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Food supremo retains her global appetite

December 29, 2011 11:26

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

3 min read

No modern takeover in Britain caused so much public furore as the February 2010 purchase by American food giant Kraft of Cadbury. Britons, as the highest per capita chocolate eaters in the world, were outraged by this assault on their national heritage by a US company.

There have been several inquiries by the Commons business committee into whether the new owners have lived up to the undertakings made at the time of the deal. The broad answer is "no."

In the latest setback it was revealed that Kraft had written to employees at the historic Bournville site in Birmingham, announcing that it would be making redundancies at the end of March - the date that Kraft's pledge to the Commons not to sacrifice jobs comes to an end. Yet the architect of the Cadbury transaction, 58-year-old Kraft chief executive Irene Rosenfeld, goes from strength to strength.

She regularly appears at the top of the Forbes list of the most influential women in the world. She has just been named by the Financial Times as the world's number-one businesswoman for 2011. American Angela Ahrendts, the chief executive of Burberry, was the highest-ranking woman heading a British-based enterprise at number eight (in the list of 50).

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