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The impact of the removal of the Multi-Fiber Arrangement on textile and cotton trade of the United States and China

Textiles and apparel trade has been governed by the Multi-Fiber Arrangement
(MFA) for three decades. Trade restrictions have generated substantial welfare losses
and price wedges in exporting and importing countries through trade distortions.
Beginning in 1995, textiles and apparel trade underwent fundamental changes in trade
flows and patterns. The World Trade Organization’s Agreement on Textiles and
Clothing (ATC) aimed to remove all MFA quotas by January 2005.
This study established an equilibrium displacement model to investigate the
impact on textile and cotton sectors of different countries and country-groups of
removing the MFA quota. The model specifies the basic linkages of textile and cotton
markets in the United States, China and four other country-groups. With different
assumptions about U.S. textile supply elasticity, foreign cotton exporters’ reaction and
changes in the U.S. farm program payments, alternative scenarios are simulated to
predict changes in domestic and import demand for textiles and apparel, import demand
for U.S. cotton, domestic and import price of textiles and apparel, U.S. cotton price and
adjusted world cotton price. Uniform distribution was imposed for selected parameters
involved in the model to overcome the deficiency of equilibrium displacement models of
assuming certainty of known related parameters.
Results indicate increased import demand for U.S. cotton by China, higher U.S.
cotton supply, more textile and apparel supply from China, decreased domestic demand
for U.S. cotton, and lower U.S. domestic demand for textiles and apparel. However,
prices of both textile and cotton markets experience both positive and negative changes
under different scenarios. Holding other assumptions unchanged, when farm program
payments increase, U.S. cotton price and adjusted world cotton price declined. When
farm program payments are held constant, prices rise. The changes expected in U.S.
cotton price are, in absolute value, greater than those of the adjusted world price.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/3311
Date12 April 2006
CreatorsXia, Yan
ContributorsRosson, C. Parr
PublisherTexas A&M University
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Thesis, text
Format464453 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital

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