Fashion

“Cowboy Carter” concert in London

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Europe   来源:Energy  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"It blew my world apart – I was devastated," said Ms Weston on initially finding out she had cancer.

"It blew my world apart – I was devastated," said Ms Weston on initially finding out she had cancer.

UK prices are still below those in the US but, as ticketing expert Reg Walker told the BBC, “what happens there happens here five to 10 years later”.So why have costs skyrocketed?

“Cowboy Carter” concert in London

If your first thought was “greed”, well, that’s definitely part of it.“It’s not speculation to think that some artists want to make as much money as they can,” says Gideon Gottfried, Pollstar’s European editor.One musician who’s been bullish about the price hikes is Bruce Springsteen.

“Cowboy Carter” concert in London

Fans were alarmed when some seats for his 2023 US tour were priced as high as $5,000 (£3,874), thanks to Ticketmaster’s dynamic pricing., Springsteen argued that most of the tickets were in an “affordable range”, but he was fed up with touts making money off his back, so he chose to match their prices.

“Cowboy Carter” concert in London

“I’m going, ‘Hey, why shouldn’t that money go to the guys that are going to be up there sweating three hours a night for it?’” he said.

Kiss star Gene Simmons also defended the system.Writing on social media, Trump said he planned to impose a 25% levy on goods from Canada and Mexico and "an additional 10% tariff, above any additional tariffs" on imports from China.

The post followed his campaign pledge to impose across-the-board tariffs of at least 10% on all imports coming into the US, and 60% or more on goods from China - many of which already face steep duties left over from actions taken during his first term as president.Some experts have said that Trump's policies may ultimately prove less aggressive than promised, and that his statements should be understood as opening salvos in bigger negotiations of migration and drug policy.

But regardless of how policy shakes out, the threats are already having economic consequences, as firms like MinkeeBlue start to stockpile, shift supply chains, re-work contracts and take other steps to guard against the possible impact.Chris Caton, managing director for global strategy and analytics at warehouse giant Prologis, said his firm had already seen an uptick in activity "on the margin" as businesses respond to possible tariffs by looking for space to stock up.

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