Shanghai's exports to the European Union (EU) countries and the
United States dropped drastically in the first eight months this
year due to export quota restrictions imposed on Chinese textiles
products by EU and the US, the latest statistics showed.
Statistics from the Customs of Shanghai, China's leading
metropolis, indicated that Shanghai did an export of US$36.41
billion to the EU countries in the January-August period, a year on
year rise of 20.9 percent, but the increase rate was 21.4
percentage points lower than last year's same period.
Exports via Shanghai port to the United States rose 28.4 percent
year on year to hit US$40.87 billion in the January-August period,
but the increase rate dropped by 14.6 percentage points from last
year's same period.
A sharp contrast to the exports, Shanghai imported US$18.39
billion worth of goods from EU countries in the first eight months
this year, a year on year rise of 19.4 percent, with the increase
rate rising by 20.1 percentage points from last year's
corresponding period.
Shanghai did an import of US$11.41 billion from the United
States in the same period, up 25.6 percent year on year, with the
increase rate reaching 23.3 percentage points year on year.
Customs experts ascribed the drop in exports to the quota
restrictions imposed on China's textiles products export by EU and
the United States.
Shanghai exported US$22.25 billion worth of apparel products in
the first eight months this year, but the increase rate dropped by
16.2 percentage points year on year.
In 2005, the elimination of global textile quota led to China's
textile export surge to the EU countries and the united States,
which caused trade disputes and rounds of talks.
The Sino-US textile agreement which took effect as of January 1,
2006 imposes quotas on a total of 21 categories of clothing and
textiles from China by 2008. Some ten kinds of Chinese textile and
apparel products exported to the EU countries have also been put
under quota restrictions, according to an agreement reached by the
two sides in June 2005.
The export restrictions impose threats to jobs of China's 19
million textiles workers.
(Xinhua News Agency September 11, 2006)