http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A59822-2004Dec12.htmlBarriers Are Intended to Curtail Chinese Shipments; Plan Roils Textile IndustryBy Paul Blustein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 13, 2004; Page A15
Eighteen days before the end of a 30 year-old system restricting international trade in textiles and apparel, the Bush administration is imposing new barriers on imported clothing that is likely to curtail an expected flood of Chinese imports in the first few months of next year.
The administration's measures include an embargo that will be imposed throughout the month of January on some of the clothing shipped to the United States during the final months of 2004.
The new rules, scheduled to be published today in the Federal Register, were posted in recent days on a government Web site. Word of their impending imposition has stirred anger among clothing retailers and importers, who contend that the barriers contravene an international agreement to open the worldwide textile trade starting in 2005. Administration officials counter that the measures are justified because the amount of clothing shipped from some foreign countries in 2004 exceeded legal limits.
The dispute is emblematic of the pitched political battles that many experts predict will continue well past Jan. 1, when the global textile trade is supposed to become much more free and similar in nature to markets such as automobiles and consumer electronics where supply-and-demand forces prevail.