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Tuzf A good year for Dyson: Profits up and robots in the pipeline
Sunday 17 April 2016 1:27 pmEU referendum: Quiz ndash; Can you guess where these celebs stand on Brexit After Ian Botham backs Leave campaign, do you know which famous faces have spoken out ndash; and on which side By: Lynsey BarberShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleIan Bothamis the latest famous face to throwhis cricket capin the ring on Brexit, in what s been called a coup for the Brexit campaign.The cricketer nicknamed Beefy , who was also a big backer of Shredded Wheat and buying British meat if his TV advert appearances are anything to go by, has called the wholeBrussels thing a racket .Botham snot alone in batting for Britain we see what you did there , following various, er, celebrities, vocally taking a side in the EU referendum debate. With voting day rolling ever closer, we can t help but wonder which other high profile names <a href=www.polenes.com.es>polene bag</a> will takea sidehellip;. and make the front <a href=www.polenefr.fr>polene fr</a> pages doing <a href=www.bru-mate.ca>brumate</a> so.Feeling a bit forgetful about who s taken which sideso far Take our quiz below to see if you can remember ndash;or guess, depending how much you were keeping up in the first place ndash; who s in and who sout. <quiz>id= 29 ]Share this articleFacebookXLinkedInWhatsAppEmailSimilarly tagged content: SectionsNewsCategoriesBusinessPoliticsTrending ArticlesLabour will regret the Rentersrsquo; Rights ActUK at lsquo;greatest riskrsquo; of jet fuel shortage as flight Jzpw SIR PAUL RUDDOCK DEFENDS HIS HONOUR
Monday 04 February 2013 8:00 pm|Updated:Thursday 30 May 2019 4:20 amAxe tax and lift growth, airlines urge OsborneBy: KCS-contentShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleSCRAPPING air passenger duty APD would end up benefiting the public purse, according to research conducted by PwC and commissioned by airlines.If the government ended the controversial levy on air travellers entering or leaving the UK, the subsequent boost to businesses could lift GDP by 0.46 per cent this year, the study by PwC claimed yesterday. The rise in business activity would more than <a href=www.stanley-cup.at>stanley at</a> offset the amount raised by APD each year, leading to a net gain of pound;500m a year in the first two years for the exchequer, it adds. The Treasury expects to take pound;2.9bn in air passenger duty in 2012/13, rising to pound;3.9bn by 2017/18. PwCrsquo report, which comes just over a month ahead of George Osbornersquo next B <a href=www.polenes.ca>polene bag</a> udget, was commissioned by <a href=www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley butelka</a> four of the UKrsquo biggest airlines. British Airways, Virgin Atlantic, Ryanair and EasyJet put aside rivalries in 2011 to jointly lobby for the end of APD through their Axe the Tax campaign. The levy has long been a bugbear of the travel industry, and sparked a fresh wave of criticism when it rose by eight per cent last April. APD costs between pound;13 per passenger on a short-haul flight and pound;92 for long-haul journeys. T