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Indonesia seeks to guard textile industry from Chinese goods

Indonesia is preparing to impose tariffs and use other means to protect its textile industry from imports from China, the latest in a series of nations which are responding to the flood of goods out of the world’s largest manufacturing nation.

Local textile associations requested the government step in after imports surged, hurting their business. The trade safeguards committee is investigating the issue and once they report the government will decide how to respond, Budi Santoso, the trade ministry’s director-general of foreign trade, said on Monday.

It’s unclear whether the government is considering imposing only safeguard duties or also other tariffs, but last Thursday the head of fiscal policy at the finance ministry said that they were planning to bring back safeguard duties on some fabric products which had expired in November 2022. On Friday, Trade Minister Zulkifli Hasan said that Indonesia could impose up to 200% tariffs on imports to protect local industries from cheap goods from countries like China.

Southeast Asia’s largest economy has to balance the need to attract more foreign investment and trade from China and other countries while also ensuring local businesses remain competitive. China is the biggest source of imports and largest customer for Indonesian exports, and a substantial increase in levies could prompt a reaction from Beijing and damage those ties.

Earlier this year, the government in Jakarta was forced to roll back some import restrictions which had led to shortages and a backlog of imports at ports. Now, protests from thousands of textile workers are pushing the government to introduce new curbs, after the nation imported almost 29,000 tons of imports of woven fabrics made from artificial filament yarn last year. Goods from China accounted for most of that.

“We have actually provided many fiscal instruments to protect the textile industry, including safeguard duties and anti-dumping duties, which are usually related to unfair trade that harm the domestic industry,” said Febrio Kacaribu, head of fiscal policy agency at the finance ministry. The ministry would need to discuss with other ministries on any other import duties, he added.

“There has been no formal discussion with the Coordinating Ministry regarding any new import duty,” Haryo Limanseto, spokesman of Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs, said on Tuesday. “Import duty policy, including any tariffs, may still be worked out by the Ministry of Trade and that will need to be discussed further across ministries.”

Indonesia has maintained an overall trade surplus for the last four years. However, the surplus with China flipped to a deficit in May, driven by imports of machinery and plastic goods.

Bloomberg
Bloomberg

© Bloomberg
The author’s opinion are not necessarily the opinions of the American Journal of Transportation (AJOT).

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