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Many of Asia's poorest nations are unprepared for the imminent end of a quota system governing global textile and clothing exports with widespread job losses inevitable as companies shift operations to China, analysts and industry players say.
Less competitive nations such as Bangladesh, Nepal, the Philippines, Cambodia and Indonesia are set to lose significant proportions of their garment and textile manufacturing industries - vital cogs in their economies - as the multi-fibre agreement is phased out by January next year.
The multi fibre agreement, established in 1975, allocates quotas of clothing and textiles that developing nations with cheap labour can export to rich countries.
It has had the effect of giving a guaranteed market for not only Asian nations, but also Eastern Europe and Mexico, to the United States and Western Europe.
It has also harnessed China's expansion potential in the textile and clothing industry but experts say that with the leash taken off in 2005, the world's most populous nation will quickly dominate the export market.
A study by McKinsey consultants for DHL released in India this month showed China could account for half the world's clothing and textile exports by 2008, up from 21.6 percent in 2000.
The rest of Asia would see their share of the world trade fall to 20.1 percent in 2008 from 31.9 percent in 2000, according to the report.
The rest of the world would suffer an even bigger decline, from 45.7 percent of the market in 2000 to 29.4 percent in 2008.
A report last year from the Institute of World Economics' Dean Spinanger and Oxfam South Asia policy adviser Samar Verma gave striking examples of what trends clothing-export nations can expect from 2005.
The report highlighted China's emergence as the world's biggest supplier of bras, which the United States had removed from quota restrictions, within just 18 months after joining the World Trade Organisation in November 2001.
China's share of the bra export market jumped from about seven percent in 2001 to over 20 percent by the end of 2002, according to Spinanger and Verma.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2004

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