Home | Hotels | Hotels Video | China Flights | China Train Tickets | Main cities | China map | Contact us | Reservation Status  

China Travel & Tourism News


Search China Travel News:

Textile makers: Local sales will offset export curbs


23-May-2005 - China Daily
China's textile makers, who spent $14.3 billion last year on building factories, say local demand will buffer any slowdown in orders from U.S. and European market because of a looming trade war.

"Domestic demand accounts for about 70 percent of industry growth,"' said Wang Donghua, a spokesman for Shandong-based Weiqiao Textile Co., the country's largest cotton textile maker. "Our economy is becoming more consumer-driven instead of investment-driven. That's our main driver of growth."

Weiqiao Textile bought 65 percent more cotton last year, added 35,000 workers and spent 3.6 billion yuan ($435 million) increasing output.

U.S. and European Union governments want to stem the rising tide of apparel exports from Weiqiao and 100,000 other Chinese textile companies since a four-decade-old system of quotas on textile trade ended on December 31. Weiqiao, which makes fabric for jeans and bed linen, says a domestic economy growing at 9.5 percent a year offers plenty of local sales opportunities.

China's textile and apparel sales rose 23 percent to $319 billion in 2004 from a year earlier, the China Textile News reported, citing figures from the China National Textile & Apparel Council. Exports, which account for 30 percent of the total, rose 21 percent to $97 billion.

"Ever since the beginning of this year, the growth of domestic sales clearly surpassed export growth," Sun Huaibin, a director at the council, said in an interview with Bloomberg.

China's per capita disposable income in urban areas, home to a third of the population, rose 11 percent to 2,938 yuan from a year earlier in the first quarter, and those in rural areas increased 16 percent to 967 yuan, official figures show.

China's textile manufacturers "are interested in developing their own brands for their own market with potentially higher margins than churning out millions of low-margin T-shirts for Western retailers," said Roger Tredre, editor-in-chief of Worth Global Style Network in London.

Textile companies in China make 17 percent of the clothes worn in the world, as measured by dollar value. The share is growing as U.S. Wal-Mart and other giant retailers seek to get more of their goods from lower-cost Chinese suppliers.

Wal-Mart was expecting to save 12-15 percent on apparel costs this year with the removal of the quota system, Joseph Teklits, an analyst with Wachovia Securities Inc. in Baltimore, said in a March 18 report.

The U.S. wholesale price of Chinese-made men's blue jeans fell 30 percent in the first two months after the quotas were removed. Underwear prices dropped more than 40 percent.

The U.S. has sided with petitions from U.S. textile companies to cap imports on $914 million of clothing and yarn from China, less than a week after announcing quotas on three other textile products.

China's textile makers started an average of 10 projects a day last year and imported $4.5 billion of new machinery. "They've been gearing up for the end of quotas," said Nicholas Lardy, a Washington-based China specialist at the Institute for International Economics. "This is a product where they have a tremendous comparative advantage."

The U.S. has instituted so-called safeguard measures for men's shirts, man-made trousers, man-made knit shirts and yarn, the Commerce Department said on May 18. It allows the U.S. to set a 7.5 percent cap on import growth of those products this month. It must first request consultations with China.

"The irony is that China demands real high-quality cotton, and that's what's produced in California and Arizona," said Wiley Murphy, who's been growing cotton at Marana, about 25 miles from Tucson, Arizona, for 30 years. "Chinese like to buy our cotton."

The 31,400 cotton farmers in the U.S. are counting on stronger overseas sales to buoy prices as domestic demand shrinks for the 8th-straight year.

"It's a two-edge sword," he said. "It's a healthy situation for the cotton growers. It's not a healthy situation for American textile industry."

Chinese demand is spurring global consumption, expected to grow 8 percent this year, the biggest annual gain since 1987.

"It used to be that our market was dependent on what happened in the U.S." said farmer Murphy. "Now it's a global market, and China is the big dog in the thing."

23-May-2005 - China Daily

Main Cities in China Travel and China Hotels

Beijing Hotels China Guangzhou Hotels China Shanghai Hotels China Hongkong Hotels China Qingdao Hotels China Hangzhou Hotels China
Beijing Canton Shanghai Hong Kong Qingdao Hangzhou



Search China Hotels China Hotels:
Please Select a City:
Find Your Hotel With China Map
Check-in:
Show Calendar
Check-out:
Show Calendar
Currency Adults Child

Search China Flight Ticket China Flight:
One Way Round-Trip
Departure city:
Destination:
Departure date:
Return date:




China Hotels info

Beijing Hotels, Shanghai Hotels
Guangzhou Hotels, Shenzhen Hotels
Hangzhou Hotels, Yiwu Hotels

China Travel info

Embassies and Consulates
China Health
China Currency
China Visa

China Tourist info

China Itineraries
Traditional Holidays
What to see in China
Weather in China

China Business info

Fairs and exhibitions
Shanghai Expo.
Canton Fair, Yiwu Fair
Institutional offices
China investment guide
Doing business in China

China Vacation info

China Map
China Travel Tourism News
Harbin Ice Lantern Festival
Hotels Reservation

China Province:

Hubei, Inner Mongolia
Jiangxi, Shaanxi, Tibet

China Cities:
China Introduction
Beijing Travel Info
Changchun Travel Info
Changsha Travel Info
Chengde Travel Info
Chengdu Travel Info
Chongqing Travel Info
Dali Travel Info
Dunhuang Travel Info
Guilin Travel Info
Haikou Travel Info
Hangzhou Travel Info
Harbin Travel Info
Nanning Travel Info
Ningbo Travel Info
Qingdao Travel Info
Shanghai Travel Info
Shenyang Travel Info
Shenzhen Travel Info
Suzhou Travel Info
Taian Travel Info
Tianjin Travel Info
Weihai Travel Info
Wuyishan Travel Info
Xiamen Travel Info
Xian Travel Info
Yangzhou Travel Info
Zhuhai Travel Info


 
| Home | Hotels | Hotels Video | China Flights | Flights Schedule | Pickup Service | Travel Packages | Affiliate | Add your hotels | Interprete Italiano-Cinese | Contact | Site Map | Link | FAQ | About Us
Copyright © 2001-2025 China Hotels Reservation - All Rights Reserved
Europe Office: ChinaHotelsReservation- Via Gerolamo Forni 64 - 20161 Milano - Fax 0291390522
China Office: China Travel(Hualv) Business co.,Ltd. - Tel 0086-577-88555070 Fax 0086-577-88522570
Xishan Donglu Xicen Gongyu 7 Zhuang 802 - 325005 Wenzhou China