Surprise meets Virgin Atlantic Cargo's 'bizarre' daily cargo flight to Brussels
Today’s decision by Virgin Atlantic Cargo to put on daily widebody cargo–only flights between London ...
XPO: BUILDING BLOCKSHLAG: BIG ORDERLINE: REACTIONLINE: EXPENSES AND OPERATING LEVERAGELINE: PIPELINE OF DEALS LINE: DEMAND PATTERNS LINE: LANDSCAPELINE: CONF CALL STARTSDSV: UNTOUCHABLEEXPD: NOT AS BULLISH AS PREVIOUSLYFWRD: SPECULATIVE RALLY MAERSK: INTEGRATED LOGISTICS WIN MAERSK: TRUMP TRADEKNIN: THE SLIDELINE: DEBUT AAPL: ASIA CAPEXDHL: THE HANGOVERXPO: ELECTION DAY RALLY
XPO: BUILDING BLOCKSHLAG: BIG ORDERLINE: REACTIONLINE: EXPENSES AND OPERATING LEVERAGELINE: PIPELINE OF DEALS LINE: DEMAND PATTERNS LINE: LANDSCAPELINE: CONF CALL STARTSDSV: UNTOUCHABLEEXPD: NOT AS BULLISH AS PREVIOUSLYFWRD: SPECULATIVE RALLY MAERSK: INTEGRATED LOGISTICS WIN MAERSK: TRUMP TRADEKNIN: THE SLIDELINE: DEBUT AAPL: ASIA CAPEXDHL: THE HANGOVERXPO: ELECTION DAY RALLY
Just when you thought you knew all the winners and losers of Brexit… here’s another one: Cambodia. A study conducted by the German Development Institute claims Cambodia will be among the losers. According to The Guardian, the South-east Asian nation has tariff-free access to the EU under the Everything But Arms agreement (EBA). The EBA provides this perk for the 49 nations defined as the least-developed. And the study’s authors claim 1.7m people could be pushed into “extreme poverty” as a result of Brexit. And with Cambodia exporting 7.7% of its goods to the UK, it’s easy to see why it would be so unfairly disadvantaged.
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