Business World

Apparel industry hoping to boost exports amid US-China trade dispute

- By Janina C. Lim Reporter

THE APPAREL INDUSTRY is hoping boosting exports by 10-20% this year, by exploiting opportunit­ies created by the escalating trade tensions between the United States and China.

“I’m looking at sustained growth. At least 10% to 20% increase with the surge of the trade war. We can get a share of that,” Teresita Jocson-Agoncillo, executive director of the Confederat­ion of Wearables Exporters of the Philippine­s (CONWEP), said in an interview last week at the Department of Trade and Industry.

The US and China have raised tariffs on their imports from the other country, thereby raising the cost to their consumers.

In the case of the apparel industry, China-based manufactur­ers may relocate their facilities to countries like the Philippine­s to escape restrictiv­e tariff rates on China-made goods imposed by the US.

Ms. Jocson-Agoncillo added that country’s labor costs remain competitiv­e in the region, making it a viable site for producing apparel.

Apparel exports amounted to $1.02 billion last year, of which US deliveries accounted for about 70%. The 10-20% forecast would bring 2018 exports to $1.12 billion at the low end to as much as $1.23 billion.

However, the Philippine Statistics Authority estimates that exports of apparel and clothing accessorie­s in the first six months fell 40.6% year-on-year to $411.14 million.

Meanwhile, Ms. Jocson-Agoncillo also revealed that US footwear manufactur­ers are working to include footwear items under the US generalize­d system of preference amid plans to set up factories in the Philippine­s. She said the US footwear companies, which she declined to name, are hoping to invest in the Philippine­s once the US Congress approves the necessary GSP adjustment­s.

“When they get the changes they want to GSP, they will manufactur­e here,” Ms. Jocson-Agoncillo told reporters in Makati City.

She noted the high cost of producing shoes in the United States, where materials for footwear are levied an average duty of around 20% to 25%.

Ms. Jocson-Agoncillo likened the situation to that of the Coach brand, which entered the country in 2011 right after the US Congress included 26 subcategor­ies of leather goods in the GSP.

The Coach brand is now manufactur­ed by four groups and has since expanded to at least eight factories in the Philippine­s.

 ?? BW FILE PHOTO ?? IN THE CASE of the apparel industry, China-based manufactur­ers may relocate their facilities to countries like the Philippine­s to escape restrictiv­e tariff rates on China-made goods imposed by the US.
BW FILE PHOTO IN THE CASE of the apparel industry, China-based manufactur­ers may relocate their facilities to countries like the Philippine­s to escape restrictiv­e tariff rates on China-made goods imposed by the US.

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