|
BEIJING, Sept. 27 -- U.S. and Chinese negotiators
began a new effort on Monday to seek an agreement that could restrict billions
of dollars of clothing imports from China, but industry officials were
pessimistic the two sides would find common ground, the Reuters reported.
 |
| Chinese workers work in a factory in
Huaibei, East China's Anhui Province in this picture taken on September
15, 2005. [newsphoto] | "I don't get the sense
that anything has really changed since the last round of talks" in Beijing in
late August, said Missy Branson, senior vice president at the National Council
of Textile Organizations. "To my knowledge, there's not been any back and forth"
discussion since then.
The two sides were meeting on Monday and Tuesday for
the fifth time since May, when the United States began to restrict imports of
clothing and textiles from China.
Imports of shirts, underwear, trousers, bras and
other clothing from China have shot up sharply following the end of a
decades-old global quota system on January 1.
Washington has restricted the imports under a special
"safeguard" provision of Beijing's entry into the World Trade Organization,
which allows countries to hold clothing and textile imports from China at 7.5
percent above the previous year in response to a "market-disrupting" surge.
U.S. textile groups have pushed the Bush
administration to try to negotiate an agreement that would restrict 30 or more
categories of clothing and textile imports from China through 2008, when the
safeguard provision expires.
But China wants any pact to end in 2007 and the
United States to promise not to use the safeguard provision again.
U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman said earlier
this month that the second condition was unacceptable.
Last week, textile industry groups filed new
petitions asking for restrictions on wool suits, synthetic coats and additional
textiles from China. They have also asked for existing curbs on bras, underwear,
pants, shirts and other clothing to be renewed when they expire at the end of
this year.
U.S. clothing importers and retailers accuse the textile industry of trying
to extend the import protection they enjoyed for decades under the global quota
system. They want any agreement to allow for progressively higher imports.
"Otherwise, we haven't weaned the industry off this protection," said Brenda
Jacobs, an attorney who works with the U.S. Association of Importers of Textiles
and Apparel.
Importers also want flexibility built into the pact so they can draw on the
next year's quota if the current year's quota is filled, or shift product from
one quota category to another.
(Source: China Daily/Reuters) |