India is one of the major
beneficiaries of United States' restrictions on Chinese textile
exports during the first six months of 2006, the Asian
giant's top planning body said while cautioning the industry to brace for even less
growth in exports in the second half, the Press Trust of India reported on
Monday.
For the first time in recent history, China's textile export to the United
States in the first six months dwindled by 0.6 per cent from the same period
last year mainly due to the export restraints, a report by the National
Development and Reform Commission said.
China's textile export to the United States in the first six months amounted
to USD 8.23 billion, the report said.
The growth is 76 per cent lower from the same period of last year. It is the
first time for China to see its textile export to the United States drop in
recent years, it said.
Due to import restrictions, growth of China's textile export to the European
Union also witnessed a decline as the total amount valued at USD 9.5 billion, up
10.3 per cent from the same period of last year.
The year-on-year growth is 46.2 per cent down.
While China's export of textile products declined, China's bordering
countries such as Vietnam, Pakistan, Cambodia and India saw a sharp rise of
their textile exports to the United States, the report said.
India's textile exports to the United States rose by over 18 per cent year on
year, the NDRC noted.
Changes in the trade environment have greatly affected China's textile export
and such a trend is expanding, the report noted.
Since global quotas were scrapped on January 1, the US and the EU have set
limits on textile products imported from China, saying that the surge of Chinese
textile products disturbed their markets and hurt the local industry.
During the January-June period, China's textile enterprises saw a sharp rise
of their export to regions without export restraints, which reached USD 44.75
billion, up 34.4 per cent from the same period of last year.
Among those regions, the textile export to Turkey rose by 221 per cent
year on year, Mexico, 155 per cent, Macao, 63 per cent, South Korea, 44 per cent
and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, 44 per cent.
Despite of all those adverse conditions such as price rise of raw materials,
appreciation of the Chinese currency, trade frictions and shortage of cotton
supply, China's textile industry remains at a 'good status', the report said.
The gross value of industrial output of China's textile enterprises above
designated scale reached 1,141.2 billion yuan (USD 142.65 billion) in the first
six months, up 23.7 per cent from the same period of last year, and the added
value, up 24.6 per cent to 295.7 billion yuan (USD 37.07 billion).
The NDRC report predicted that in the second half year, China's textile
industry will remain a stable growth but uncertain trade factors will lead to
even less growth in export.