Calls to reform food VAT to encourage healthy and sustainable diets
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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 5-May-2025 06:09 ET (5-May-2025 10:09 GMT/UTC)
“Those not particularly knowledgeable in high-end fashion and luxury goods like counterfeits more than more fashion-savvy consumers, and they are more likely to post on social media about the original brand,” said Ludovica Cesareo, assistant professor of marketing in the Lehigh University College of Business. “This phenomenon is due to low-knowledge consumers’ greater ability to disengage from moral concerns about counterfeits.”
Joerg Niessing, an INSEAD marketing professor and digital strategy and transformation expert, has been named the winner of The Case Centre’s Outstanding Case Teacher Competition 2025. This global honour recognises his ability to bring business challenges to life using interactive technology and an innovative and creative teaching approach.
Financial markets are reacting not just to Donald Trump's return to the White House but also to the unpredictability of this victory, according to a new study from the University of Surrey. Investors must diversify their portfolios to mitigate risks associated with political volatility and to remain vigilant about the potential for abrupt market corrections.
The continued intensification of global warming has made extreme heat events an increasingly severe threat to crop production. Cotton, as a globally important economic crop and a strategic pillar of China’s textile industry, faces significant challenges from frequent extreme high-temperature events during the summer. The high overlap between extreme heat and the blooming and boll-setting stages of cotton leads to issues such as pollen inactivation, anther non-dehiscence, and bud and boll shedding, severely affecting cotton yield and quality. This has become a critical bottleneck restricting the high-quality development of the cotton industry. Therefore, breeding heat-tolerant cotton capable of withstanding high-temperature stress has become an urgent need in the field of crop breeding.
In an age where social media promises to connect us, a new study reveals a sobering paradox - the more time we spend interacting online, the lonelier we may feel. Researchers at Baylor University’s Hankamer School of Business analyzed a study that followed nearly 7,000 Dutch adults for nine years to understand how our digital habits shape our well-being.