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MEDIA MUSCĂTURES 4 March: Trump rates, inflation, obesity

MEDIA MUSCĂTURES 4 March: Trump rates, inflation, obesity

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Donald Trump’s renewed commercial war with Canada, Mexico and China stole the titles this morning. The announcement of the White House, Monday that the tariffs for imports from all three countries will enter into force sent spiral markets, Sky news reportscausing a major stock for sale.

BBC also reports Canada and China have announced reprisal shares – Canada promised 25% rates in about $ 107 billion from US imports, while China has announced 10% -15% rates for US agricultural imports.

In the meantime, so Financial times and telegraph Report on how food inflation in the UK has reached a five -month height, according to industry data. The cost of breakfast staples, including bread, butter, eggs and cheese have increased.

One -third of children between the ages of five and nine times found.

The estimates, published in the Medical Journal lancet, are the most comprehensive global analysis of obesity rates so far.

The Guardian has a feature on The growth “ShopLifting Brazen”, With the workers in supermarkets who tell about the thousands that the thieves cost, they also admit the lack of support from the head offices.

Read the Băcăuan’s coverage about Increased middle -class stores and What the police do about increasing the epidemic of retail crime.

At non -alcoholic levels they were added to the mass offers from supermarkets, A telegraph story reveals. But the paper asks – is it okay to drink them at your office?

Sky News It has covered a government announcement according to which about 1.3 million people with low salaries must provide sick salaries guaranteed for the first time, in an attempt to stimulate the level of health and life.

A story in Sun. It presents a complainant of a Gail, who accuses the bakery of the above – who claims to be almost zero waste – of hypocrisy for “binning sandwiches every few hours”.

In several US news, President and CEO Kroger, the largest US food chain, resigned against a personal conduct investigation, The Guardian reports. His departure comes just a few weeks after Kroger failed to merge with Albertsons in an agreement that would have marked the greatest merger of US history supermarkets.

Finally, Financial Times’ Annual “FT 1000: companies with the fastest growth in Europe” The report is now, presenting 1,000 examples of “exceptional” business performance.