China awaits textile pact fine print (Reuters) Updated: 2005-11-09 00:35
Clarity
Many Chinese-based manufacturers said they
welcomed an end to uncertainty but were waiting for the Ministry of Commerce to
explain the quotas.
"The deal is good for us, because it removes uncertainty for buyers," said
Zuo Quntao, a manager at the Weida Garments, a shirt maker in the eastern
Chinese province of Zhejiang that exports nearly all its shirts.
But Zuo said that Weida and other exporters had not seen the details. "For
real buyer confidence, we need to know the details of how quotas will be
allocated," he said.
While some manufacturers welcomed the deal, other manufacturers said that if
the quotas threatened growth, they may move some production to Southeast Asian
countries, or use those countries for final processing so orders escape quota
restrictions.
"We've mostly remained outside the limits. We've been using other countries
in Southeast Asia to transfer shipments," said a sales manager at Aotin
Enterprise, a clothes exporter in the far southern province Guangdong, who gave
his surname as Luo.
The deal came after five months of grinding negotiations between China and
the United States. Washington imposed quotas after U.S. manufacturers and trade
unions complained that cheap Chinese clothes threatened their survival.
Chinese textiles and clothes exports grew to $13 billion in the first months
of this year, a rise of 65.5 percent on the same period last year.
In the deal, the United States said it would exercise "restraint" in using
"safeguard" limits on Chinese textiles. But Fan Dabiao, the general manager of
Soho International, a clothes exporter in eastern China, said he was worried
about more restrictions.
"The U.S. promised only to exercise restraint, so who knows what the
variables may be in the future," he told the Chinese-language International
Business Daily.
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