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BEIJING, May 15 (Xinhuanet) -- Textile manufacturers and exporters in China said on Sunday that they were outraged by the "hasty and unwise" decision of the United States to re-impose quotas on imports of three types of Chinese clothing, warning that such a decision would
hurt both sides badly.
"The US decision is both hasty and unfair, as it was
based on the controversial statistics from the American side, which only covered
the first three months of the year," said Yang Weidong, general manager of Jifa
Textile Group Co. Ltd., a leading textiles producer in east China's Shandong
Province.
Although exports of his company to the United States
have increased by 30 percent in the past four months as against last year's
figure, a large proportion of them were actually ordered last November and
December, said Yang.
"I have received no orders from US importers since
Washington launched investigation on China imports in April, and my US business
partners even recalled orders worth more than 3 million US dollars over the
period," he complained.
The US Committee for the Implementation of Textile
Agreements announced on Friday a 7.5-percent cap on the annual increase of
imports of China-made cotton shirts, trousers and man-made fiber underwear,
based on its observation that an import surge from China had "caused market
disruption" in the United States.
China's Ministry of Commerce immediately voiced its
strong opposition to this decision, which it said had "run counter to World
Trade Organization's agreements" and "set a very bad precedent."
The ministry recorded a 19.1 percent growth for
China's textiles and clothing exports to the United States in the first quarter
this year, which was 5.6 percent lower than in the same period of last year.
"Actually, following a soaring momentum in the first
two months,exports growth to the United States has been declining since
earlyMarch," said a source with the Beijing-based China Textile Industry
Association.
Ning Jinyun, general manager of Tianjin Textile
Import and Export Inc. in north China, said that the company, which sold
textiles and clothing worth more than 20 million US dollars to the United States
last year, was forced to accept small American orders only this year for
"serious concerns about the risks."
"This is really abnormal and painful for a big
company like us," said Ning, who was also deeply worried that other countries
and regions might follow the example of the United States and "make things
harder for the Chinese manufacturers and exporters."
Yuan Zhongjian, general manager of the Shanghai-based
Cliff Knitwear Co. Ltd., questioned if the US administration had made a wise
decision by "re-imposing quota in the post-quota era under the WTO regime."
"They claimed that such a decision had defended
thousands of American jobs, but couldn't they see that it would also make
millions of Americans pay more for their clothing and affect billions of dollars
in American business?" asked Yuan.
According to Yuan, when the old quota system was in
place, the cost of every piece of exported Chinese textile products would be
raised by at least 10 percent. "Now the nightmare is returning in just less than
half a year," he said.
Hu Guocheng, a researcher with the Beijing-based
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, echoed Yuan's opinion, saying that theUS
ceiling on China imports will "induce more harm to US retailersand consumers
than possible benefits to American textile manufacturers."
Industry insiders say that as a result of the hasty
US decision,most Chinese textile manufacturers are not well-prepared and the
newly-imposed quota might be used up in two to four months.
"By that time, they will have only two options:
either to explore new markets or to stop production and even go bankruptcy,"they
predict.
Textile companies in Shandong, one of the country's
leading textile manufacturing and export bases, are already considering major
production cuts as well as a sharp cut in their cotton imports. Last year the
province imported 465,000 tons of cotton, including 182,000 tons from the United
States. Enditem |