Greece: Shipbuilders, Special Interests and Sour Milk
Greek vested interests: why a longer shelf-life for milk could help fix the Greek economy, the Dutch fight for their tulips, and why there are too many beautiful people at work.
Business Daily reflects on the aftermath of the Greek General Election. The country may have just elected a newly minted government, but it's got the same old dire economic problems. Hugo Dixon, a columnist with Reuters Breaking Views and the New York Times, tells us that the big test now will be to unpick the country's extraordinary array of vested interests, from under-employed teachers to farmers insisting on shorter shelf-lives for pasteurised milk. He says restrictive practices, protecting many Greek industries, have been held in place across the economy, despite years of austerity measures. Also in the programme, the 麻豆社's Jane O Brien reports from the Netherlands and the US on how the Dutch are still saying it, and selling it big, with flowers. And Lucy Kellaway reflects on why the workplace curiously seems to be becoming ever more beautiful. She thinks this lurking prejudice towards good may be proving an increasing drain on true meritocracy and efficiency in many major multi-nationals.
(Photo: Alexis Tsipras, Credit: Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images)
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- Mon 21 Sep 2015 07:32GMT麻豆社 World Service
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Business Daily
The daily drama of money and work from the 麻豆社.