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Gaming a gateway to future opportunities

Bigshow

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Gaming is not just a pastime it’s a doorway to modern careers and creative thinking.Today, gaming industries offer jobs in design, coding, streaming, and eSports, inspiring young minds to chase passion driven careers.Many kids discover storytelling, art, and music through game creation and role play, turning imagination into skill Multiplayer games teach leadership, teamwork, and confidence and also values that go beyond the screen and into real life.
 
The situation you mention about the reduction of the GST on certain products and the increase on others reflects a fairly common political practice: giving the impression of economic relief without actually providing any real benefit to consumers. While announcing a reduction in the tax on notebooks may sound positive, increasing the GST on paper to 18% ends up neutralizing that advantage, as production costs will inevitably rise and consumers will end up paying more. In that sense, it can indeed be seen as a form of manipulation or fiscal manipulation. I think the real problem is the lack of transparency in economic decision-making and the absence of coherent policies that benefit the average citizen. Rather than changing parties, what we need is a government that prioritizes social welfare over political strategies and communicates its decisions honestly and clearly.
I think this type of measure is a clear example of how governments sometimes manipulate figures to create an illusion of progress. Saying that the GST has been lowered on a product like notebooks sounds good politically, but if the tax on paper increases at the same time, the real effect on prices is negative for consumers. In practice, families end up paying the same or even more. I don't know whether to call it "deception" directly, but it does demonstrate a lack of transparency. The worrying thing is that these types of adjustments are often disguised as helping the public while benefiting certain industrial or financial sectors. More than a partisan issue, I think the problem is structural: economic policy should be clearer and thought out over the long term, not just to generate headlines. Citizens need coherent decisions, not political marketing strategies.
 
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