contributors

John Manners-Bell Info

John Manners-BellJohn started his working life as an operations manager in a freight forwarding and road haulage company based in the UK. Prior to establishing Transport Intelligence, he worked as an analyst in consultancies specialising in international trade, transport and logistics.

He also spent a number of years as European marketing manager for UPS Supply Chain Solutions working at locations across Europe including France, Netherlands, Switzerland and Germany. He holds an MSc in Transport Planning and Management from University of Westminster and is an Associate of King's College London. He is a Fellow of the UK Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport and a Member of the Logistics Global Advisory Council of the World Economic Forum.

John has travelled widely, undertaking research and speaking at conferences in countries including China, Hong Kong, India, Japan as well as in the Middle East, USA and extensively throughout Europe. He is regularly quoted in the international and trade media as well as on radio and television.

www.transportintelligence.com






[data]
[category]Media[/category]
[position]Managing Director at Transport Intelligence[/position]
[country]USA[/country]
[img]http://www.globallogisticsmedia.com/img/c/65/00cd-00-4f3adb65.jpg[/img]
[/data]

Latest Articles

  • 18/05/2012   Out-sourcing to Asia ‘not an unstoppable trend’

    A paper ‘Relocating the value chain: off-shoring and agglomeration in the global economy’, authored by Richard Baldwin and Anthony Venables, describes the process of un-bundling and fragmentation of manufacturing which has resulted in the globalization of supply chains.

  • 03/03/2012   Plunge in China’s high tech exports growth spells trouble for air carriers

    Latestt official figures provide an insight into why China’s air cargo sector has been struggling. In 2011 the export growth of China's electronic products fell by 17.4 percentage points.

  • 15/02/2012   The logistics of online shopping faces major growing pains

    The internet retailing revolution has brought enormous benefits to the global express and logistics sectors. The online shopping market now accounts for almost a fifth of all purchases in some developed markets, and is growing at anything between 15-20% a year in Europe and the US and around 75% a year in China.