The Ministry of Commerce has issued a circular to alert domestic
companies to the pitfalls of exporting textile products to the
United States and the European Union using fake certificates of
origin.
Under last year's Sino-US and Sino-EU memorandums on textile
trade, the agreed trade volume for the following year will be
slashed to penalize the whole industry if these illegal practices
are carried out.
Sun Kaifen, from the Commerce Department of north China's Hebei
Province, said that the ministry has ordered local departments to
inspect companies and submit a report around mid-July.
The ministry will punish companies and individuals concerned
strictly in line with the law, Sun said.
Since the EU and US imposed textile export quotas on China last
year, the country's textile exports to these two economies have
been slowing down and shifting to neighboring countries and
regions.
Hong Kong and the Republic of Korea, for instance, have
registered year-on-year growth of 234 percent and 150 percent
respectively in their textile exports to the EU between January and
May. The customs authorities of some EU members said this rapid
growth could be a sign of malpractice.
Customs statistics from China showed that over the first five
months, a number of provinces including Guangdong, Hebei and
Zhejiang have increased their textile exports to Myanmar, Vietnam,
Thailand, the Republic of Korea, Russia and Pakistan.
Zhao Yumin, director of the International Market Department of
the Research Institute for International Trade and Economic
Cooperation, attributed the illegal trade to the import
restrictions of EU and United States which singles out China.
She said that the motivation of domestic companies for
conducting illegal trade was stoked up by the decrease in import
demands of foreign countries and the smooth transfer of
information, capital and commodities under economic
globalization.
Zhao said that this phenomenon proves how costly it is to
implement an agreement against the trend of free trade.
So far, the EU has imposed import restrictions on ten categories
of textile products made in China while the United States has
restricted the import of 21 categories of textile products from the
country.
(Xinhua News Agency July 13, 2006)