Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India

Cotton, textiles, and apparel are critical agricultural and industrial sectors in India. This study provides descriptions of these sectors and examines the key developments emerging domestically and internationally that affect the challenges and opportunities the sectors face. More than four million...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bedi, Jatinder S., Cororaton, Caesar B.
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161260
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author Bedi, Jatinder S.
Cororaton, Caesar B.
author_browse Bedi, Jatinder S.
Cororaton, Caesar B.
author_facet Bedi, Jatinder S.
Cororaton, Caesar B.
author_sort Bedi, Jatinder S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cotton, textiles, and apparel are critical agricultural and industrial sectors in India. This study provides descriptions of these sectors and examines the key developments emerging domestically and internationally that affect the challenges and opportunities the sectors face. More than four million farm households produce cotton in India, and about one-quarter of output is produced by marginal and small farms. Although production has expanded-most recently with the introduction of Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) cotton-domestic prices dropped sharply in the late 1990s, in parallel to world cotton prices. Using partial equilibrium simulations, we estimate that a price movement of the magnitude that occurred has a significant effect on levels of poverty among cotton-producing households. The fiber-to-fabric production chain, from cotton processing through apparel, employs more than 12 million workers in India and provides 16 percent of export earnings. Except for the spinning industry, these sectors are dominated by small, fragmented, and nonintegrated units, which adversely affect their competitiveness. Recent policy reforms have induced some technological improvements. In terms of future prospects for the Indian processing, textile, and apparel industries, our analysis emphasizes three dimensions of reform: the need for further investments in human resource development to improve industry productivity and reduce poverty among workers in these sectors, the emergence of modern domestic retail marketing chains, and the potentially vibrant prospects for the industry that arise from a growing domestic fabric demand and new opportunities in world markets if appropriate policies and investments are undertaken.
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spelling CGSpace1612602025-11-06T06:10:21Z Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India Bedi, Jatinder S. Cororaton, Caesar B. cotton textiles clothing rural poverty subsidies economic policies markets Cotton, textiles, and apparel are critical agricultural and industrial sectors in India. This study provides descriptions of these sectors and examines the key developments emerging domestically and internationally that affect the challenges and opportunities the sectors face. More than four million farm households produce cotton in India, and about one-quarter of output is produced by marginal and small farms. Although production has expanded-most recently with the introduction of Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) cotton-domestic prices dropped sharply in the late 1990s, in parallel to world cotton prices. Using partial equilibrium simulations, we estimate that a price movement of the magnitude that occurred has a significant effect on levels of poverty among cotton-producing households. The fiber-to-fabric production chain, from cotton processing through apparel, employs more than 12 million workers in India and provides 16 percent of export earnings. Except for the spinning industry, these sectors are dominated by small, fragmented, and nonintegrated units, which adversely affect their competitiveness. Recent policy reforms have induced some technological improvements. In terms of future prospects for the Indian processing, textile, and apparel industries, our analysis emphasizes three dimensions of reform: the need for further investments in human resource development to improve industry productivity and reduce poverty among workers in these sectors, the emergence of modern domestic retail marketing chains, and the potentially vibrant prospects for the industry that arise from a growing domestic fabric demand and new opportunities in world markets if appropriate policies and investments are undertaken. 2008 2024-11-21T09:54:30Z 2024-11-21T09:54:30Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161260 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Bedi, Jatinder S.; Cororaton, Caesar B. 2008. Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India. IFPRI Discussion Paper 801. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161260
spellingShingle cotton
textiles
clothing
rural poverty
subsidies
economic policies
markets
Bedi, Jatinder S.
Cororaton, Caesar B.
Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India
title Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India
title_full Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India
title_fullStr Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India
title_full_unstemmed Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India
title_short Cotton-textile-apparel sectors of India
title_sort cotton textile apparel sectors of india
topic cotton
textiles
clothing
rural poverty
subsidies
economic policies
markets
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161260
work_keys_str_mv AT bedijatinders cottontextileapparelsectorsofindia
AT cororatoncaesarb cottontextileapparelsectorsofindia