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| Chinese Minister of Commerce Bo Xilai
delivers a speech at at the 2005 Fortune Global Forum May 18, 2005.
(Xinhua photo) |
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| Chinese Minister of Commerce Bo
Xilai answers questions after delivering a speech at at the 2005
Fortune Global Forum May 18, 2005. (Xinhua
photo) |
BEIJING, May 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Chinese Minister of
Commerce Bo Xilai said here on Wednesday at the 2005 Fortune Global Forum that
it was unfair that the United States and the European Union had blamed China for
the fast growth of Chinese textile exports to their markets and had either
imposed or intended to impose restrictions on Chinese products.
At the forum, which is scheduled to conclude on
Wednesday afternoon, Bo said that some developed countries had failed to abide
by WTO (World Trade Organization) stipulations, which partly contributed to the
short-term rapid growth of China's textile exports.
When the Uruguay round WTO talks were held in 1995,
the participants reached an agreement, asking developed countries to gradually
ease their quota system for textile and garment products import in 10 years.
"But some countries didn't do that. They had kept 70 to 90 percent of the most
important quotas in place till the end of last year. Their activity caused the
short-term rapid growth of China's textile exports in the first several months
this year," said Bo.
"But now the United States and the EU blamed China
for such a rapid growth, and tried to set restrictions on China's textile
products, it's unfair," he added.
China is a developing country which, after a long
time of hard efforts, had created a comparatively competitive textile
industry.The industry is low value-added and closely related to the living of a
large low-income population.
Averagely, one exported shirt could only make some 30
to 40 cents of profit for China, while a large proportion of the benefits
arising from China's textile exports have been shared by importers, retailers
and consumers worldwide, said the minister.
Developed countries should not take a "double
standard" on international trade, which means they would ask the whole world
toopen market to their own competitive industries while keeping their own
markets closed in any fields where they have no competitive edge, he said.
"Such activity is obviously in violation of the WTO
principle of 'free and fair trade'," said Bo.
On April 4, the United States announced it would
stage a 90-day investigation on three categories of China's textile exports,
namely cotton shirts and jackets, cotton trousers and underwear bycotton and
artificial fabrics.
On April 6, the European Union also issued outlines
of special trade protection measures against China's export of textile products,
intending to restrict sales of 12 categories of Chinese textiles to the EU
market.
On May 13, US Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez
announced that the US government has decided to re-impose quotas on Chinese-made
cotton trousers, cotton knit shirts and underwear.
During his meeting with a US Chamber of Commerce
delegation in Beijing on May 16, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said the US
restrictions were "not beneficial" for the sound development of Sino-US trade
relations.
"China and the United States should proceed from the
long-term perspective and work together to safeguard global textile integration,
a major progress made in the world's multi-lateral trading system," said Wen.
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