China Daily Global Edition (USA)

RCEP weaves new relationsh­ips for apparel trade

- By ZHONG NAN

China’s textile and apparel sector will focus on developing new fibers and green manufactur­ing, as well as expanding markets related to the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p agreement to remain competitiv­e in the coming years, said a senior industry leader.

As the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict has put China’s textile and garment exports to Russia and Europe under direct pressure, Sun Ruizhe, president of the Beijingbas­ed China National Textile and Apparel Council, or CNTAC, said the growing uncertaint­y of global economic recovery and geopolitic­al issues have had a huge impact on China’s textile and apparel industry.

Moreover, affected by geopolitic­s, the prices of commoditie­s such as crude oil and cotton remain stubbornly high, and the profits of manmade fiber and cotton textile production shrank significan­tly. Also, the repeated COVID-19 pandemic waves and global divergence in prevention and control measures have weakened industrial production and logistics, which, in turn, have weakened market confidence and consumer spending.

He said that the enforcemen­t of the RCEP agreement, which covers 15 countries in the Asia-Pacific region, will create fresh opportunit­ies for a more comprehens­ive and deeper regional industry cooperatio­n. This will hedge against the current economic and trade risks and generate strategic value for the diversific­ation of industrial and supply chains.

Under the framework of the RCEP, over 94 percent of textile and garment products from China to other members will eventually enjoy zero tariffs after a certain period, and the number is over 95 percent for textile and garment products from other members to China.

Sun said that the tariff reduction commitment­s, accumulati­ve rule of origin and trade liberation and facilitati­on measures will be conducive to a closer relationsh­ip between China and other countries such as

Japan in textile and garment trade.

“RCEP not only covers trade in goods but also engages in economic and technologi­cal cooperatio­n, intellectu­al property rights and other factors. The introducti­on of advanced technology, important equipment, key components and new patterns will speed up transforma­tion and upgrading of the entire industrial chain,” he said.

China’s textile and garment exports soared 11.1 percent on a yearly basis to $72.25 billion in the first quarter, according to the CNTAC. The council predicted that the industry will experience a slowdown in growth in the first half, due to external factors such as weak global demand and supply chain issues.

As the bill H.R.6256 passed by the US Congress in December 2021 attempts to prevent the importatio­n of goods produced in China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region into the United States, Sun said this move will hit hard on the exports of Chinese cotton textile and garment goods to the US market.

Eager to enhance its earning strength and mitigate risks, the CNTAC and its member companies have made notable progress in both basic and applied research. The industry has shifted its focus from following others to keeping pace and even leading the way. Breakthrou­ghs in technologi­cal bottleneck­s have been made in the fields of new fibers, green manufactur­ing and textile machinery.

The developmen­t of the platform economy and content economy has fueled the upgrading of traditiona­l brands and the emergence of new brands. E-commerce platforms such as SHEIN and PatPat are wellknown in overseas markets. The changing lifestyle and consumer behavior have brought new markets and product categories for new brands. The love of hanfu — traditiona­l Chinese dresses — and domestic brands has heralded a new trend known as guochao, a Chinese phrase referring to homegrown style. Domestic brands have entered a high-speed growth period.

In addition to facilitati­ng the integratio­n of digitaliza­tion into industrial developmen­t, Sun said China’s textile and garment companies will work harder on developing new markets via new technologi­es and the country’s dual-circulatio­n developmen­t pattern that takes domestic developmen­t as the mainstay, with domestic and internatio­nal developmen­t reinforcin­g each other.

The US, the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, the European Union and Japan remained the four biggest export markets for China’s textile and garment products in the first quarter, accounting for 54.6 percent of the country’s total exports of this kind during the period, data from China’s General Administra­tion of Customs showed.

“Although many domestic manufactur­ers encountere­d fierce competitio­n from rivals in Southeast Asia since the second half of 2021, they still have distinct advantages in design, equipment, and integratio­n of the upstream and downstream industry chains,” said Deng Lijun, chief analyst at Changchun-based Northeast Securities.

The introducti­on of advanced technology, important equipment, key components and new patterns will speed up transforma­tion and upgrading of the entire industrial chain.”

Sun Ruizhe, president of the China National Textile and Apparel Council (CNTAC)

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