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Beyond China: US' Xinjiang cotton ban has far-reaching implications, even for Asian alternatives

For garment manufacturers in South and Southeast Asia, a sweeping United States ban on all Xinjiang products - including cotton - may initially seem like a windfall, given its smothering effect on China's role as the world's top textile maker.

But the reality is far more complicated, as the global textile supply chain is so deeply intertwined that what looks to be a potential boon could instead be a crushing burden.

The concern came into the spotlight as the Bangladesh Garment Buying House Association (BGBA) asked its members last month to be cautious about sourcing raw materials imported from the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region after Washington's Uygur Forced Labour Prevention Act came into effect.

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Kazi Iftaquer Hossain, president of the non-profit BGBA, told the Post that although the act has not yet impacted the Bangladeshi garment industry, it may still face setbacks due to the US' import restrictions.

"So far as we know, Bangladesh garment exporters haven't encountered difficulties till now, but they send messages relevant to the current change of their policy," Hossain said. "Here, we exporters have to prove that no Xinjiang province materials - either wholly or partially - are used to manufacture our garments, so it's a real challenge."

Bangladesh imports about 40 per cent of cotton products from China, Hossain added when explaining how "it's difficult to change this major sourcing".

Taking advantage of the production-capacity shift in the labour-intensive industry away from China over the past few years, countries in South Asia have been steadily increasing their market shares in terms of textile exports to the US.

The US boycott of Xinjiang cotton has been another catalyst of the trend, and it may further fundamentally reshape the global textile supply chain by isolating China - the world's biggest textile producer, exporter and consumer.

According to data from the US Department of Commerce, the share of US cotton product imports from China was 21.5 per cent in the first five months of this year, down 3.7 percentage points from 2020. Meanwhile, the share of those from Bangladesh increased from 8.4 per cent in 2020 to 10.2 per cent, and those from India were up from 16.5 per cent to 19.2 per cent. Vietnam's share has remained at around 9 per cent in the past two and a half years.