1 / 13

Apparel Value Chains and Opportunities to Create Jobs in the TPP

Apparel Value Chains and Opportunities to Create Jobs in the TPP. Toni Dembski-Brandl Target Corporation, on behalf of the TPP Apparel Coalition September 2011. TPP Apparel Coalition. TPP Apparel Coalition Key Goals. The Coalition supports the negotiation of a

Download Presentation

Apparel Value Chains and Opportunities to Create Jobs in the TPP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Apparel Value Chains and Opportunities to Create Jobs in the TPP Toni Dembski-BrandlTarget Corporation, on behalf of the TPP Apparel CoalitionSeptember 2011 Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  2. TPP Apparel Coalition Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  3. TPP Apparel Coalition Key Goals The Coalition supports the negotiation of a 21st Century TPP agreement, which offers a potential growth platform for economic integration, trade and investment that could provide tremendous new opportunities for our members to buy and sell goods and services, to sustain and grow well-paying jobs and to provide high value add for the U.S. and TPP economies. Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  4. The History of Managed Trade for Textiles and Apparel Before 1995: Managed through global system of quotas – Multi-Fiber Arrangement (MFA). 1995 – 2004: Phased transition to quota-free trade – Agreement on Textiles and Clothing. 2005 – 2008: Special China Safeguards. 2009: Full integration into global trade system. Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  5. Why Does a Yarn Forward Rule of Origin Not Work in Today’s Global Supply Chains? Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  6. Example: Fabric Inputs Required by One Factory For One Year Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  7. What is a Global Value Chain? • The value chain describes the full range of activities that firms and workers do to bring a product from its conception to the final customer. • This includes activities such as design, production, marketing, distribution, retail and support to the final customer. • When considering ways to create new opportunities in the TPP for apparel, it is important to keep in mind the value and jobs created throughout the entire value chain, not just factory production. Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  8. Two Garment Timelines How a garment is produced 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 How a garment is produced from a trade agreement perspective 4 5 6 • R&D, Design Garment • Legal Reviews • Order Garment and Inputs • Make/Ship Yarn • Make/Ship Fabric • Make/Ship Garment • Distribute Garment • Market Garment • Sell Garment Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  9. Wide Variety of Apparel Value ChainsOne Size Does Not Fit All • Garments could be made in a TPP country from imported fabric that uses TPP yarns. • Garments could be made in a TPP country from imported yarns used to make fabric in a TPP country. • Garments could be made in a TPP country from imported fabric. • Garments could be designed and marketed and sold in a TPP country, creating additional jobs. • The ex-factory value of the garment is only a small percentage of the retail value—on average about 25-35%. Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  10. Effective Apparel Rules that Promote Jobs throughout the TPP • A yarn forward rule of origin is too narrowly focused on this small percentage of value that comes from the factory, while ignoring the majority of the retail value. • The TPP Apparel Coalition believes TPP negotiators should embrace a modern textiles and apparel policy that facilitates the millions of jobs that are sustained by today’s global value chains. • Flexible rules of origin based on either a change in tariff heading (CTH) or a regional value-content (RVC) requirement would be most effective to spur new investment in the TPP region. Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  11. A Value Chain Breakdown 75% 25% • Rest of the Picture (US) • R&D • Design • Legal/Compliance • Shipping • Distribution • Merchandising • Retail Operations • Inputs (US, TPP, or Other) • Labor • Yarns/Fabrics • Sewing Thread • Buttons • Label • Embroidery Thread • Finishes • Packaging Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  12. Qualifying Garments in TPP • Despite the significant value add within the TPP region, under a restrictive yarn forward rule of origin, the jeans couldn’t qualify for duty-free treatment. • TPP negotiators must create simple and understandable rules for eligibility to encourage more trade in the region. • Today’s consumers expect a wide variety of fashionable apparel and flexibility in sourcing inputs is necessary to meet design specifications and consumer demands. Toni Dembski-Brandl on Behalf of TPP Apparel Coalition

  13. Thank you! For more information, go to www.tppapparelcoalition.org

More Related