INVESTMENT
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TRADE LINKAGES IN AFRICAN
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straining exports from their home country. Investors from Taiwan (China)
and China helped to make the textiles industry in Lesotho the single largest employer, accounting for 90 percent of export earnings.
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Other African producers also benefited from AGOA. In 2004, Sub-Saharan African exports of apparel to the United States exceeded $1.5 billion.
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The expiration of the MFA on January 1, 2005, ushered in anew apparel trade environment, however. On the one hand it unleashed anew wave of Chinese sales on the world market. The ILO, in its analysis
of the post-MFA environment, reported that textiles and apparel exports under the AGOA fell to $270 million in the first quarter of 2005 versus $361 million a year earlier. The 25 percent reduction contrasts with a 19 percent increase in China’s exports for the same period.
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On the other hand, following the expiration of the MFA, many
companies that had invested inAfrica to take advantage of the quota began moving back to China in search of cheaper labor.
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Between January and March 2005, Kenya exported $60 million of textile and clothing products to the United States,
which was 13 percent or $9 million less than the exports during the same period in But,
important to note, the stepped-up competition
African apparel makers face today is not just an Asian phenomenon:
indeed, just as fierce competition comes from other Southern markets,
such as Central and Latin America figure 6.8 shows a value-chain comparison between Kenya’s and Honduras apparel sectors.
FIGURE 6.8
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