Constrained growth exhibited by India in the apparel and textile sector

India misses the clothing cut in consequence of inadequate incentives, excessive emphasis on cotton fibre and handlooms by the government, flip-flop in raw material policy, faulty duty structure in the man-made fibre segment where imports of certain raw materials (like PTA) are taxed higher than those of finished products and inflexible labour laws.

An analysis of export trends of key nations shows that while the average annual growth rate of Chinese textile and clothing (T&C) exports slowed to 6.1% since 2012 (it was as high as 20.1% in 2011), India has managed to perform only a tad better, with an average expansion rate of 8.2% in the last three years.

With China gradually shifting from labour-intensive industries (like garments) to capital-intensive ones due to soaring wage costs, India is unlikely to capitalize on that opportunity if it fails to address the structural issues plaguing the sector at the earliest.

Vietnam, however, clocked an impressive 15.8% growth rate in its T&C exports since 2012. Even Bangladesh, despite facing an international backlash for poor labour standards following a number of tragedies at its garments units that claimed hundreds of lives in recent years and resulted in some global retailers cutting down on their garment orders, managed to perform decently with a 7.8% growth rate since 2012.

India has failed to take advantage of a slowdown in China’s textile and garment exports as also persisting global concerns about violations of labour norms in Bangladesh in recent years, while tiny Vietnam seems to have emerged as the largest beneficiary, reports Banikinkar Pattanayak in New Delhi.

A vision document, aimed at raising the country’s textile and clothing exports, including handicrafts, to $300 billion by 2024-25 from the current $41 billion, is still waiting to be taken up by the Cabinet, even 10 months after the Ajay Shankar panel had submitted it.

The withdrawal of certain export incentives in the recently-announced foreign trade policy 2015-20 is going to make it even more difficult for domestic exporters.

Recent Posts

TJX Companies removes fur, angora, mohair from its products

TJX Companies has decided to remove natural fur from its collections, including angora, which comes from rabbits, and mohair, which…

3 days ago

Bangladesh plans to boost jute production and sustainability

The government of Bangladesh has introduced a detailed and multi-level plan to increase jute production and improve its quality.

3 days ago

Eastman launches Naia Lyte for lightweight, high-performance fabrics

Eastman introduced Naia™ Lyte, a new cellulose acetate filament yarn, at the Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics Spring/Summer 2026 exhibition.

4 days ago

Ecco, Spinnova develop shoe using leather by-product fibers

Ecco, Spinnova have introduced the Ecco BIOM 720 shoe. This product is unique as it uses leather by-products that are…

4 days ago

Xefco deploys first waterless plasma dyeing system

Xefco has deployed its Ausora system, marking the first time a waterless plasma textile dyeing machine has been deployed at…

4 days ago

trinamiX to use NIR technology for supply chain transparency

trinamiX is helping manufacturers, recyclers, sorters, and brands improve material identification through its mobile near-infrared spectroscopy technology.

5 days ago