The European Union is likely to initiate 'dumping'
investigations against certain Chinese textile and garment
products, a senior industry figure has warned.
Cao Xinyu, vice-chairman of the China Chamber of Commerce for
the Import and Export of Textiles, said there could be claims that
Chinese exporters are selling certain goods in Europe at below the
cost of producing them.
"Several industrial associations from European countries, in
particular South European countries, have been preparing dumping
claims with the European Commission against eight categories of
Chinese textile products," he said.
The targeted products include men's shirts, cotton towels, socks
and underwear.
China reached an agreement with the European Union last June,
freeing Chinese textile exports to the economic bloc from safeguard
measures, but the agreement does not rule out the possibility of
dumping claims.
Cao said his chamber has put exports of certain categories under
close inspection.
The chamber has notified domestic exporters of the possibility
of dumping charges. It will provide them with further information
and legal help.
It is not clear whether the European Commission will launch
official investigations and, if so, when it will do that because
there are also people within the European Union that support
Chinese imports.
China's export of textile products rose by 20 percent
year-on-year in the first quarter this year, but reports suggest
some international buyers, such as Wal-Mart, have switched to
buying from other Asian countries.
Cao argued that the industry's growth rate in the first three
month was stable and "better than expected."
But he said it was of little value to compare this year's
exports with last year because special circumstances skewed 2005's
figures.
"Last spring nearly all textile producers exported products not
only for the spring and summer, but also for the autumn and winter
because of fears the European Union and the United States might
suddenly shut the door to Chinese textiles."
In another development, the European Commission launched on
Monday a public consultation exercise aimed at helping its
forthcoming strategic review of trade and economic relations
between the European Union and China.
"The commission will invite all interested parties to comment on
how the European Union should manage its relationship with China in
the decade to come," the commission said in a statement on its
website.
Announcing the review last week in a speech, EU Trade
Commissioner Peter Mandelson called China "the biggest single
challenge of globalization in the trade field."
He said: "Europe must get China right, as a threat, an
opportunity and as a prospective global partner."
Mandelson said the review would focus on "key challenges, such
as intellectual property, market access issues and investment
opportunities" and would "spark a lively debate both within the
European Union and in China."
The Commission's Communication on the European Union's trade and
economic relationship with China will be published in the last
quarter of this year.
(China Daily May 10, 2006)