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Newsletter: October 2009
Trends in EU Textile and Clothing Imports
Overall, EU textile and clothing imports rose in
value
by just 0.2% in 2008, reaching Euro80.46 bn (US$117.65 bn). However, the
overall figure conceals the fact that clothing imports alone were up by 2.4%
in value while textile imports declined by 5.7%.
In
volume
terms, the trends were similar as textile and clothing imports as a whole
fell by 2.9% but clothing imports rose by 2.8% while textile imports fell by
6.7%. In the first three months of 2009, reflecting the worsening economic
situation, textile and clothing imports fell by 1.7% in value terms and by
11.9% in volume.
Prices
rose
in 2008, despite an increase in the availability
of supplies following the removal of safeguard quotas against China at the
end of the previous year. Some suppliers increased their prices in order to
maintain revenues in the face of falling sales volumes as the global
financial crisis took hold. However, many suppliers have been moving to
higher value products.
Eight of the ten largest textile and clothing
suppliers to the EU raised their prices in 2008. Among these, the average
price of imports from Vietnam rose by a significant 49%. However, this was
exceptional, and other increases were more moderate.
In the first three months of 2009, all of the ten largest suppliers raised
their prices at a time when volumes were declining. EU imports of Chinese
dresses, pullovers, trousers, T-shirts and women's blouses—which had been
subject to safeguard quotas from mid-2005 to the end of 2007—rose in volume
at double and triple digit rates in 2008, while the average prices of these
imports fell at double digit rates. In contrast, imports of these items from
Vietnam all fell sharply in volume but surged in price. |