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Chinese Textiles-Addressing the Issues

Chinese Textiles-Addressing the Issues. Hylke Vandenbussche Professor Faculty of Economics and Applied Economics Catholic University of Leuven. The Facts. In 1995: Multi-Fiber Agreement (1995-2005) :protection to the Textiles/Clothing industry in developed countries

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Chinese Textiles-Addressing the Issues

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  1. Chinese Textiles-Addressing the Issues Hylke Vandenbussche Professor Faculty of Economics and Applied Economics Catholic University of Leuven Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  2. The Facts • In 1995: Multi-Fiber Agreement (1995-2005) :protection to the Textiles/Clothing industry in developed countries • December 2001, China entered the WTO, giving it preferential market access to other WTO members • Since January 2005: huge increase in Chinese textiles/clothing exports worldwide • March 2005: complaints from the EU Textiles federation about Chinese unfair practices and call for protection • June 2005: EU-China Agreement: export growth is limited but only for 3 years. By 2008 trade will be fully liberalized again. Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  3. What products are we talking about ? Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  4. Question 1: Does the strength of the European Economy really lie in the production of T-shirts, pullovers and flax yarn ? Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  5. Pretty bad! Many jobs at risk Around 2 million employed in EU15 alone! How bad is the current situation in the EU textile/clothing ? Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  6. How bad is the current situation? This sector represents around (2003) • 180.000 firms in EU • 200 bn Euros annual sales • 5 bn Euro investment figure • 68 bn Euro annual imports • 42 bn Euro annual exports (negative trade balance!) Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  7. Where are the textiles firms located in Europe ? Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  8. Evolution of Employment in EU15 Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  9. Evolution of number of firms in EU15 Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  10. Did EU Commission strike a good deal ? • Temporary protection, when CREDIBLE, can induce firms to reorient their production towards other types of products in which Europe can have a leading edge Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  11. A good deal for EU ? • BUT!! For this to work it is important that firms know the protection is TEMPORARY and the government is serious about liberalizing afterwards. • If the government is subject to lobby powers than firms have an incentive to innovate less in order to convince the government they need more protection to survive. • This is what happened during the Multi-Fiber Agreement: Textile firms in EU had 10 years (1995-2005) to prepare for liberalization, but their efforts have not been sufficient. Strong lobbying on behalf of the Textiles Federation has now gained them extra time. Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  12. Are the Chinese doing something ‘unfair’ or are they just very good at producing t-shirts? The Chinese comparative Advantage: • Low wages • Long working hours • Specialization in mass textiles • Hard working  …yes! They are very good at this! Should we deny them their comparative advantage ? Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  13. Unfair Chinese ? Subsidization ? • Allegation: Chinese firms are being subsidized in a direct and indirect way (cheap loans, no tax collection, cheap utilities,…) • Solution: when there is direct subsidization, the WTO has a legal tool: Countervailing duties (5 year tariffs) • When there is indirect subsidization: harder to prove and WTO tools are limited Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  14. Unfair Chinese ? • Lessons from Central-Europe: governments of former communist countries have a tradition of subsidization and government steering of the economy. They find it hard to suddenly commit to ‘hard budget constraints’. A tariff on EU side provides outside commitment to reduce subsidization. (Everaert & Vandenbussche, 2001, LICOS working paper,”Does protection harden budget constraints?”) Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  15. Child labor and no environmental standards Should the West put a stop to this ?  No, income of children for some families is only way to survive (movie Daens !) But market forces will make sure that as China develops further, child labor is bound to die out. As families get richer, children are the first ones to pull out of the labor market (Pavnic and Edmonds 2005, Journal of International Economics) And the same applies for environmental standards. Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  16. Is there a future for textiles in Europe ? Yes! But in different types of products: high value added type of textiles that require R&D and innovation (construction, protective clothing, medical uses,…) • Instead of a ‘threat’ we should see China as an ‘opportunity’ with a market of 1 bn consumers it offers a lot of possibilities for the EU provided we operate in different types of goods and sectors • This will require substantial restructuring and perhaps downsizing of the textiles sector in EU, but this is an adjustment phase. For those that will no longer be employed in textiles can engage more in service type of jobs where most of the growth of the EU economy is. • Basic course in Management accounting suggests one of two succesful strategies for firms 1) compete in costs; 2) differentiate products. Wrt the Chinese we whould engage in vertical product differentiation and compete in quality Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  17. Conclusion • Textiles industry had more than 10 years to restructure since they knew Multi-Fiber was ending but they did not sufficiently do so • Government was not very credible in terms of ending date of protection, I hope they will be in 2007 and give a strong signal to textiles industry they will be ! • China has a comparative advantage in this type of textiles therefore we should not try to cost compete with them but instead move into higher value added textiles • T-shirts, socks, pullovers and flax yarn is not our future ! Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

  18. Conclusion Thank you for your attention ! Questions and Comments ? Lunch debate on Chinese textiles on 28th June 2005

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