Bangladesh’s garment exports to India, China and Japan grew 17.79 per cent year-on-year in the July-May period of the current fiscal year. Japan is the largest export destination for Bangladesh among Asian nations. In the July-May period, Bangladesh’s garment exports to Japan rose 13.04 per cent year-on-year. Major Japanese retailers are increasing their footprint in Bangladesh for formal garments like woven shirts and T-shirts and bed sheets.
Garment shipments to India from Bangladesh more than doubled year-on-year in the first 11 months of the fiscal year. The reason for the exponential rise is bulk purchase by western brands with operations in India and Indian clothing chains, which are finding Bangladesh’s garments to be more competitively priced for India's middle-class demographic.
Overall exports to India increased 24.67 per cent year-on-year in the July-May period. The demand for formal wear in India is high due to the growing middle-income office-going population. The three per cent stimulus given to Bangladesh’s exporters also acts positively for higher growth to India and other new destinations.
China itself is becoming a major garment export destination for Bangladesh. Moreover, China is a densely populated country. So, having a large consumer base, China is turning into a major garment export market for Bangladesh.
The trade war triggered by the US will inevitably have a wider psychological impact, causing uncertainty in Asian monetary and trade policies. In the era of globalization, if China suffers severe economic damage because of the US, India can hardly escape being shortchanged.
In 2017, China-India bilateral trade was up by 20.3 per cent year-on-year. China has become India's largest trading partner and India is China's largest trading partner in South Asia. The world's two largest emerging economies have reached a new high in economic and trade cooperation. India has remarkable advantages in IT, service and pharmaceutical sectors. China leads in manufacturing as a world factory.
Now when the US’ unilateralism undermines the interests of all countries and jeopardizes the free trade system, China and India should join hands to shield free trade. In 2017, the US was China’s largest export market and China was also the US’ largest import market. In addition, the US is India’s largest export destination and the second largest source of imports. The rising trade dependence of China and India with the US proves that bilateral free trade is a positive game. If the US launches a trade war on the pretext of the so-called trade deficit, all three parties will suffer.
The Istanbul Fashion Conference, which was first held in 2008, is an international project aimed at bringing together supply chain rings like supply, manufacturing, export, import, economy, fashion design, brand, retail, and logistics of apparel and textile sector. TGSD is organizing the 11th TGSD Istanbul Fashion Conference under the theme ‘Responsible Fashion’ on October 3 and 4, 2018 at Çıragan Palace Kempinski Istanbul. The conference will underline the strength of the clothing industry in Turkey, its sustainability and its capabilities as an unequalled business partner in the region. The first day of the conference will feature a world class speakers program. The second day will be a B2B meetings between buyers and the suppliers.
Istanbul Fashion Conference, which is included in the international event calendars, shares information on the following issues and creates new export opportunities thanks to B2B Business Meeting Platform which is organized with buying offices from foreign countries, and local brands. Istanbul Fashion Conference also provides business opportunities for our manufacturers who have participated in the conference from almost every region of Turkey.
With the ongoing tariff war between the US and China, it’s the US cotton industry which is expected to get directly hit as China piles on an additional 25 per cent tariff on US uncombed cotton imports. This will affect the US cotton industry rather significantly as China has traditionally been a large buyer of US cotton and a massive supplier of products back to the US market.
About 95 per cent of the American Pima crop is exported every year and typically China imports about 40 per cent of that crop. The highly prized long-staple American Pima cotton is soft to the touch and durable. Most of the crop is exported to China and India. For the crop year that runs through July 31, China has purchased 2,39,200 bales or approximately 120 million pounds of the fiber.
Already some 2,05,000 bales have been shipped, leaving a balance of about 34,000 bales for this year in addition to some 34,000 bales of forward contracted cotton sales for the next crop year. These existing sales along with the entire new crop are at risk relative to the proposed Chinese tariffs.
China is one of the principal buyers of US cotton as is Vietnam. The United States is the second largest exporter of cotton, having shipped around 15 million bales of cotton overseas last year.
"However, one of the problems in the region compared to Asia-China in particular is merchandising, the response time, getting samples back, highlighted Tony Anzovino, President AAPN and Chief Sourcing and Merchandising officer, Haggar Clothing. Though it has started working on this direction. As per US Commerce Department’s Office of Textiles & Apparel (OTEXA), the Western Hemisphere accounted for 6.5 per cent of the $2.33 trillion in textiles, apparel, leather and accessories imported to the US last year. For apparel alone, the Western Hemisphere accounts for 16 per cent of US imports, whereas Bangladesh, Indonesia and India combine for 15 per cent of those imports."
The recently held 2018 pro:Americas NYC Regional Summit hosted by the American Apparel Producers Network (AAPN), brought an interesting analogy to the fore as seemingly Central American countries have been able to stay away from the tariff drama being imposed by Trump Administration. The reason behind this is the US has a trade surplus with Central America, and because of that it’s making money rather than losing it, stated Mike Todaro, MD, AAPN.
However, one of the problems in the region compared to Asia-China in particular is merchandising, the response time, getting samples back, highlighted Tony Anzovino, President AAPN and Chief Sourcing and Merchandising officer, Haggar Clothing. Though it has started working on this direction. As per US Commerce Department’s Office of Textiles & Apparel (OTEXA), the Western Hemisphere accounted for 6.5 per cent of the $2.33 trillion in textiles, apparel, leather and accessories imported to the US last year. For apparel alone, the Western Hemisphere accounts for 16 per cent of US imports, whereas Bangladesh, Indonesia and India combine for 15 per cent of those imports.
The Western Hemisphere also counts for 57 per cent of men’s and boy’s man-made fibre knit shirts, 54 per cent of cotton knit shirts, 39 per cent of cotton hosiery and 34 per cent of cotton underwear. For the year to date through April, textile and apparel imports from the CAFTA countries increased 2.35 per cent to $2.54 billion worth of goods, according to OTEXA. Honduras is first for the region in apparel, Mexico is second, El Salvador is third, Nicaragua is forth and Guatemala ranks fifth.
According to Anzovino, people are looking for speed, quality and consistency and if the region can supply it at the right price. To have something faster might be a more compliant environment. One key area lacking in the hemisphere, however is wovens, specifically synthetics. You can find everything you need in this hemisphere, but not necessary at the right price. But the region is extremely strong on the knit side, said Anzovino.
Hebe Schecter, President, Kaltex America, noted that parent company Grupo Kaltex, Mexican-owned, vertically integrated conglomerate, has grown to be a full-service textile company that produces acrylic fiber, yarn, fabrics, apparel and home textile products. Interaction with customers on a timely basis helps it achieve goal. Men’s custom shirt company Stantt used thousands of body scans, millions of data points and the latest 3D modeling software to create its 99 sizes that allows for anyone to find their perfect fit using three simple measurements --chest, waist and sleeve. The factory uses cutting edge technology and equipment to craft its shirts one at a time. Stantt makes and delivers the shirts in seven days, selling through e-commerce and specialty retailers like Nordstrom and Mitchell’s. And as the Matt Hornbuckle, co-founder & CEO, Stantt, said, by eliminating the waste of excess inventories and errors, they are able to use the highest quality materials and make them at a great value.
"A glaring example of this is the launch of the latest version of AccuMark 3D by Connecticut-based Gerber Technology in partnership with the San Francisco–based startup Avametric +and Israel’s Virtuality. Fashion. And as Mary McFadden, Executive Director -CAD Product Management, Gerber Technology says, Gerber Technology, with this most recent installment has provided a solution that facilitates the process from simple sketches to interaction with consumers. She goes on to add they have good integration of data flow between these systems, as well as the ability to integrate with external systems that customers use because they have many tools they need to use in their process, so having 3-D product offerings makes the offerings more robust and complete."
Although design technology has witnessed tremendous progress over the years, advancement in 3-D platform is yet to match pace. The first half of 2018 witnessed apparel-technology leaders elevate their digital solutions to generate realistic patterns, accurate samples and streamline product lifecycle management (PLM).
A glaring example of this is the launch of the latest version of AccuMark 3D by Connecticut-based Gerber Technology in partnership with the San Francisco–based startup Avametric +and Israel’s Virtuality. Fashion. And as Mary McFadden, Executive Director -CAD Product Management, Gerber Technology says, Gerber Technology, with this most recent installment has provided a solution that facilitates the process from simple sketches to interaction with consumers. She goes on to add they have good integration of data flow between these systems, as well as the ability to integrate with external systems that customers use because they have many tools they need to use in their process, so having 3-D product offerings makes the offerings more robust and complete.
The technology enables every person contributing to the apparel-making process to make detailed changes to digital patterns, illustrating in real time how they can achieve a specific style, without the challenges of shipping patterns or samples. By allowing the artwork to actually be in the CAD data, one can eliminate these hard pieces going along the factory floor. It helps in communicating instructions to factories, especially when they don’t speak your language, because of huge language barriers.
These integrated software solutions enable brands to utilise the technology for merchandising and virtual try-on for customers. Rather than doing photo shoots with the samples and the colorways that one needs to populate an e-commerce website, you could use 3-D simulations instead.
Lectra, the French technology-solutions provider, which recently upgraded its 3-D technology to streamline the Fashion PLM 4.0 platform, also aims to offer a comprehensive system for apparel design. The brand through its Connected Development application and the Connected Design, offers enhanced tools for patternmaking, 3-D sampling and marker making.
Integrating its 3-D platform with a 2-D patternmaking feature was essential for an easy communication between a designer and his team. The 3-D sample can be used early in the design process to make decisions in terms of style lines, the size of the garment or ensure the vision of the designer is clearly communicated and understood by the technical-design team or patternmakers. It can also be used later for fitting purposes, which is a very strong feature for Lectra’s 3-D offering.
Despite the influence of fast fashion on software innovation in the apparel-industry, there is a thrust on sustainable solutions to make the design process more efficient. In addition to fully integrating these fashion design steps into digital platforms, technology providers are developing applications that allow detailed samples to be viewed and altered by professionals in different corners of the world.
Amnon Shalev, Chief Executive, Virtuality.Fashion aimed to develop a product that provided a crisp, digital vision of designs and whose technology allowed fashion brands to bypass 2-D patternmaking, creating a detailed sample in less than 48 hours. Based on a software created for the video-game and movie industries, the applications provide a realistic vision of designs. Illuminating on the technology, Shalev says, there is pressure on designers to introduce new collections faster, more collections in a single season and faster to the market. If you have to do 3-D and go through 2-D, it takes time. With our technology you don’t have to go through 2-D. Presentations can be done very fast for buyers and management.
Apparel-software providers, by investing in innovative upgrades to their own software and joining cutting-edge digital partners, are creating virtual creative spaces and options to help designers reduce waste, cut costs and bring collections to market faster.
Oak Tasar, silk development project has been launched in Uttarakhand. This development project is being supported by the Textile Ministry’s Central Silk Board. It is expected to provide a new dimension to employment of farmers associated with the silk industry. Increasing production of silk in the state can lead to additional income generation for farmers. Apart from a grant of a crore, land will be provided for the Oak Research Center. Like Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand will arrange funds for silkworm farmers.
This ambitious project will increase silk production in the state. India produces about 3,3,000 metric tons of silk. The production of mulberry silk in Uttarakhand is now 33 metric tons and the target is to produce 55 metric tons. In Uttarakhand, oak grows naturally in good quantities. The weather is ideal for Manipuri Oak. Uttarakhand can take advantage of the current situation as silk production has decreased in plains. Experts feel in the hills, adequate agricultural land is available and farmers can cultivate silk by raising oak and mulberry plants. Farmers and the silk department will have to make efforts to increase the production of oak and mulberry.
Turkey wants to impose new measures on textile firms importing material from China, alarming leaders of one of the country’s biggest export industries. The textile ministry had been asking for additional documents for textile imports from July but it has been asked to postpone the move until January.
The government plan was aimed partly at tackling Turkey’s widening current account deficit, which reached $47.1 billion last year. The material imported from China was sold to other countries such as Russia and the United States, benefiting Turkey. Turkey imported a quarter of its $10.1 billion textile from China in 2017, more than half of which was cotton fabrics and intermediary goods. The new measures are likely to add costs and cause delays in trade. Turkey’s textile sector is a pillar of its economy. Ready-to-wear clothing accounted for about 18 per cent of Turkey’s $157 billion exports last year.
IndustriALL Global Union’s affiliate in Sri Lanka has directed ATG Ceylon to stop union busting at its factories. Recently, workers at ATG belonging to the Free Trade Zones & General Services Employees’ Union (FTZ&GSEU) picketed the British Embassy over labour abuse at the company.
Labour violations have continued at ATG after the union was forced to hold a vote in February 2017 to represent workers, despite already having a mandate to do so. The company has refused to discuss worker issues brought up by the union. Neither has it allowed the union to meet in the factory, even though it is the recognised bargaining agent. Furthermore, 59 workers who celebrated Labour Day on 1 May, after the government decided to postpone the 1 May holiday to 7 May, were put on compulsory leave and their photos were displayed in a notice that claimed they engaged in unlawful strike action.
In another act of victimisation during the company’s 25-year anniversary celebrations in 2017, the company refused to give eight union activists a medal for their five or more years of service, as other workers had received. IFTZ&GSEU has received considerable support from the German ambassador in Sri Lanka, who wrote to the Minister of Labour on 20 June 2018 expressing concerns of the violations of labour rights at the company.
The Woolmark Company has strengthened its brand identity in Vietnam through high-quality natural fibres and wool products. The company has been working in the Vietnamese market for the last five years, witnessing the country’s growing interest in the use of natural fibres and its potential for production of quality wool product. The industry employs more than 2.7 million people in the country, equivalent to 25 per cent of the industrial workforce and is the second largest export earner in the manufacturing sector.
Accounting for 17 per cent of world apparel exports in 2017, Vietnam’s textile exports have steadily grown to $31.1 billion in 2017 from the modest $1.35 billion in 1998, listing the country among the world’s top five textile exporters. However, it is essential for Vietnamese businesses to develop specific strategies to enhance competitiveness and generate breakthroughs. Simultaneously, businesses also need to leverage effective flows of foreign investment, while actively participate in the supply chain to reduce costs and optimise domestic performance.
The textile and garment industry has long been Vietnam’s key economic sector. The industry employs more than 2.7 million people in the country, equivalent to 25 per cent of the industrial workforce and is the second largest export earner in the manufacturing sector.
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