Title: T
1- TC Trade Challenges
- for Latin America
- The ATC Ended
- Is TC a Normal Sector?
- Presentation by
- Mr. Matthias KNAPPE
- ALADI Secretariat Montevideo, Uruguay, 25-26 May
2005
2TC is not (yet) a Normal Sector for Business
- Purely rules-related TC is a normal sector
- But
- Non-optimal preparation for competition despite
10 years anticipation - Industry is swimming and a new competition wave
is expected with DDA - Present concerns distract from DDA
- No special treatment anymore (1 classroom)
3Structure
- TC Trade
- in Latin
- America
7 Challenges For LA
Finding Responses
4Characteristics of TC industry in South America
- Poor market diversification mainly to US
- Poor product diversification underwear,
knit-shirts, trousers nightwear - Mainly CMT/maquila full-package to be
developed only few countries are vertically
integrated - Poor linkage between foreign investors local
industry - Insufficient use of regional opportunities
5US Imports 1st Quarter 2005
- Jan Feb strong, March lower growth
- China up 107 for apparel but strong increase
in key cotton products (338/9) 1257 347/8
1521 352 308 - But strong growth from preferential suppliers
(CAFTAknit Andean knit woven focus is on
duties rather shifts within than between regions
- But how reliable is the data e.g. EU confusion
For Jan/Feb 2005 Source OTEXA
6TC Exports from ALADI Countries in 2003
7US Imports from ALADI 3 year comparison
8US Import changes from ALADI 2004- 2005
9US Imports from ALADI in 2004
10US Apparel Imports by Region
Source OTEXA and emergingtextiles.com
11US Apparel Imports by Region
Source OTEXA and emergingtextiles.com
12Structure
- TC Trade
- in Latin
- America
7 Challenges For LA
Finding Responses
13World Garment Exports Declining Growth Rates
Source WTO idea D. Birnbaum
141. Prices will fall furtherMore supply and quota
rents are gone
Source Robin Anson, Director Textiles
Intelligence ITMF, Dresden October 2003
www.textilesintelligence.com and Textile Outlook
International No. 110 March-April 2004
15US Apparel Imports Unit Value Jan 05 to Jan 04
China prices down 9 on average but up to 50 in
key products in US (35 in EU)
Source OTEXA
16US Apparel Imports Unit Value Jan 05 to Jan 04
Source OTEXA
172. Country Enterprise Consolidation
Source US Department of Commerce Report to the
Congressional Textile Caucus on the
administrations efforts on textile issues
Washington, September 2002
18Changing Enterprise Requirements
- Mega companies or smaller flexible firms gt
- Supplier has more responsibility
- Speed to market counts (standard apparel timely
replenishment fashion apparel quick response) - Trade policy and foreign investor response were
key for apparel export development in many LDCs
19Mega CompaniesGlobal Process for a Dress Shirt
Selected by fabric mill quality is fine
Vertical setup by fabric mill
Good relationship good in piece dye
Major shirt factory in TAL
203. China as a WTO Member Major Player
- US clothing imports from China 2002 60 2003
46 2004 32 Jan-Apr 2005 67 - Japan 85 of all clothing imports from China
- Australia 69 of clothing and 21 of all textile
imports from China - January 2005 exports to EU Knit apparel up 163
woven apparel up 80 - January 2005 exports to US Knit apparel up 111
woven apparel 79
21Chinas T-Shirt Exports to the EU in Jan 05
Source China Customs, 02/05
22US Imports of Cotton T-Shirts Jan 05 Jan 04
Source OTEXA
234. Use of Trade Remedies
- Safeguards (fairly traded imports)
- Antidumping duties (unfairly traded imports)
mainly yarns, fabrics made ups trade chilling
effect - Countervailing duties Unfair trade practices
- TC products as targets for retaliation in
dispute settlement cases. - Possibility of new quotas against China
- 1) Special TC Safeguards until 31/12/2008
- 2) Product Specific Safeguards until 10/12/2013
(all products, not only TC) - To be discussed in detail tomorrow
24Discriminatory Trade Policy Decision Influence
Sourcing Decisions
Source USA-ITA
255. Doha Trade Negotiations and TC
- NAMA Negotiations reduction of high tariffs,
tariff peaks and escalations specific formula
sector approach? additional provisions for LDCs
newly acceded countries (less than full
reciprocity) - Adjustment related issues impact NAMA
- Rules negotiations (e.g. ITCB request on AD)
- Identification, categorisation, examination
treatment of NTBs - South-South trade under NAMA or GSTP?
- ITCB and its future role for South America
- Market access development aspects of cotton
266. Multilateral vs. Complex System of FTAs
- CAFTA/Andean RTA negotiations distracts from NAMA
(short vs. long term) - RTAs need to provide new benefits, incl. regional
cumulation - But NAMA can erode these preferences
- Other countries also receive preferences
- AGOA and Canada with easy RofO
- QIZ in Jordan and Egypt
- EU New GSP scheme, incl. cumulation
27But Preferential Differential Treatment is
Equally Important
Source USA-ITA
287. New Rules (e.g. FTAs, RTAs, Security)
- Preferential treatment continued USCBP
intervention - Codes of Conduct - Ethical Sourcing
- ECO Labelling Remain voluntary but can reduce
market access - Security US Customs-Trade Partnership Against
29Summary / Challenges
- 1. Price reduction
- 2. Consolidation
- 3. China? Or rather Improving
Competitiveness - 4. Use of trade remedies
- 5. DDA and TC Trade
- 6. Multilateral approach vs. FTAs/RTAs
- 7. Imposition of new (buyers) rules
30Structure
- TC Trade
- in Latin
- America
7 Challenges For LA
Finding Responses
31Closer Regional Cooperation
- Small countries will not be able to develop a
vertically integrated industry - A regional (or inter-regional) vertical approach
is needed - RTAs need to integrate closer regional
cooperation, incl. Regional sourcing, CAFTA
example - RTAs could lead to product market
diversification - AFTEX developing regional complementarities
exploiting synergies and in Latin America
323 Areas of South-South Trade Development
- a) DCs as a market
- QUAD market 80 of world imports post-ATC
growth rate expected to be 1-5 - Large DC will grow much faster
- GSTP could be a door-opener
- b) S-S Trade of intermediaries to export to
traditional markets (value chain cooperation) - c) Improve relationship with foreign investors
- TCDC is key for all three areas
- Cotton development needs to be seen in light of
- S-S trade
33Hubs Spokes Changes to Hub Regional Hubs
CAFTA
ES
N
CR
H
DR
Mex CAN
G
USA
Sub Saharan Africa
L
N
M
S
K
What is in it for South America?
34Diversifying into MMF Apparel Exports to US
- The production skills set is not very different,
but sourcing skills are needed - Improving buyer relationship as any
diversification strategy needs cooperation with
buyers (to expand to support the product
switch) - Partnership with national and/or regional
suppliers - Joint marketing of regional apparel and textile
companies
35US Imports from SA Fibre Composition
36The Phenomenon Most Duty-free Access Utilisation
is for Cotton Apparel
Andean
AGOA
Jordan
CBI
World
37Tariff Peaks for Cotton MMF Apparel
Source USAID and USITC
38Summary
- Closer Regional Cooperation (macro and meso level
(AFTEX example) - South-South Trade at 3 levels
- Diversification into MMF products coupled with
south-south cooperation
39THANK YOU ! For more information http//www.intrac
en.org/textilesandclothing
Contact Matthias Knappe, Senior Market
Development Officer Knappe_at_intracen.org
40- WTO Rules Governing
- TC Trade
- From 2005
- Presentation by
- Mr. Matthias KNAPPE
- ALADI Secretariat Montevideo, Uruguay, 25-26 May
2005
41Rules prevailing from 1 January 2005
- WTO principles of transparency
non-discrimination - Exceptions regional trade agreements special
and prefential treatment - Antidumping rules prevent unfair trading
practices - Safeguards prevent injury from trade flow
- Dispute settlement mechanism to resolve disputes
that might arise.
42Trade Remedies
- Safeguards (fairly traded imports)
- Antidumping duties (unfairly traded imports)
mainly yarns, fabrics made ups trade chilling
effect - Countervailing duties Unfair trade practices
- TC products as targets for retaliation in
dispute settlement cases. - Possibility of new quotas against China
- 1) Special TC Safeguards until 31/12/2008
- 2) Product Specific Safeguards until 10/12/2013
(all products, not only TC)
43Possibility for China special TC Safeguards
- Until 31/12/2008 for ATC products only
- Invoked by any member by asking for bilateral
consultations if market disruption (threaten to
impede the orderly development of TC trade) - Request for consultations implies immediate
limitation of exports at a pre-determined level
(7.5 (6) above the amount imported during the
last 12 months) - Does not necessarily require China's agreement
- No WTO notification no multilateral surveillance
- Duration max. 12 months
- Not to remain in effect beyond one year, without
reapplication, unless otherwise agreed
44China Textile Safeguard implementation
- Has been invoked by the US
- on knitted fabrics, cotton and mmf dressing gowns
bathrobes, cotton and mmf brassieres ended
23-12-04 - Presently on socks exports (332, 632)
(threat-based) - US Court of Int. Trade enjoined CITA from
considering threat-based petitions (hearing is
scheduled for May) - CITA to invoke safeguards on 338/339 347/348
352/652 - CITA to invoke thread-based safeguards on
638/639 647/648, 340/640 - Quotas will be low based on year ending Feb or
Mar 2005 data plus 7.5 (for 338/9 almost filled) - EU Will invoke against T-shirts flax yarns by
end May unless China restrains its exports
45Can China safeguards protect US South
America trade?
- CBI apparel companies are top customers of US
yarn and fabrics CITA considers OPT as an
extension of US production but South America? - CITA self-initiated investigations on 347/8,
338/9, 352/652 US textile industry filed 7/14
new petitions - New quotas could be in place by May/June these
will be low! - AAFA US import production follow a
consistent pattern regardless of whether China is
restrained - Safeguards on brassieres slowed imports from
China helped reverse a decline of imports from
CBI
46Chinas Response TC Export Taxes
- 148 products of HS chapters 61 62 in 6
categories outerwear, dresses, knit and non-knit
blouses, sleepwear and underwear. - Tax either 0.2 yuan/piece or 0.3 yuan/piece i.e.
0.024 and 0.06 - From 1. June tax will rise to 1-4 Y/p for 74
classes of TC products some will be lowered - Major objective to encourage manufacturers to
switch to higher value-added products - 50 major exporters agreed on 6 price coordinating
panels to oversee export (price) developments and
suggest floor prices
Announced by MOFCOM n 20 May 2005
47WTO Post ATC Adjustment-related Issues
- Proposal by Mauritius i) WTO study to identify
winners losers and recommend measures and
solutions ii) CTG to establish a work programme
on dealing with the findings and to help DCs - Broad support and understanding of painful
adjustement process, but no consensus - Similar 20-10-04 request from Tanzania on behalf
of LDCs. - 19-01-05 it was agreed that WTO Secretariat will
prepare a paper to look into options for LDCs to
improve their competitiveness, incl. TA CB - 20 May Tunisia (Turkey Jordan) called CTG to
discuss remedies to problems faced agenda
rejected
48Doha Trade Negotiations and TC
- NAMA Negotiations reduction of high tariffs,
tariff peaks and escalations specific formula
sector approach? additional provisions for LDCs
newly acceded countries (less than full
reciprocity) - Adjustment related issues impact NAMA
- Rules negotiations (e.g. ITCB request on AD)
- Identification, categorisation, examination
treatment of NTBs - South-South trade under NAMA or GSTP?
- ITCB and its future role for South America
- Market access development aspects of cotton
49The Cotton Issue in WTO Market Access
- Market Distortion by Subsidies
- Appellate Body confirmed WTO interim ruling that
US subsidies caused serious prejudice to
Brazilian cotton producers - US direct payments to farmers are trade
distorting - Payments to US mills and exporters to cover the
difference of US and world prices to ensure US
exports are not permissible - West Africa Initiative Distinction between
Market Access Development Issues
50Cotton Implications for TC Trade
- Long-term reduction of subsidies tends to
increase price - End of ATC increases demand for cotton shifts
it to Asia price increase - Supply response in Asia, Australia West Africa
but in US and EU? - Will possible end of US support for cotton have a
negative impact on cotton fibre consumption? - Impact of cotton negotiations on TC trade?
- Development assistance for cotton in West Africa
51What can we do together ?
1.- Sector Strategy Development
The SHAPE
2.- Understanding its own and competitors
performance
The FiT
3.- Developing fabric sourcing skills to
become full-packagesuppliers
Sourcing Guide and database
4.- Understanding changing markets
New ITC TC website Workshops Tailored Product
Market Development
5.- Applying e-applications in the TC sector
Business Guide in e-commerce for TC
Implementing tailor- made market
penetration approaches in line with buyer
requirements
ITC Tailored Consultation
52THANK YOU ! For more information http//www.intrac
en.org/textilesandclothing
Contact Matthias Knappe, Senior Market
Development Officer Knappe_at_intracen.org
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