It is necessary for domestic enterprises to switch to green textile and garment production in an effort to achieve sustainable development goals and cope with the gradual loss of Vietnam’s cost advantage, insiders have said.
Vietnam's textile and garment industry will continue to face difficulties in the coming months due to the decreasing orders from markets like the US and the EU, according to the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS).
Statistics from VITAS showed that in the first half of the year, the industry’s export turnover was estimated at 18.6 billion USD, down 17.6% over the same period last year. Meanwhile, the import turnover also reduced by 20.5% to 10.7 billion USD in the first six months of the year.
VITAS forecast that production and export of textiles and garments will gradually improve, but difficulties will continue until the end of 2023 as many businesses have not yet had enough orders for the third and fourth quarters.
As such, the garment and textile sector set an export turnover target of 40 billion USD this year.
According to information from the Mercantile Exchange of Vietnam (MXV), since the end of 2022 cotton prices have been quite stable, mainly struggling within a small range of 1,800 - 1,900 USD per tonne. The cotton prices traded on the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) as of July 18 at 1,847 USD per tonne, down nearly 1.5 times from the price of nearly 2,700 USD per tonne recorded last August.
Cotton prices are stable at low levels stemming from both supply and demand of the market. On the supply side, cotton production gradually recovered after the effects of drought in the main cotton-growing region of the US in mid-2022. Meanwhile, the recovery in demand for cotton was lower than expected due to global economic headwinds.
In particular, China, the world's largest cotton importer, is still showing a slow recovery after removing its zero-COVID policy, making cotton imports less positive.
Pham Quang Anh, Director of the Vietnam Commodity News Centre, said that the world economy still faces many challenges, especially the slow recovery of China which has continued to be a major obstacle to increase demand for cotton products. Therefore, cotton prices could maintain a pullback trend in the near future.
Stable cotton prices are a good thing for big cotton importing countries like Vietnam. But the problem is that the price dropped sharply and showed no signs of recovery, making local textile and garment enterprises that had purchased goods before not able to react.
The price difference makes the cost of producing textiles and garments in the country high compared to elsewhere which is not heavily dependent on input materials, hindering Vietnamese firms in receiving orders.
Cao Huu Hieu, General Director of the Vietnam National Textile and Garment Group (Vinatex), said difficulties have been seen from the third quarter of 2022 due to low consumer demand, the deeply dropped price because of decreasing cotton prices - the main raw material of the yarn industry.
When China officially reopened, the domestic yarn industry also found it difficult to compete on price. Therefore, the entire yarn industry suffered losses and production inventories were high. In addition, the unit price dropped sharply, many manufacturing units have reduced processing prices by up to 50%.
The difficulties have not been only due to the price of raw materials, but also from intrinsic production factors.
In the past, the often mentioned advantage of Vietnam's textile and garment industry to compete with big rivals such as Bangladesh and India was abundant and cheap labour. With this advantage, the industry became a key export sector of Vietnam when contributing more than 10% to the annual export turnover.
However, in the past few years, along with the development of the labour market, cheap labour in Vietnam has no longer been an advantage.
Anh said salary increases in the textile and garment sector is a good sign for workers' lives, as well as showing the industry's capacity. But labour costs are not as cheap as before, which would partly limit Vietnam's competitiveness.
However, on the positive side, this is the driving force for the industry to improve production technology and product quality. It requires Vietnam's textile and garment industry to switch to more diversified competitive advantages to quickly return to the textile and garment supply race, not only focusing on cheap labour as before.
Switch to sustainability
To overcome these difficulties, many businesses had to be flexible in their production. They are willing to do small orders, complexity and higher requirements. However, it is still important to transform ourselves for more sustainable development.
Vu Duc Giang, Chairman of VITAS, said “greening” in garment and textile production could help businesses meet the requirements of importers from Europe, along with sustainable business development. This is no longer