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Brave new world? : container transport in 2043

Recurso electrónico / Electronic resource
MARC record
Tag12Value
LDR  00000cam a22000004b 4500
001  MAP20200011729
003  MAP
005  20200413175631.0
008  200408s2020 usa|||| ||| ||eng d
040  ‎$a‎MAP‎$b‎spa‎$d‎MAP
084  ‎$a‎922.113.1
24510‎$a‎Brave new world?‎$b‎ : container transport in 2043‎$c‎Charles Fenton...[Et al.]
260  ‎$a‎New York‎$b‎McKinsey & Company‎$b‎TT Club‎$c‎2020
300  ‎$a‎80 p.
520  ‎$a‎The container transport industry has been at the centre of the incredible expansion in international trade since the 1950s. Commercialised in 1956, the container's simplicity and modularity has made it the mode of choice for the transport of many goods from one place to another: containers today transport 23% of dry seaborne trade tons (and close to 100 percent of everyday goods like televisions, toys, and clothing). Consumers have benefited enormously as the real cost of transporting goods has fallen. However, the success of the container has not always meant the financial success of the industry behind it. Returns for the average container liner operator, container terminal operator, or freight forwarder have lagged the cost of capital over the last two decades and only a select few players have managed to find a sustainable recipe for value creation
650 4‎$0‎MAPA20080615727‎$a‎Transporte de mercancías
650 4‎$0‎MAPA20080561901‎$a‎Contenedores
650 4‎$0‎MAPA20080605100‎$a‎Comercio internacional
650 4‎$0‎MAPA20080594091‎$a‎Transporte marítimo
650 4‎$0‎MAPA20080573799‎$a‎Sector marítimo
650 4‎$0‎MAPA20080551520‎$a‎Logística
7102 ‎$0‎MAPA20080442569‎$a‎McKinsey & Company
7102 ‎$0‎MAPA20200007579‎$a‎TT Club