Chinese textile firms using North Korean factories for production. Once ready, the factories then send the clothes that are labeled as Chinese all over the world. Making clothes in North Korea helps Chinese manufacturers make huge cost savings. Textiles were North Korea’s second biggest export in 2016.
Chinese suppliers send fabrics and other raw materials for manufacturing RMG to North Korean factories across the border where the garments are assembled and exported. Dozens of clothing agents operate in North Korea, acting as go-betweens for Chinese clothing suppliers and buyers from the United States, Europe, Japan, South Korea, Canada and Russia. North Korea has about 15 large garment exporting enterprises, each operating several factories spread around the country, and dozens of medium sized companies. All factories in North Korea are state-owned. And the textile factories appear to be doing great business. They take orders from not only China but all over the world.
It is believed North Korean workers can produce 30 per cent more clothes each day than a Chinese worker. Total exports from North Korea in 2016 rose 4.6 per cent. In addition Chinese companies are relocating their factories to Bangladesh, Vietnam and Cambodia to take advantage of cheaper labor.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
Cotton markets hold firm as tariffs, higher supply reshape global fiber economic…
In a year marked by tariff escalations, geopolitical brinkmanship and a recalibration of global trade flows, the international cotton market... Read more
Beyond Cotton How Kapok could redefine sustainable insulation in textiles
In the lush, humid heart of Southeast Asian rainforests stands a giant, a silent sentinel of the forest canopy. Growing... Read more
Bharat Tex 2026: Redefining the global textile value chain
Union Minister of Textiles, Giriraj Singh, has officially unveiled Bharat Tex 2026, signaling a significant leap in India’s influence over... Read more
Intertextile Shanghai Spring 2026: A hub for global textile innovation
The textile industry’s pulse is quickening as Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics – Spring Edition prepares to open its doors from... Read more
Moscow Fashion Week 2026: Blending sustainable innovation with timeless glamour
Scheduled to run from March 14-19, 2026 in Moscow, Russia, the Moscow Fashion Week (MFW) is cementing its status as... Read more
The Store as Stage: How fashion is crafting immersive consumer worlds
The North American fashion retail sector in 2026 is shedding its product-first identity and shifting towards a model that values... Read more
Turning the supply chain upside down, on-demand production reshapes apparel
The global fashion industry, long celebrated for its creativity and scale, is facing a structural reckoning. For decades, retailers and... Read more
Intertex Milano 2026 - A global nexus for textile innovation
Intertex Milano is set to return this summer, confirming its status as a premier international destination for the textile and... Read more
Primark at crossroads as AB Foods weighs spin-off amid digital and Lefties press…
The long-standing supremacy of Europe’s budget fashion champion, Primark, is facing a test. As of February 2026, Associated British Foods... Read more
Vietnam, Bangladesh, Cambodia drive US apparel imports in 2025
The 2025 year-end data for the US apparel sector reveals an industry in structural flux. Despite aggressive tariff measures and... Read more












