Textile Complex
Textile Complex
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Todays topics
Brief Historical Perspective Global Patterns of Development for the Textile Complex Textile and Apparel Stages of Development A Global Barometer of Development A Broad Perspective on Global Supply and Demand
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Q: Think about Japan's economic development in 1920s-1940s: would you say what happened then supported the M/M theorists or structural theorists?? Why? A: M/M Theory Imitation or at least following a developed pattern.
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Q: Why does the textile complex provide an easy entry for new producer nations to enter world economy? A: Limited capital and technology are required. These are in short supply in developing countries. Apparel production particularly is labor intensive and cheap labor is usually what developing countries have
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1. Embryonic stage In poorest and least developed countries. Cottage industries for domestic consumption. Simple fabrics: Hand produced, natural fibers. May export some natural fibers. E.g. some African countries.
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2.
Improvement in volume, quality, sophistication May develop own fiber production, including manufactured fibers. Increased production of intermediate inputs (made in own country). Increased investment from developed countries; Better infrastructure, government stability, etc. More contracting, more advice on marketing, management, etc. E.g. Advanced ASEAN members, China
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4. Golden Age
Increasingly large, sophistical t/a industries. Trade surpluses. Manufactured fiber production more advanced; These countries begin to invest in other countries. (Korea, Taiwan just as advanced countries once invested in them.) Some countries may start to shift away from textiles to other industries.
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5.
Full maturity
Output may increase, but employment begins to go down, especially in apparel sector (why?) Production of manufactured fibers, relatively complex mill products. Production more capital intensive. More extensive use of offshore production and contracting. Example: U.S., Japan, Italy ??
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6. Significant decline
Number of firms and employment levels go down significantly. Trade deficits. More offshore production. Decline occurs at different rates depending on government policies in Particular countries. Role of government important. Example: UK, Germany, France, Belgium
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Question
Q: Regarding global patterns of development more specifically, the stages of development described do you think these support the M/M theories of the structural theories? Why? A: M/M Theory Following a developed pattern.
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Question
Q: What is different about these stages than what the US and Britain went through in their industrial development? A: Investment from outside In the early Industrialized process, US and Britain developed by having no outside investment.
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T&A development generally parallel to the development stages of a nation Particularly in less-developed areas
1. Developing Stages 2. Developed stages
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Developed Stages
Difficulty in competing in the domestic market Changes make industry more competitive
Assembly in low-wage countries Investments made in technology to reduce labor costs and improve productivity More protectionist policy
Result??
Makes industry in other countries become more competitive These would have otherwise (without investment) been much slower to develop
(figure 5-7)
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Question
Q: Are you willing to consider the concept that patterns of development in textile complex reflect broader economic & industrial status in regions or nations? A: Dickerson makes the following observations: Manufactured fiber only able to be provided when country has reached a certain level of development: technology, capital inputs, infrastructures, other factors associated with development. Textile complex typically one of earliest sectors to "mature" in a country.
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Question
Q: What characteristics of the textile complex account for many of the global shifts that affect both developed and developing countries? A: Dickerson makes the following observations: 1. Serves basic human needs 2. Labor intense 3. Easy entry because of low capital and technology requirements
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Q: What is the effect, in general on Textile and Apparel Stages of Development to the global economy? A: Dickersons claim: Increasingly interlinked, more dependent and what happens in one country will have effects all over the world esp. in countries very different in economic development.
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A Broad Perspective on Global Supply and Demand Number of T/A producer nations has increased and is increasing Many earlier developing nations have become much more productive These 2 factors have led to enormous global capacity to supply consumers. Actually a global overcapacity. Global supply exceeds demand. Extremely competitive global market condition
Developed countries depend on their home markets for growth. Developing countries depend on exports for growth.
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