The European Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson
said yesterday the European Union was glad to see China's
voluntary measures to increase its export tariffs on textiles.
"The European Commission has to consider
carefully to see whether the duties will operate quickly
enough, strong enough and with enough certainties,"
he said.
China's textile exports grew rapidly this
year but it was not China's fault, he said. Since the European
countries had not been fully prepared, he hoped that the
two sides would reach consensus under the World Trade Organization
framework and handle the matter smoothly.
"It (dealing with these current trade
frictions with China) takes me a lot of time everyday but
it is justified," Mandelson said.
Safeguard measures on China's T-shirts
and flax yarn will be launched by European Union in 10 days
in case no progress is made through the formal consultation
between the two sides.
Other quotas on Chinese socks, which went into effect last
October, were filled last week, meaning no more Chinese
socks can be legally imported to the United States.
"The one thing I can predict is that
there will be more safeguards," said Labuda yesterday.
The US quotas have added to the market confusion created
by the new taxes on exports to be imposed by the Chinese
Government. Export tariffs on each of some kinds of products
will be raised to about 1 yuan (12 US cents) - from a previous
level of about 0.2 yuan - at the end of the month.
For Chinese clothing suppliers, the quotas
are likely to hurt because "we cannot export some products,"
said Barry Zheng of Ningbo Veken Elite Zhedong Knitting.
"Clients here want to give us orders but they are worried
that they may not get that order."
And local companies have called on the government
to be stronger in consultations and find more effective
ways to achieve the healthy growth of China's textiles exports.
"I do expect the Chinese Government
can act stronger when it begins the textile consultation
with the United States since we have much bargaining room,"
said Wei Bensen, a manager from the foreign trade department
of Shandong-based Yeliya Garment Group.
Textile associations and academics have
requested that the government retaliate against the United
States through trade action or take the US side to the WTO.
Wei also expected the government to find
a better way to motivate exports. He said the increased
export tariffs would greatly impede China's textile exports
to other markets such as Japan and South Korea, and do little
help to calm export growth to the United States and Europe.
"An export license system is a better
way to control export speed," he said.
Meanwhile, the EU's textile committee's
decision to back consultations may also precede temporary
import quotas on Chinese exports. The final decision will
be made by the EU today.
Source:China Daily