The government must take steps necessary to make the Indian textile sector competitive, besides being dedicated on the tariff front. Like China, India has all required resources technology, skilled labourers, raw materials. It lacks is the political will to rectify policy anomalies. Twisted labour laws do not favour the creation of massive textile manufacturing units that could compete with the Chinese facilities in the economy of scale.
The government must not rest easy after erecting tariff walls. The textile sector needs rejuvenation to make it the thriving export engine it once was. Tariff protection is a half measure. Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Vietnam are giving the Indian textile industry a run for its money. Most of these countries have extremely favourable trade treaties with India, including Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) and benefits from other pacts.
China had been indirectly exporting its products without paying duties through these countries after a little value addition. The tariff wall will make it to use this gap to acquire market access. The government needs to plug this gap through the principle of rules of origin.
INDIA has doubled import duties on 328 textile items making costlier imported garments such as fabrics, carpets and technical textiles. Evidently, this policy decision aims to guard Indian manufactures from the fallout of a bitter Sino-US trade war. Indian textile is expected to suffer from collateral damage. India took a quiet, unannounced step last month to protect its key industry when it raised import duty on more than 50 textile products. The recent action is much bigger in terms of the number of products.
The textile sector is India’s second largest job provider after agriculture. It consists of almost 15 per cent of the country’s total exports, making it the world’s second largest textile exporter after China. It has a sincere awareness as blocked by the Americans, China may flood the Indian market with cheap goods that would destroy the domestic industry.
Triarchy has teamed up with supermodel and climate advocate Amber Valletta to promote its exclusive Plastic-Free Stretch Denim collection.
To combat cracking, researchers have discovered an innovative solution that repurposes waste carpet fibers into concrete, significantly reducing cracking risks.
This week in Germany, the denim giant, Levi's, introduced the Levi’s Jeans Fit Guide, an innovative voice-driven tool powered by…
The MANTRA in Surat has partnered with NABL, a division of the Quality Council of India, to offer a specialized…
ReHubs, a European hub focused on textile-to-textile recycling, is teaming up with event organizer AMI to launch the Textiles Recycling…
The four-year ReBioCycle project seeks to advance recycling technologies for bioplastics such as PLA and PHA with €7.5 million in…