Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Saturday, Nov 19, 2005


News
Features
Stocks
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - WTO


`WTO meet must discuss textile issues separately'

Our Bureau

"To protect jobs in the industry in the poorest countries, textiles and clothing needs to be detached from the general discussions."

Coimbatore , Nov. 18

THE International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers Federation (ITGLWF) has said that the next month's WTO ministerial meeting at Hong Kong must have specific discussion on the impact of trade liberalisation on textiles and clothing sector in countries forecast to face their textile trade `burnout'.

The federation has in this regard urged the trade unions to prevail upon their respective local governments to bring forward the agenda for WTO developing measures to help emerging and struggling industries adjust to meet the threats posed by dominant producers such as China and including the possibility of a permanent safeguards clause.

"To protect jobs in the industry in the poorest countries, textiles and clothing needs to be detached from the general discussions in the Hong Kong meet and treated separately," the federation General Secretary, Mr Neil Kearney, has said in a statement.

The `bleakest' forecasts for trade and employment trends for 2005 have not materialised and the industry remained relatively stable in countries forecast for burnout this year.

But this had not happened by accident. The threat of safeguard action followed by the introduction of new trade restraints in the EU and the US caused a rethink by many intent on relocating production to China.

Calling upon the global trade unions to work towards creating adequate trade measures to meet the threat posed by dominant players, the federation felt that the refusal of governments to enforce effective labour legislation and failure of voluntary initiatives involving corporate codes of conduct to eradicate the key abuses made it essential that the WTO and the ILO created mechanisms to help `outlaw' the use of exploitation to gain market advantage.

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page

More Stories on : WTO



Stories in this Section
More jobless among the educated: Study


Next round of rains likely from tomorrow
Cheaper metals check inflation
Mahindra British, MICO sign pact with Maharashtra Govt
States reluctant to cut stamp duty on NPA take-outs
Drawback rates hiked on slew of items
Plea for hike in import duty on vanaspati
East Asia Summit a harbinger for Asian integration
SAFTA will more than double SAARC trade: PM
Indian-model of `social entrepreneurism' in healthcare to be replicated
Army doctors on AIDS awareness tour
Govt to move towards 6-laning of golden quadrilateral: Montek
LNG imports likely to be increased to meet demand
Assam Co completes testing at Amguri 6 well
ONGC won't sell its stake in IOC, says Raha
Ranbaxy seeks directive on generic manufacture of Tamiflu
NTPC to set up captive coal mines
Govt panel looking at R&D expense-related tax provisions
CII meet on textiles in Hyderabad
Nortel sees potential in SMB segment
US Consulate raises visa fee to Rs 4,600
AP proposes to provide piped water in all cities
Jhanjra project foreclosure cleared
What Jehanabad means
IIM Kozhikode's 2-day seminar from today
NIFT to be accorded university status
`Think a little different from the ordinary'
Cochin SEZ assn office-bearers
Free FAPCCI consultancy
K. Radhakrishnan is NRSA chief
50 acres for science city
Retail: Govt weighing different FDI models
MIGA offers insurance product for SMEs — Eligibility: Less than 300 staff, $15-m assets, $15-m sales
`WTO meet must discuss textile issues separately'
New philanthropy centre to be set up at Nitte
Amendments to Competition Act to be finalised soon: Gupta
All set for Dubai air show tomorrow; major deals likely
Ministry open to suggestions to simplify FBT
After a lull, timeshare segment now enters growth phase


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | The Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2005, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line