Return of the Dragon: Post-Quota Cotton Textile Trade |
January 1, 2005, marked the end of an era, the
conclusion of the gradual phase-out of quotas on
apparel trade for all World Trade Organization
(WTO) member nations mandated by the watershed
Agreement on Textiles and Clothing. The agreement
set a timetable for the gradual removal of quotas in
four steps — by January 1995, 1998, 2001, and 2005,
when all remaining quotas were removed. Upon
China’s accession to the WTO in late 2001, many
grew concerned about surging Chinese textile exports
and their likely continued growth in the absence
of quotas after 2004. The Fall 2002 Textile
Consumer addressed this issue, predicting that with
the expiration of all remaining quotas in 2005, China
would come to dominate international
textile and apparel trade. Revisiting this
topic, we examine how the world has
changed since 2002 and where textile
and apparel trade stands now, and we
suggest how the markets for cotton may
be affected by likely future changes in
textile trade patterns. |
Top |
| China’s Emergence in Textile Trade |
China’s growth and dominance in
textile and apparel trade come as little
surprise. Fixed-asset investment in
China’s textile and apparel sector has
climbed sixfold since 1999, to a record
102.4 billion yuan ($12.4 billion) in 2004.
Cotton use by Chinese textile mills has grown rapidly
in recent years, effectively doubling since 1999,
to over 41 million bales. A key factor behind this
increased mill use of cotton has been a robust export
trade to several destinations, including the United
States. Since China’s accession to the WTO, the
dollar value of U.S. imports of Chinese cotton textiles
and apparel has soared 91.4% (from 2001 to 2004),
reaching a record $4.4 billion in 2004. U.S. import
data for early 2005 indicate that imports from China
have climbed even more dramatically this year; for
the first four months, they were up 109.5% from
the same period last year. If this growth rate persists through the rest of the year, 2005 import volume
could jump to over $9 billion. Even more impressive
is the growth in newly quota-free Chinese textile
and apparel imports — primarily cotton-dominant
apparel categories — as discussed below.
|
Top |
| China’s Phenomenal Growth in Cotton |
Since the completion of
quota phaseouts on
January 1, 2005, world
volume of imported
cotton textiles and apparel
has climbed, but
by amounts that hardly
seem extraordinary. For
the four-month period,
the dollar value of
shipments expanded
12.7%, little higher than
the 9.8% average annual
growth over the
last 15 years. At first
blush, this growth rate is unimpressive. However,
if we focus only on shipments from China, the
growth is more pronounced. The value of U.S.
imports of cotton textiles and apparel from China
was up 109.5% for the first four months of 2005 and
is on track to reach a record volume this year. In
contrast, shipments from the rest of the world grew
only 2.8%. In part, it is this phenomenal growth in
imports of Chinese cotton products that has led to
the current impasse in trade negotiations between
the United States and China. Even so, the Chinese
growth appears less impressive when we consider
cost per SME. The landed cost of total world cotton
textile and apparel imports for the four-month
period climbed a modest 1.9%, to $2.35, while the
cost of Chinese goods rose 27.5%, to $1.87 (compared
with $2.49 for the rest of the world). It appears that as Chinese import volume climbs, Chinese costs
are moving in the direction of parity with world
costs—suggesting that Chinese shippers will enjoy
little pronounced long-term cost advantage in a
quota-free world.
|
Top |
| Newly Quota-Free Cotton Products |
If we focus just on imports of cotton product categories
freed from quotas in 2005 (primarily apparel),
a more divergent pattern in textile trading is evident.
The dollar value of total world
imports of newly quota-free cotton
products expanded 12.8%, as the
cost per SME climbed 2.1%, to
$3.26 — growth little different from
the annual average over the past
15 years. But Chinese shipments
of the same newly quota-free
products enjoyed 308.7% growth,
as the cost per SME declined 9.1%,
to $2.85. In fact, if the impressive
growth in Chinese exports is excluded,
the world volume in newly
quota-free cotton products grew
only 1.6% in dollars, as costs
climbed faster, rising 4.3%, to an
average $3.33 per SME. Given that many apparel products were among the
last to be integrated into quota-free trading, it comes
as little surprise that the most dramatic year-to-date
growth in shipments from China has occurred in
this category. The dollar value of Chinese shipments
in newly quota-free categories of cotton apparel
climbed 376.7% from the same period last year,
while the cost per SME plummeted 37.6%. At the
same time, the value of imports of these products
from the rest of the world grew only 1.8%, as the
cost per SME rose 2.5%. Various newly quota-free
Chinese cotton apparel products saw some of the
strongest growth for the first four months of 2005,
easily outpacing the growth in shipments from the
rest of the world— implying that China’s share of
the U.S. import market has expanded markedly
from year-ago levels.
|
Top |
| Forecasting Continued Growth |
In forecasting the growth in cotton products from
China, one need only look to the past for insight.
After the third stage of quota phaseout (January 1,
2002), U.S. imports of cotton products no longer
subject to quota climbed dramatically, owing primarily
to surging shipments from China. From 2001
to 2004, the import volume (SMEs) of newly quotafree
cotton products grew 69.6%. However, excluding
China, world shipments actually fell 8.4%, while
Chinese shipments mushroomed by 483.9%. As the
volume of Chinese imports grew so rapidly, the
cost per SME for these categories fell 45.9%, a decline
the rest of the world was unable to match. Accordingly,
China’s share of world
shipments of cotton products
newly integrated into quotafree
trading grew from 24% in
2001 to 53% in 2004. With
China’s increased installed
capacity for apparel production
now in place, there is little
reason not to expect similar
growth in Chinese shipments
of products from which quotas
were lifted in January 2005.
|
Top |
| The Impact on Cotton |
The lingering debate regarding
U.S. safeguard measures
against Chinese cotton textile and apparel imports directly affects the market for
cotton. With China as the world’s largest buyer of
cotton and the United States as the largest seller,
any changes in textile trade policy could have major
ramifications for cotton. For the 2005/06 marketing
year, the USDA forecasts that China will import a
record 15.0 million bales to satisfy internal mill
demand for fiber. Typically, the United States accounts
for 55% to 60% of China’s cotton purchases,
suggesting that it likely could sell a record 7 to 8
million bales to China in the coming marketing
year. Should the volume of cotton products exported
from Chinese mills wane, as a result of new trade
restrictions, the volume of cotton demand could
likewise fall, possibly resulting in an oversupply of
cotton on the U.S. and world markets, which would
suggest a depressed outlook for price.
|
Top |
| Denim Jeans: Commanding a Premium |
With 8.3 pairs of jeans filling the closet of the average
American, are consumers continuing to buy more?
According to AccuPanel survey data from STS
Market Research, denim jeans unit sales have increased
6.7% for the first quarter of 2005, compared
with the same period in 2004. Furthermore, the
average price is up 7.4%, for an increase of $1.74. A
major impetus behind this growth is sales of
premium-priced denim jeans.
First-quarter unit sales of premium-priced (over
$60) denim jeans nearly doubled from 2004 — for
a 98.8% increase, compared with only 4.0% for
lower-priced jeans. Nonetheless, 89.7% of all denim
jeans sold in the first quarter of 2005 cost under $40,
and another 7.7% cost between $40 and $59.99,
leaving premium-priced jeans with the smallest
share of denim jeans unit sales, just 2.7%. Despite their rapid sales growth, premium-priced jeans still
are for a niche market.
Premium-priced denim jeans maintain their status
by not discounting. Over 9 out of 10 (91.2%) pairs
of premium-priced denim jeans were purchased at
regular price, compared with only 40.2% of lowerpriced
jeans. Though the average price increased
for both premium- and non-premium-priced jeans,
premium prices grew much faster, up 39.4%, compared
with 2.3% for non-premium prices.
Fiber also plays a key role in the premium jeans
market. According to Cotton Incorporated’s Lifestyle
Monitor™, almost two-thirds (63.6%) of consumers
say they are willing to pay more for natural fibers
such as cotton — perhaps one reason why 88.8% of
premium-priced denim jeans sold were cottondominant
(containing at least 60% cotton).
The fact that consumers are paying more for jeans
does not mean they own fewer pairs. According to
the Lifestyle Monitor, denim jeans ownership
reached its highest level in 2004 among purchasers
of both premium and non-premium jeans. In fact,
consumers who say they are willing to pay over
$70 for a good-fitting pair of denim jeans own an
average of 13.3 pairs, compared with 8.1 pairs for
shoppers not willing to pay that much. The consumer
most likely to say she will pay over $70 for
a pair of jeans is a woman aged 20 to 24 who shops
mostly at specialty stores.
|
| |
|