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BEIJING, June 13 (Xinhuanet) -- Although the European Union has agreed to stop investigations on 10 categories of textile products from China, according to the agreement signed by both sides last Saturday in Shanghai, China's textile companies cannot sigh with relief because the country's textile export growth to EU will be
limited between 8 percent and 12.5 percent annually from 2005 to 2007.
This means the EU market is not fully opened yet,
despite the elimination of global textile quota on Jan. 1, 2005, said a Chinese
insider, who believes China's textile industry has to restructure itself to deal
with future tough tests.
The Chinese government should voluntarily impose
limit on the amount of textile export and introduce "voluntary export quotas" to
restructure its industry, he said.
"China now has more than 40,000 enterprises that
export textile goods, but only 3,000 enterprises have an annual export value of
more than 5 million US dollars each," said Xi Shiping, chief executive of the
Shanghai Textile Holding Group.
Many small textile firms that vanished after doing
one business deal had disrupted the export order and brought shame on the
prestige of Chinese textile industry, he said.
The distribution of "voluntary quotas" provides an
opportunity for the government to reshape enterprises for textile export, he
said.
Even for most competitive textile enterprises in
developed coastal areas, the export quotas are deficient. The textile exportof
eastern China's Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces, which ranked asthe first and
third largest textile exporters in China last year, soared at a surprising rate
since beginning of this year.
In January 2005, Zhejiang's textile export soared
70.7 percent to the European Union, and 72 percent to the United States.
Jiangsu's textile export to the European Union jumped 80.6 percentlast February.
The limitation of a growth rate between 8 and 12.5
percent definitely means extremely fierce competitions among all enterprises for
"voluntary quotas."
When distributing quotas, the government will support
the most competitive enterprises, Xi said.
Experts suggest Chinese textile enterprises should
improve their own structure and sharpen their competitive edge to deal with new
challenges. Most of China's products for export, especially light industrial
products, are low value-added. In manycases, raw materials are imported,
processed in China and then forexport.
Despite huge amount of export, Chinese textile
industry gains only meager profits from international trade. In the first two
months of this year, the cotton textile industry of Jiangsu Province only had a
sales-profit ratio of 1.42 percent.
The textile industry at the Yangtze River delta has
to abandon former development pattern of low cost and low profit, said Shen
Anjing, vice president of the Shanghai Municipal Textile Academy.
"To face the new challenge, the country's textile
sector shouldreadjust their export strategies and introduce more advanced
technology to increase the added value of their products," said Sun Huaibin,
spokesman for the China Textile Industry Council.
China is regarded as the largest beneficiary from the
elimination of global textile quota, but in fact China's profits gained from
garment processing account for only less than 10 percent of garment sales
abroad.
Wang Yu, secretary general of the China Import and
Export Council, advised domestic textile enterprises to cooperate with their
foreign counterparts because the Chinese enterprises enjoy large production
scale, while foreign companies have name brands and advantage in garment design,
noting their collaboration will benefit both sides. Enditem |