Major countries removed their textile trading quotas as
scheduled on January 1, but many restrictive measures remain,
especially for China.
The European Union said it has eliminated quotas on 210 textiles
and clothing items last Saturday.
The United States, Canada and Turkey, major countries which ran
a quota system on textile trade before January 1, 2005, also
removed their quotas according to their promises.
The moves are in line with the agreement among World Trade
Organization (WTO) members inked a decade ago, though some textile
manufacturers asked to postpone the quota elimination for fear of
the challenge of free trade.
The trade volume put under quota restriction accounts for about
70 per cent of the total global textile trade, and the trade volume
that is free of quota restriction is about 30 per cent.
The cancelled quota of the United States is estimated to be
worth US$76 billion.
Many analysts have forecast competitive Chinese textiles will
swamp the world market after the lifting of quotas.
But Ma Bin, a manager from the Ningbo Shenzhou Textile Group,
said exports had not increased quickly in the new year.
"We are still watching what kind of moves other countries will
apply," he said.
He said many foreign companies are cautious about making deals
because of possible trade barriers.
Ma's worry is not groundless as many countries have prepared or
are writing measures against increasing Chinese textile exports,
according to Sun Huaibin, a spokesman from the China Textile
Industry Association.
For example, the EU regulation introduces a statistical
monitoring system for imports of textiles and clothing products
from China, to assess whether safeguard measures should be imposed
in case of a sudden increase in imports of textile and clothing
products from China.
But the EU official said earlier they are reluctant to initiate
safeguard procedures.
The United States has threatened to impose safeguards on Chinese
textiles and it had accepted 12 requests ranging from shirts to
trousers.
The Bush administration is expected to begin making decisions on
the import-curbing requests in early February.
Its moves have angered US textile retailers who filed the case
in the Court of International Trade in New York.
The court issued a preliminary injunction last Thursday which
blocks the Bush administration from considering the 12
petitions.
(China Daily January 5, 2005)