1. What
will happen quotas are phased-out on
China on
January 1,
2005? China
wins, U.S. textiles
and almost everyone else loses.
·
In apparel categories
removed from quota control in 2002,
China has already taken a 65
percent share of the
U.S. market (as of March
2004).
That share is still continuing to
grow.
The country with the next highest share
is Thailand at 4 percent. Prior to
the quota removal,
China had a nine percent
share.
·
Business
Week
estimated that 30 million jobs around the world
could be lost once textile and apparel quotas
are removed from
China on January 1,
2004.
·
In a survey taken at the
Cotton Sourcing Summit in
Miami, 87 percent of
importers and retailers polled
predicted that
China would take more than 50
percent of the
U.S. apparel market once
quotas are lifted. 43
percent predicted that
China’s share would be
between 75 and 90 percent.
·
In developed countries
that have not used quota,
China has taken between 70
and 80 percent of the market
(Japan and
Australia).
·
The World Bank
predicts that
China will capture half the
world’s apparel trade once quotas are
removed.
A study by McKinsey and Company also
predicted that
China’s share that would rise
to 50 percent for both textiles and apparel. The
United States International Trace Commission
predicted that once quota
go away,
“China would become the
supplier of
choice.5”
2. A Rising
World Tide: The
Istanbul
Declaration and the Global
Alliance for Fair
Trade in Textiles
(GAFTT)
·
91 textile and apparel
trade groups from 49 countries have banded
together in a “Global Alliance for Fair Textile
Trade” (GAFTT). The goal
is prevent a Chinese takeover
of world textile and apparel
trade.
·
The groups point out the
massive economic destabilization as tens of
millions of jobs move from the developing world
to China. Much of
the jobs losses will be in heavily Muslim
countries, many of which could be severely
effected and where the
U.S. has important security
concerns.
·
GAFTT includes groups
from the
U.S.,
Turkey,
Mexico,
Bangladesh,
Philippines,
Sri
Lanka,
Uganda,
South
Africa,
Morocco,
Peru,
Argentina, and many more. See www.fairtextiletrade.org
·
This large coalition has
formed over just the last 4 months. GAFTT for an
emergency WTO meeting on the impact of the quota
phase-out and strong use of
China textile safeguard (eg,
use “threat” track )
3. How Does
China Do It?
– The Chinese government uses unfair trade
practices to
under price
manufacturers around the world.
·
China dropped
prices by an average of 48
percent after quotas were removed in a
successful effort to dominate world trade in
these product areas. Not a
single competitor was able to match
China's artificially low
prices.
·
According the U.S.-China
Economic and Security Review Commission,
“China has artificially
suppressed the value of its
currency by as much as 40 percent and continues
to heavily subsidize its manufacturing sector –
in the form of tax incentives,
preferential access to
credit and capital from state-owned financial
institutions, subsidized utilities, and other
measures.”
·
In regards to textile
and apparel production,
China uses the following
unfair trade practices to artificially
under price every other country
in the world:
o
Currency manipulation (40
percent
advantage)
o
Export subsidies (rebate
of export taxes: 13
percent)
o Free capital (US
government reports that up to 50 percent of
government loans to Chinese business are never
repaid).
o
Direct state subsidies to
textile industry (50 percent is still owned by
the Chinese
government
o
Plus many others……include
tax holidays, land giveaways, power and freight
subsidization
4. What Needs
to Happen to Stop
China?
·
An Emergency WTO Meeting:
o The
U.S. government should
support
Mauritius in requesting an
emergency meeting of the WTO to review the
impact of the quota
phase-out.
o The purpose of the
meeting is not to extend the quota system but to
examine what should be done to
prevent a disastrous take
over world textile and apparel
trade.
·
Effective Use of the
China
Textile Safeguard by the
U.S.
and EU
o
Right now, the
China textile safeguard,
which is allowed by the WTO, has not been used
effectively.
o
In the cases where the
U.S. has used it, China has been able to gain 40
percent of the market by the time it has gone
into effect - - and then the safeguard only
lasts one year or less, before the process must
start over again (takes at least six
months).
o
There are two tracks for
using the safeguard – threat of serious injury
and actual market disruption. The
market disruption track takes too long. The
U.S. and E.U. need to use
the “threat” track.
o
Congressional members
should let the Administration know that they
must use the safeguard effectively by using the
“threat”
track.
“Trade
Liberalization in
China’s
Accession to the World Trade Organization”,
Elena
Ianchovichina and Will
Martin
World Bank, June 2001, p.
21.
McKinsey study: AFX News
Limited, 3/28/04.
Roger W. Robinson, Jr., Chairman, U.S.-China
Economic and Security Review Commission, before
the House Committee on Armed Services, June 16,
2004.