF

 

By
 Mindanao Daily News
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“Every man for himself” (or “each for themselves”) describes a chaotic situation where individuals, in a crisis or competition, act only in their own self-interest without helping others. This idiom highlights a total lack of cooperation, forcing everyone to rely entirely on their own survival skills
 It’s used for saying that everyone needs to look after themselves and not worry about anyone else. Everyone looks out for his or her best interest. Originally this phrase expressed approval. It appeared in Chaucer’s The Knight’s Tale (“Ech man for him-self, ther is non other”), implying that if one did not look out for oneself no one else would.

Yes, each person does what is best for himself or herself. Yes, times are getting tougher. I think you, my dear readers, know what I am talking about. No reason to list everything again. Sometimes, there is no team spirit in this office; it’s definitely every man for himself. Neighbors would tell each other: mind your own business. The tone between us humans is becoming more and more harsher.

Some people live alone because friends and families have abandoned them. Important helpline is Psalm 27:10 for them. “When my father and my mother forsake me, then the LORD will take care of me.”

And solitary survivors like Robinson Crusoe, or the hero in the movie Castaway, fascinate. But the loner is someone who purposely holds himself aloof, like the Unabomber, Mathematician Ted Kaczynski. People doggedly moving ever farther away from one another constitute hell in C.S. Lewis’ book, The Great Divorce.

Fact is  –  Proverbs 18:1 says:  A man who isolates himself seeks his own desires; he rages against all wise judgment.

Living in community and helping one another is foundational for all who wish to follow Christ. We know from Acts 2 that the early church took this seriously, seeing many examples of believers helping one another, including materially, so that there would be no one in need within their group.

Much has been written about the benefits of strong relationships. I wrote about it at this corner several years ago. People are healthier, live longer, and are generally happier if they have strong friendships beneficial for helping and encouraging each other. And let me repeat it – especially during these tough times.

Philippines' fragile balancing act

 


By Manila Bulletin Newsroom
Published Apr 25, 2026 12:05 am | Updated Apr 24, 2026 05:12 pm
For years, the Philippine economic narrative was one of resilient, if unremarkable, stability. But as 2026 unfolds, that script is being rewritten by volatile cocktail of geopolitical friction, stalled infrastructure, and a central bank forced to abandon its post-pandemic crouch.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) recent signal of a definitive shift toward tightening cycle marks the end of an era of easy money, ushering in a period of “measured” but persistent hikes to combat an inflation outlook that is rapidly souring.
The challenge facing the BSP’s Monetary Board is twofold: it must anchor inflation expectations that have drifted toward a projected 6.3 percent for 2026, while ensuring it does not choke off the recovery that remains more fragile than the headline figures suggest. By opting for a “measured cadence” of rate hikes rather than aggressive shocks, the BSP is attempting a surgical strike against price pressures. Yet, with real interest rates sitting in negative territory at -1.5 percent, the central bank is effectively running to stand still.
The urgency of this tightening is underscored by the deteriorating global landscape. The Middle East conflict has evolved from a distant geopolitical concern into a direct hit on the Philippine kitchen table, driving up the costs of oil and fertilizer. For a nation that relies almost entirely on energy imports, these supply shocks are not merely transitory blips; they are systemic threats that Fitch Ratings has cited in its decision to downgrade the Philippines’ outlook to “negative.”
This outlook revision by Fitch is a sobering wake-up call. It threatens to interrupt a 20-year streak of credit resilience, dating back to the fiscal malaise of the mid-2000s. The crux of the problem lies in the stalling of the ”Build, Better, More” engine. A collapse in infrastructure spending in late 2025—born of necessary but disruptive graft probes—has robbed the economy of its traditional growth multipliers. When public investment falters just as energy costs spike, the result is a pincer movement that squeezes both the government’s fiscal space and the consumer’s wallet.
Amid these gathering clouds, however, there is a significant silver lining: the institutional “vote of confidence” from JPMorgan Chase & Co. The inclusion of Philippine sovereign debt in its flagship emerging-market bond index by January 2027 is a landmark event. It promises a ₱240 billion windfall of foreign capital, potentially compressing yields and lowering the long-term cost of debt exactly when the Bureau of the Treasury needs it most.
This inclusion creates a fascinating paradox. While Fitch warns of a potential downgrade due to governance and energy risks, the world’s largest index provider is preparing to pull the Philippines deeper into the global financial fold. It suggests that while the country’s short-term “outlook” is clouded by the Marcos-Duterte political rift and impeachment dramas, its long-term “infrastructure” as a credible borrower remains attractive to passive global capital.
The path forward requires a delicate calibration of policy. The government must expedite the cleanup of its infrastructure bureaucracy to restart the growth engine, while the BSP must remain the “adult in the room,” raising rates enough to defend the peso and tame prices without tipping a cooling economy into a freeze.
The Philippines is currently a tale of two trajectories. One leads toward the prestige of global index inclusion and a broader investor base; the other toward a credit downgrade and a return to the fiscal instability of the past. For the Marcos administration, the “smart risk management” praised by analysts must now transition from rhetoric to results. In a world of six percent inflation and negative real rates, there is no longer any margin for error.

Why is everyone leaving their K-pop groups?

 

The K-pop industry ended 2025 with the news that Danielle would be leaving NewJeans and Ador after a year-long dispute between the group and Hybe’s sublabel. Fast forward to April 2026, and more members of globally recognized idol groups have been announcing their departures.

Mid-March saw Enhypen part ways with Heeseung, and Zerobaseone split in half as members Zhang Hao, Ricky, Kim Gyuvin, and Han Yujin left the group to prepare for a redebut under home agency YH Entertainment. And right at the start of this month, SM Entertainment announced that Mark Lee would no longer be part of NCT, NCT 127, and NCT Dream—as his contract with the label came to an end. Fellow NCT/WayV member Ten also recently announced that he will no longer renew his exclusive contract with SM Entertainment but will remain in his groups.

Speculations have also arisen that Katseye’s Manon would be leaving her group after Hybe and Geffen announced that she would be going on hiatus. It’s noted that the Swiss Ghanaian member did not perform with the global girl group for their Coachella set.


12 LIFE LESSONS


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1. Wake up early and always see the beautiful rising sun.

2. Meditate to enjoy the essence of enjoying the present.

3. Don't overthink about the future. Everything happens for a reason.

4. Never fear, because there is nothing to fear.

5. Visualize your dream lifestyle every day.

6. Strongly believe you will live that lifestyle for sure.

7. Listen more and speak less.

8. The pain and worry you are facing now will fade away.

9. Be you. Live by your values.

10. Never expect anything. It's the gateway for a happy life.

11. Be bold to stay alone.

12. Always set your heart on the divine.