US hopes for 'fair' China textile deal (AFP) Updated: 2005-09-09 10:56
The United States hopes for a "fair" deal with China to regulate textiles trade
but will "walk away" from a bad one, US Trade Representative Rob Portman said,
AFP reported.
Chinese workers sew
garments at a textile factory in Panjin, Northeast China's Liaoning
Province September 5, 2005. [newsphoto] |
Speaking after talks in Beijing a week ago failed to find a breakthrough to
the simmering row, Portman said there were still grounds for hope.
"I'm optimistic about the comprehensive agreement with China because it's
good for China," he told reporters.
"It would add certainty to an uncertain next three years," he said. Current
US safeguards against Chinese textile imports allowed by the World Trade
Organisation are due to expire in 2008.
"On the other hand, absolutely the United States government would walk away
from a bad deal," Portman said, adding that Washington would not "negotiate
away" trade protections allowed it by the WTO.
To the anger of US and European textiles producers, Chinese garment exports
have rocketed since a global quota system was abolished on January 1 in line
with WTO guidelines to liberalise the trade.
The European Union and China on Monday signed a "fair and equitable" deal to
end a costly impasse that left millions of Chinese-made garments blocked at
European ports and strained relations.
Millions of Chinese clothes and textiles were impounded at EU ports because
they exceeded import quotas agreed by both sides in June as part of a deal that
narrowly averted a trade war.
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