World's apparel, sneakers hub Vietnam struggles as US ban on Xinjiang
cotton bites
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[April 27, 2023] By
Francesco Guarascio and Khanh Vu
HANOI (Reuters) - Tighter U.S. rules to ban imports from China's
Xinjiang are compounding pressure on Vietnam's apparel and footwear
makers, hitting a sector that has already shed nearly 90,000 jobs since
October in the global manufacturing hub as demand slowed.
Among garment exporters, Vietnam has faced the worst hit from the the
Uyghur Forced Labor Protection Act (UFLPA), a Reuters review of official
U.S. data showed. The law, in place since June, requires companies to
prove that they do not use raw material or components produced with
Xinjiang's forced labor.
The U.S. clampdown hurts as it comes on top of a drop in clothing demand
from richer nations that has already dented industrial output and
exports from the Southeast Asian manufacturing powerhouse, a major
supplier to big brands such as Gap, Nike and Adidas.
Of the $15 million worth of apparel and footwear shipments held up for
UFLPA checks more than 80% were from Vietnam, and only 13% of its
cargoes were cleared for entry, U.S. customs data up to April 3 showed.
Many U.S. importers are still sanguine, but their supply chains could
still be disrupted as Vietnam's apparel makers depend on China for about
half of their input materials, according to the country's industry
association.
Vietnamese manufacturers, trade associations and the industry ministry
did not reply to Reuters questions about the impact of UFLPA.
The value of shipments from Vietnam that have been denied entry to the
U.S. exceeded $2 million, three times more than those from China - with
the sanctions having increased exponentially in the first months of this
year. While U.S. controls have been far more frequent for the
electronics industry, especially for solar panels which could be made
with polysilicon from Xinjiang, only 1% of electronics cargoes checked
were denied entry, as opposed to 43% of apparel and footwear shipments.
In total, customs checked nearly 3,600 shipments worth more than $1
billion from a range of countries to ascertain they did not carry goods
with input from forced labor in Xinjiang, U.S. customs data showed.
XINJIANG LINKS While the halted shipments represent a tiny portion of
the $27 billion worth of garments and footwear Vietnam exported to the
U.S. last year, compliance risks may lead to more painful adjustments
for Vietnam.
That, in turn, will hit U.S. consumers as Vietnam is their main source
of cotton apparel, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce.
"Vietnam's heavy reliance on cotton textile materials from China poses a
significant risk of containing Xinjiang cotton, as the province produces
over 90% of China's cotton," Sheng Lu, Director at the Department of
Fashion and Apparel Studies at the University of Delaware, told Reuters.
He said it was unlikely Vietnam could drastically reduce this
dependence, also because many manufacturers there are owned by Chinese
investors.
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Labourers work at a garment factory in
Bac Giang province, near Hanoi October 21, 2015. Vietnam's textiles
and footwear would gain strongly from the TPP, after exports of $31
billion last year for brands such as Nike, Adidas, H&M, Gap, Zara,
Armani and Lacoste. REUTERS/Kham
An industry and a government official familiar with the matter
confirmed that some Vietnamese suppliers may find it hard to comply
with the new rules, either because they import cotton from Xinjiang
or because they are unable to prove they do not.
The Federal Maritime Commission, the U.S. agency responsible for
international ocean transportation, warned earlier this month of
potential supply chain disruptions caused by UFLPA checks. In a
survey last year, nearly 60% of U.S. fashion industry managers said
they were exploring countries outside Asia for their supplies as a
reaction to the forced labor law. Sheng Lu said it would be hard for
U.S. firms to rapidly find alternative suppliers, therefore more
checks on Vietnamese cargoes are to be expected.
Western companies should "make more significant efforts to map their
supply chain, figure out where production at each stage happens and
demonstrate adequate due diligence", he said. SHEDDING JOBS
Weaker demand has forced the industry, Vietnam's biggest employer
after agriculture, to shed nearly 3% of its 3.4 million workers
since October, and contributed to an 11.9% drop in the country's
exports and a 2.3% decline in output in the first quarter of this
year from a year earlier, slowing growth.
Roughly one in every three pairs of shoes that Nike and Adidas sell
globally and 26% and 17% of their clothing, respectively, is made in
Vietnam. However Nike has significantly reduced its output of
apparel and footwear in Vietnam despite the country remaining its
main manufacturing hub, according to its latest annual report
updated to May 2022. It did not reply to questions about UFLPA.
Adidas did not comment on UFLPA either, but said downsizing at its
Vietnamese suppliers would respect local law.
"Vietnam continues to be among our major sourcing countries," an
Adidas spokesperson said. Gap said it had no shipments detained. Two
officials from U.S. footwear and apparel industry trade associations
said the new rules have had no major impact so far on Vietnam and
blamed recent job cuts on lower global demand. Major job cuts in
Vietnam were under way at Pou Chen, a major supplier to Nike and
Adidas, Reuters reported in February, at a time when it is planning
a big manufacturing investment in India.
People were fired at a contractor of U.S. sportswear company Under
Armour, and workers had their hours slashed at Regina Miracle
International, a supplier of U.S. lingerie giant Victoria's Secret,
workers and executives told Reuters. Those companies did not reply
to Reuters' questions. "Normally, firms recruit new workers after
Tet (Lunar New Year), but this year everything has gone the
opposite," said Nguyen Thi Huong, 45, who worked for Pou Chen for
ten years and recently lost her job.
(Reporting by Khanh Vu and Francesco Guarascio; Additional reporting
by Kate Masters, Casey Hall and Phuong Nguyen; Editing by Miyoung
Kim and Sonali Paul)
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