Tuesday 29 November 2011

Share of Textile and Clothing in manufacturing and total GDP

Tuesday 29 November 2011 by Smartex Trading · 0


. Share of Textile and Clothing in developed and total GDP
T&C industries have a say in varying degrees to GDP directly. Some general
commentary includes: 
• Manufacturing is on average a fifth of GDP, less in low income countries and
older in middle income countries;
• The contribution of the T&C industry to manufacturing value added increases
with incomes but begins to fall at some level. The share of T&C in MVA is a
third in low-income countries but approximately a sixth in middle income countries.
• Combined, T&C contributes 7% of GDP in low income countries.
  
 Source: World Development Indicators – based on tables A7-A10 in Appendix A
The contribution of T&C is still very high in some LDCs even though it has fallen in recent times. The contribution of T&C to MVA in Bangladesh was 30% (latest year for which data available). In Madagascar, it fell from 36% in 1990 to 6% in 2006 and in Nepal from 31% in 1990 to 19% in 2006. With respect to other low-income countries, the contribution of T&C to MVA in India increased to 24.4% in 2003. In Pakistan, the participation of T&C to MVA was 92% in 2006. The T&C industry makes a liberal contribution to the economy as a whole; the data suggest that Pakistan has been able to maintain the competitiveness of its exports over 1990-2006. ElSalvador’s MVA as per cent of GDP barely increased between 1990 and 2006 nor did the contribution of T&C to MVA. Vietnam has substantially increased its exports of T&C and clothing in particular.  Although low income countries are more dependent on T&C exports, low middle income countries are the most significant group of developing country exporters. The contribution of T&C to MVA for the group as a whole averaged around 14% in 2006. In Syria the contribution of T&C to MVA  is highest at 42%. In Sri Lanka, T&C contributed 33% to MVA. In Morocco and Colombia T&C contributes approximately 20% to total MVA. The contribution of T&C to MVA is lower in the Dominican Republic, Guatemala and the Philippines. The contribution of T&C to total MVA in Colombia, Guatemala, Morocco, Sri Lanka, Syria and to a lesser extent the Dominican Republic increased between 1990 and 2006 (or nearest year). However, in other cases the contribution of T&C to total MVA decreased.  Within the high-middle income grouping, Mauritius has the highest share of T&C exports in total manufactured exports. However, the contribution of T&C to MVA is relatively low reflecting to a certain extent the Mauritian transition from T&C (a key contributor in the 1980s and 1990s) to other value added activities  102.1.3 Share of T&C in Employment Traditionally the T&C sector was responsible for significant job numbers in developed countries, but over the last decades the sector has become the first step towards manufacturing production and employment for many developing countries. While total world employment in T&C barely changed in recent decades, the distribution of employment changed substantially with the EU and US losing jobs and mainly Asia gaining (ODI et al. 2002).  Appendix A presents data on employment within industry T&C employment for selected countries across country income groupings, including average wages and the share of wages in MVA. The average result for the country income groupings are Source: UNIDO Industrial Statistics, World Development Indicators, and ILO Labour stats – average sare based on a selection of countries in each group, see Table A11 These averages reveal that textiles and clothing are responsible for the majority of formal jobs in a number of LDCs, and a third in low and middle income countries. However, the average picture overlooks country specific features. LDCs such as
Bangladesh, Cambodia, and Lesotho all have very high shares of total manufacturing employment in the T&C industry (77%, 90% and 89% respectively). In terms of value added per employee, this is highest for Bangladesh and Cambodia. However, in Bangladesh, the share of wages in MVA is twice as high as in Cambodia.  For low income countries such as Pakistan and El Salvador, T&C employs a relatively large share of the total employment in manufacturing (44.3% and 50.2% respectively) with relatively higher wages ($1,647 and $2,675 respectively).  Within the lower middle income country  group Honduras has a  very high share of employment in T&C (76%), a very high share of wages in MVA (67.5%). Sri Lanka has a relatively high dependence on the  T&C industry for employment (46.4%). Morocco has a relatively elevated share of labour employed in T&C (40%).  112.2 Dynamic aspects  Beyond the static aspects, there are several other pathways through which textiles and clothing affects economic development. T&C production may be considered as the first step up on the industrialization ladder and the wider effects depend on: 
• learning by doing and knowledge spillovers; 
• agglomeration effects; 
• local linkages;
• upgrading; and the role of value chains and FDI
This section discusses the academic pathways with some illustrated examples, while section 2.3 provides country examples.
2.2.1 Learning by Doing and Knowledge Spillovers Firms in developing countries  able to participate in global production networks and global value chains (GVC’s) of which T&C is often the first1 are typically expected to increase their skills, knowledge and technology – all considered as key factors for productivity improvement and growth (UNIDO 2004). Less technologically advanced countries can exploit their late coming and distance from the technological frontier in order to tap into new technologies. Firms in developing countries are therefore posited to ‘learn by doing’ through trade with more developed and developing countries (Young, 1991) and participation within GVC’s through international knowledge espill overs.  Without achieving and sustaining learning by doing and national knowledge spill overs, developing countries and producers may not be able to capture all benefits. As we will argue later, rising country governments have a role to play in formulating industrial policy to ensure that the potential benefits which may accrue from T&C export production are harnessed in such as way so as to result in positive learning spillovers for the wider economy. Increasing the skill level of labour should translate into higher output effects  and value added in order to maintain competitiveness at the initial stages of progress and move onto other activities. Learning effects within the economy are cumulative and can work across sectors.
 
2.2.2 Agglomeration Effects 
The climate in which low income countries can drive development from a manufacturing base created by the T&C sector is now framed by the presence of extremely large supplying countries in the global market (Brenton et al. 2007). While start-up costs are comparatively small and scale economies are not important which favours production in locations where labour costs are low, there are some important changes in the nature of the global market for clothing that may condition the role that
                                                         
1
 For  reasons such as the relatively low levels  of assets employed and low skill of labour, T&C production is often one of the first step onto the industrialization ladder and into global production networks.
12the sector can play in development relative to previous episodes of industrialization. For example, the scale of production in China has had implications for other developing countries trying to get on the T&C ladder. On the other hand, while China and India derive scale economies in terms of T&C production, it is also the case that the cost competitiveness in Southern China is being eroded by domestic pressures such as wage and land rental increases – the negative effects of agglomeration on competitiveness. This will present opportunities for other T&C exporters who are able to tap into existing niche markets. In Southern China, land and labour costs are rising within EPZs so much so that large firms are reconsidering their investment strategies and looking to other South East Asian economies where land and labour costs are lower. UNIDO (2004: 3) also suggested that even successful enterprises may find it difficult to sustain competitiveness as the wages in their countries rise and market conditions change. 
2.2.2 Local linkages
The development of local linkages with garment assembly such as business support systems may facilitate the transition into higher value added activities and horizontal diversification into other sectors, as arguably in the case of Southern China, but it also raises demand and prices of factors of production.
2
 Alternatively, the competitiveness
of the T&C value chain may be enhanced through backward vertical integration, such as through the development of the textile industry.   As an example, in Pakistan a broad policy framework ‘Textile Vision 2005’ aims to make the textile industry more competitive with additional investment downstream in order to increase the overall textile exports of the  country. Increasing the share of manmade fibre based products is also being worried. Pakistan is in the process of expanding the raw material base by encouraging the production of polyester staple fibre and other man made fibres within the country (UNCTAD 2005a). 2.2.4. Industrial Upgrading and the role of value chains and FDI  The participation in comprehensive networks and global value chains  can help industrial upgrading and improved economic performance. Gereffi (2002:21) classifies the T&C industry as a buyer-driven GVC  which contains three types  of lead firms: retailers; marketers; and branded manufacturers. Industrial upgrading in the clothing industry is primarily associated with a shift from assembly to full package production, which changes the relationship between buyer and supplier in a direction that gives far more autonomy and learning potential for industrial upgrading to the producer. This implies vertical integration, whilst also influencing GVC governance structures and the balance of power in favour of producers.  Producers can move up the T&C value chain and integrate vertically, or they  diversify moving horizontally into othersectors.3 In order to do this, producers and countries need to develop local linkages and supplier capabilities.  2 China is increasing exporting more stylish products given its level of income. See Rod rik(2006).  3 It has been observed that countries diversify until they reach a certain level of income, after which
they begin to specialize again (for an example, see Carrere et al. 2007).  13  East Asian economies such as Hong Kong, South Korea and Taiwan are good examples of industrial upgrading. They started out with low technology T&C industries and upgraded into higher value added activities and higher technology industries, making a transition from Original Equipment Manufacture (OEM) to Own Design Manufacture (ODM) to Own Brand Manufacture (OBM).4 As this process of technological and industrial upgrading  occurred, T&C production relocated and moved offshore inside the region. This stylized description of the development of the manufacturing industry within East Asia  is known as the ‘Flying Geese’ model (Akamatsu 1962). China, Viet Nam and Cambodia have more recently been able to take part in this regional process of upgrading as T&C production has been offshored and outsourced to its (mostly) coastal  regions from other East Asian Newly Industrialized Countries (NIC’s).  A major question is whether and how other countries can replicate the East Asian model of upgrading? Most authors suggest that due to the fragmentation of production, buyers increasing require suppliers to take on increasing responsibility for fabric and input sourcing, supplier managed inventory and production flexibility, for example, at the same time as they maintain control of production, export and marketing networks and in particular, branding . The implications noted by Brenton et al. (2007) for developing country T&C producers involve higher barriers to entry than in the past.  The post-quota era of T&C manufacture has  seen increased consolidation of T&C production amongst preferred suppliers. UNCTAD (2005a) notes that in most cases those countries with a geographical proximity to major buyer markets have gained.5 As buyers expect to rely more on core suppliers, they may be less footloose in their relations with suppliers. This can be good  for host country, but T&C producers are either ‘locked into’ or ‘locked out’ of T&C GVCs.  Achieving preferred supplier status may be some distance away for some developingcountry T&C producers unless they are able to competitively differentiate themselves based on other factors. This is likely to remain the case until ‘locked in’ countries are able to move up their technology trajectory and look to outsource and/or offshore their own T&C production base to ‘locked out’ countries. The previous discussion suggested that upgrading occurs via participation in value chains (without direct ownership). But it can also happen via FDI (which involves ownership of local firms). FDI can provide market access for developing country producers to developed country markets and the opportunity to upgrade and add additional value through knowledge spillovers and technological transfer, similar to being division of a global value chain.  Regarding specific FDI projects in T&C  manufacturing in developing countries, Japan was the largest outward investor in 2004, followed by the US. The mostattractive host countries included China, Eastern Europe and the US, followed by South and South East Asia.  4 See Humphrey and Schmitz (2004). 
5 It is noted that low labour costs are not enough to ensure consolidation, geography and proximity to markets in order to supply just in time delivery are key determinants.  14It is noted by UNCTAD (2005a) that between 2002-4 overall the developing EastAsia Pacific region accounted for most FDI in T&C manufacturing (38.5%), followed by Central and Eastern Europe (29.1%)  and Latin America and the Caribbean(13.1%). Africa accounted for 5.1% of total FDI projects in T&C manufacturing over the same period. In Cambodia, the textiles, clothing and leather industry was thesecond most attractive FDI destination in 2002, after wood.

Sunday 27 November 2011

Crochet Thread

Sunday 27 November 2011 by Smartex Trading · 0


Crochet thread.
Crochet yarn is particularly formulated thread more often than not prepared from mercerized cotton for crafting decorative crochet items such as doilies or filet crochet. Crochet thread produces stuff of fine gauge that may be stiffened with starch.

Yarn Measurement

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Yarn quantities are frequently calculated by weight in ounces or grams. In the United States, Canada and Europe, balls of yarn for handcrafts are sold by weight. Common sizes include 25g, 50g, and 100g skeins. Some companies also primarily measure in ounces with common sizes organism three-ounce, four-ounce, six-ounce, and eight-ounce skeins. These measurements are taken at a standard temperature and humidity, because yarn can absorb moisture as of the air. The actual length of the yarn contained in a ball or skein can vary due to the inherent heaviness of the fibre and the thickness of the strand; for instance, a 50 g skein of lace weight mohair may contain several hundred metres, while a 50g skein of bulky wool may have only 60 metres.
There are extra than a few thicknesses of yarn, also referred to as weight. This is not to be confused with the quantity and/or weight listed above. The Craft Yarn Council of America is making an effort to promote a homogeneous industry system for measuring this, numbering the weights from 1 (finest) to 6 (heaviest). Some of the names for the various weights of yarn from finest to thickest are called lace, fingering, sport, double-knit (or DK), worsted, aran (or heavy worsted), bulky, and super-bulky. This identification convention is more descriptive than precise; fibre artists disagree about where on the continuum each lies, and the precise relationships between the sizes.
A more accurate measurement of yarn weight, often used by weavers, is wraps per inch (wpi). The yarn is wrapped snugly around a ruler and the number of hush-up that fit in an inch are counted.
Labels on yarn for handicrafts often include information on gauge, known in the UK as nervousness, which is a measurement of how many stitches and rows are twisted per inch or per cm on a specified size of knitting needle or crochet hook. The proposed standardization uses a four-by-four inch/ten-by-ten cm knitted or crocheted square, with the resultant number of stitches across and rows high made by the suggested tools on the label to determine the gauge.
In Europe textile engineers frequently use the unit tex, which is the weight in grams of a kilometre of yarn, or decitex, which is a finer measurement corresponding to the weight in grams of 10 km of yarn. a lot of other units have been used in excess of time by different industries.
Some yarn retail stores try to help the customer decide yarn by attaching a sample knitted square to the shelf holding each display of a meticulous weight of yarn, sometimes provided by the producer. These samples are knit in the industry normal four-by-four inch / ten-by-ten centimetre gauge. Samples help the buyer by showing them the feel and thickness of the finished knit fabric.

Yarn Colour

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Colour:

Yarn may be worn undyed, or may be painted with natural or artificial dyes. Most yarns have a single consistent hue, but there is also a wide selection of variegated yarns:
heathered or tweed: yarn with flecks of dissimilar colored fiber
ombre: variegated yarn with light and dark shades of a single hue
Multi-colored: variegated yarn with two or more distinct hues (a "parrot colorway" might have green, yellow and red)
Self-striping: yarn dyed with lengths of color that will automatically create stripes in a knitted or crocheted object
Marled: yarn prepared from strands of different-colored yarn twisted mutually, from time to time in closely related hues.

Yarn is a long continuous length.

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Yarn is an extended unremitting length of interlocked fibres, suitable for use in the production of textiles, sewing, crocheting, knitting, weaving, embroidery and rope making. Thread is a type of yarn intended for sewing by hand or machine. Modern manufactured sewing threads may be finished with wax or other lubricants to hold up the stresses involved in sewing. Embroidery threads are yarns specifically designed for hand or machine embroidery. Spun yarn is made by twisting or otherwise bonding staple fibres together to make a cohesive thread, or "single." Twisting fibres into yarn in the process called spinning can be old-fashioned back to the Upper Paleolithic, and yarn spinning was one of the very first processes to be developed. Spun yarns may contain a single type of fibre, or be a blend of various types. Combining synthetic fibres (which can have high strength, luster, and fire retardant qualities) with natural fibres (which have good water absorbency and skin encouraging qualities) is very common. The most widely used blends are cotton-polyester and wool-acrylic fibre blends. Blends of different natural fibres are common too, especially with more expensive fibres such as alpaca, angora and cashmere. Bamboo yarn is a less luxurious kind so as to is a recent modernization.
Yarns are selected for different textiles based on the characteristics of the yarn fibres, such as warmth (wool), light weight (cotton or bamboo), stability (nylon is added to sock yarn, for example), or softness (cashmere, alpaca). Acrylic yarn is the least expensive.
Yarns are made up of a number of singles, which are known as plies when grouped together. These singles of yarn are twisted together (plied) in the opposite direction to make a thicker yarn. Depending on the direction of this final twist, the yarn will be known as s-twist or z-twist. For a single, the direction of the final twist is the same as its original twist.
Filament yarn consists of thread fibres (very long continuous fibres) either twisted together or only grouped together. Thicker monofilaments are typically used for manufacturing purposes rather than fabric production or decoration. Silk is a natural filament, and synthetic filament yarns are used to produce silk-like effects.
Texturized yarns are made by a process of air texturizing (sometimes referred to as taslanizing), which combines multiple filament yarns into a yarn with some of the characteristics of spun yarns.

Yarn specifications [1]

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Fun Fur Yarn
TH-005
Novel fun fur thread with solid dyed which is suit for bathrobe, socks etc. This item with very good spongy touch feel. Composition: 100% Polyester heaviness Of Skein: 50g for each skein Specification: 4.5NM
Rope Yarn
TH-105
Novel dream Snowflake Yarn with solid dyed which is suit for bathrobe, socks etc. This item with very good soft touch feel. Composition: 100% Polyester Weight Of Skein: 50g for each skein Specification: 1.05NM
Fansay Snowflake Yarn
TH-168
Novel fancy Snowflake Yarn with solid dyed which is suit for bathrobe, socks etc. This item with very good soft touch feel. Composition: 100% Polyester Weight Of Skein: 50g for each skein Specification: 12.5NM
Chunck Yarn
TH-016
Novel Fantasy Snowflake Yarn with solid dyed which is set of clothes for bathrobe, socks etc. This item with very good soft touch feel. Composition: 100% Polyester Weight Of Skein: 50g for each skein requirement: 1.05NM
Chunky Yarn
TH-943

Novel Chunky thread with solid dyed which is suit for bathrobe, socks etc. This item with very high-quality soft touch feel. Composition: 100% Polyester Weight Of Skein: 50g for each skein Specification: 4.4NM






Saturday 26 November 2011

Characteristics of the textile and clothing sector

Saturday 26 November 2011 by Smartex Trading · 0


The textile and clothing industry comprises:
The treatment procedure of raw materials, i.e. the preparation or production of various textile fibres, and/or the manufacture of yarns (such as through spinning).
"Natural" fibres include cotton, wool, silk, flax, jute, etc.
"Man-made" fibres include fibres coming from transformation of natural polymers (cellulosic fibres e.g. viscose, acetate, modal, etc.), synthetic fibres (i.e. organic fibres based on petrochemicals, such as polyester, nylon/polyamide, acrylic, polypropylene, etc), and fibres from inorganic materials (e.g. glass, metal, carbon or ceramic).In relation to textile materials, the terms "man-made", "synthetic" and "artificial" fibres are often used interchangeably. According to the manufacturing processes used, "synthetic" fibres are those gained through polymerization of organic monomers, while "artificial" fibres are obtained through chemical transformation of natural organic polymers. the production of knitted and woven fabrics (i.e. knitting and weaving);finishing activities - aimed at giving fabrics the visual, physical and aesthetic properties which consumers demand - such as bleaching, printing, dyeing, impregnating, coating, plasticizing, etc; the transformation of those fabrics into products such as: garments, knitted or woven (= the so-called "clothing" industry); carpets and other textile floor covering;home textiles (such as bed linen, table linen, toilet linen, kitchen linen, curtains, etc.).



Textile Market research

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The textile and clothing  industry retains like a diverse and heterogeneous industry that covers an important number of activities from the transformation of fibres to yarns and fabrics to the production of a wide variety of  textile products such as hi-tech synthetic yarns, wool, bed-linen, industrial filters, geo-textiles, clothing etc..The Textile and Clothing sector that pays an important part of the world manufacturing industry. It plays a crucial and significant role on the economy and social well-being in numerous regions of the world. According to the latest structural data available for Europe, in 2006 there were 220.000 companies employing 2.5 million people and generated a turnover of €190 billion. The textile and clothing sector accounts for 3% of total manufacturing value added in Europe.

Pioneer in Trade

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Welcome to Smartex Fashions:
An unbridled passion for excellence, innovation and reliability has been the cornerstone of our success at Smartex Fashions. In the business of textiles for over a decade in Pakistan and overseas, we are a hundred percent textile products export house recognized by the Smartex efforts and integration world wide. Based in the culturally resplendent city of exports, we have been a pioneering force in the textile industry. Over the years we have evolved into a one-stop shop for textile products, bringing to you the entire spectrum of woven, printed and embroidered fabrics as well as garments and accessories for women. By fusing the best of design with high production values, we are proud to be a company for trading and sourcing that meets the stringent time and quality standards of global fashion.



All kinds of yarns

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Now a days some where...the weather is becoming warmer and warmer due to the Greenhouse effect. Thin and fine materials such as super wash wools, rayon, thylotex, azlon, cashmere, anti-pilling acrylic etc., in the form of two-in-one, three-in-one or even six-in-one components produced by means of semi-worsted machines tend to be very popular, thus making great competition and imitation among spinning factories in Pakistan.With long years of experience, Smartex can provide all kinds of yarns categorized from worsted spinning yarns, semi-worsted yarns, woolen spinning yarns, cotton spinning yarns and spun silk spinning yarns to dissimilar types of fancy yarns. We have kept some of them constantly in stock for your instant orders too.

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