World Textile and Apparel Trade and Production Trends: USA and EU published by Textiles Intelligence in March, 2009. This report consists of 40 Pages and the price starts from US $ 785.
Abstract
US clothing demand contracted in 2008 for the first time since the late 1940s.
Sales via clothing and clothing accessory stores, and department stores were
down although sales via warehouse clubs and superstores were dynamic. Clothing
sales are expected to decline further in 2009 as consumers cut back on their
spending, and devote a larger share of their disposable income to savings.
Clothing imports fell by 2.7% in volume terms, and the fall was evident in
garments made from all of the major fibre types - cotton, wool, man-made
fibres, and silk blends and non-cotton vegetable fibres (SBVF). Textile
imports were down by 7.2%, reflecting declines in yarns, fabrics and made-up
textiles. China remained the USA' s largest textile and clothing supplier in
2008 with a 41% share of the market. Other major suppliers included Pakistan,
India, Mexico and Vietnam. US production of textiles and clothing fell
sharply, reflecting the weakening market as well as the continuing migration
of production to lower-cost foreign locations. The fall in output also had a
detrimental effect on employment. However, exports rose - by 1.1% in textiles
and by 2.6% in clothing.
EU textile and clothing production also declined in 2008, and the decline
accelerated following falls in the second half of 2007. Clothing output in the
third quarter of 2008 was down by 4.7% compared with the corresponding period
a year earlier while textile output was down by an even sharper 8.7%.
The drop in output came after the elimination of safeguard quotas against
certain Chinese products at the end of 2007, and coincided with a worsening of
the EU trade deficit in 2008. Having said that, imports from most of the major
suppliers weakened in volume terms. During the first 11 months of 2008,
textile and clothing imports from Hong Kong, Indonesia, South Korea, Thailand,
Turkey and Vietnam all fell at double digit rates. The main exception was
China, which raised its shipments to the EU by 6.5%.
EU firms have been achieving gains in certain export markets. In Eastern
Europe, for example, notable successes have included Russia - which became the
largest destination for EU clothing exports in 2007 - and Ukraine. Clothing
exports to the United Arab Emirates have also fared particularly well.
Table of Contents
SUMMARY
- USA
- Consumer demand
- Retail market
- Imports
- Production
- Exports
EUROPEAN UNION
- Trends in EU textile and clothing production
- Trends in EU textile and clothing trade
- Textile trade
- Textile exports
- Textile imports
- Clothing trade
- Clothing imports
- Clothing exports
- Austria
- Belgium
- Bulgaria
- Cyprus
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hungary
- Ireland
- Italy
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Malta
- Netherlands
- Poland
- Portugal
- Romania
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- UK
- Outlook
List of tables
- Table 1: USA: leading suppliers of textile and clothing imports, 2003-08
- Table 2: Extra-EU27: fibres, textiles and clothing trade balances, 2006
and 2007
- Table 3: Extra-EU27: textile exports by ten leading destinations, 2006 and
2007
- Table 4: Extra-EU27: textile imports by ten leading suppliers, 2006 and
2007
- Table 5: Extra-EU27: clothing imports by ten leading suppliers, 2006 and
2007
- Table 6: Extra-EU27: clothing exports by ten leading destinations, 2006
and 2007
- Table 7: Intra-EU27: textile and clothing exports by member state, by
value, 2006 and 2007
- Table 8: Intra-EU27: textile and clothing imports by member state, by
value, 2006 and 2007
- Table 9: Extra-EU27: textile and clothing exports by member state, by
value, 2006 and 2007
- Table 10: Extra-EU27: textile and clothing imports by member state, by
value, 2006 and 2007