Limited Companies were introduced in the UK in 1867, ending Mercantilism and beginning the shift of financial power to private hands.
The Co-Operative was operating full vertical integration of farm to fork with agricultural land on foreign soil.
The Vesty Brothers did it differently and created separate companies under their control. For instance beef farms in Argentina. They then fixed prices between their companies to push all the profit into the lowest tax environment aka transfer pricing. They pioneered refrigerated shipping with the launch of their fleet in 1870. They went on to battle with the UK Tax Office for 100 years in the process creating many of the tax avoidance schemes in use today - transfer pricing, non-domicile resident, putting all your money in trusts and charities etc. Becoming Viscount Vesty and one of the richest families in Britain.
La Belle Epoch was the first period of extensive Globalist Trade and all came crashing down in 1914 with the outbreak of WW1.
I don't get the first bit of your statement.
Limited Companies were introduced in the UK in 1867, ending Mercantilism and beginning the shift of financial power to private hands.
The Co-Operative was operating full vertical integration of farm to fork with agricultural land on foreign soil.
The Vesty Brothers did it differently and created separate companies under their control. For instance beef farms in Argentina. They then fixed prices between their companies to push all the profit into the lowest tax environment aka transfer pricing. They pioneered refrigerated shipping with the launch of their fleet in 1870. They went on to battle with the UK Tax Office for 100 years in the process creating many of the tax avoidance schemes in use today - transfer pricing, non-domicile resident, putting all your money in trusts and charities etc. Becoming Viscount Vesty and one of the richest families in Britain.
La Belle Epoch was the first period of extensive Globalist Trade and all came crashing down in 1914 with the outbreak of WW1.
fair enough
I can answer it for you: It Is Not A Map