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Research Note 8 1997-98

Textiles, Clothing and Footwear-Overseas Tariff Rates Facing Australian Exports

Tas Luttrell
Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Group
29 September 1997


The Government recently announced its decision on levels of tariff protection for the Textiles, Clothing and Footwear (TCF) industry sectors after 2000. It was announced that tariff reductions would continue until 1 July 2000 but rates would then remain unchanged until 1 January 2005, when a further reduction would occur.

A central part of the debate before that decision and the earlier Automotive Industry decision, was the question of tariff protection facing Australian exports of similar products.

One line of argument which emerged was that Australia should pause in its tariff liberalisation process and make future reductions in protection contingent on clear progress toward liberalisation by its trading partners.

It was claimed that Australia still faced very high levels of protection in export markets and that further reductions in tariff protection would leave Australian TCF industries exposed to unfair competition from countries which were not lowering their protection.(1)

It was also suggested that high duty rates applying in the United States and the European Union made Australia more vulnerable to competition products from low-cost countries such as China seeking markets.

A distinctive feature of the TCF industries has been the high levels of tariff and quota protection applied in many countries. The replacement of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) by the World Trade Organization (WTO), reductions in protection levels agreed upon in the Uruguay Round negotiations and the liberalisation in trade promised through APEC(2), however, have begun to change that image.

In the 1997 Trade Outcomes and Objectives Statement in February, the Minister for Trade noted that when the Uruguay Round agreements are fully implemented (by 1 January 2005), about 68 per cent of Australia's TCF exports will enter overseas markets duty-free.(3)

The WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing, arising from the Uruguay Round, includes a program for elimination of the country-specific quotas which were a feature of the Multifibre Arrangements under GATT.

Within APEC some members have reaffirmed their Uruguay Round targets, while others have promised greater access to their markets or achievement of the promised targets more quickly.

The following table shows the maximum and minimum tariff levels applicable to TCF product groups imported into Australia and the simple average tariff for each group. The table shows similar details for TCF exports to Australia's major markets.

New Zealand, Hong Kong and Singapore do not appear in the table. Australian exports to New Zealand enter duty-free and the other countries have zero tariffs.

The table indicates that while high rates of duty still apply in a number of countries-notably China and Thailand, the rates for Australia's other main markets are comparable to, and in some cases well below, the equivalent Australian rates.

Unfortunately, in some countries the problems that arise are not with tariffs but with non-tariff barriers, e.g. anti-dumping policies, quarantine restrictions quotas and technical standards.

  1. The Textiles, Clothing and Footwear Industries, Industry Commission Report No. 59, 9 September 1997, vol. 1 p. 231.
  2. Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation. The group members are: Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, People's Republic of China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Republic of the Philippines, Singapore, Chinese Taipei, Thailand and the United States of America.
  3. Trade Outcomes and Objectives Statement, The Hon. T. Fischer, Minister for Trade, February 1997, p. 56.

Table of Tariff Rates and Simple Averages (%)

 

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