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Industry, the state, and the new protectionism: textiles in Canada and France

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

Rianne Mahon
Affiliation:
Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Paterson School of International Affairs atCarleton University, Ottawa.
Lynn Krieger Mytelka
Affiliation:
Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Paterson School of International Affairs atCarleton University, Ottawa.
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Abstract

In this article we address two questions pertinent to the debate on the relationship between industrial restructuring and the new protectionism. First, does the appearance of industry-specific trade barriers necessarily indicate an attempt to preserve those traditional sectors in which advanced capitalist states no longer enjoy a comparative advantage? Second, are all advanced capitalist states equally susceptible to protectionist pressures or will neomercantilist states, given their established capacity for sectoral intervention, find such pressures easier to resist than their liberal counterparts? After analyzing recent changes in textile technology and in the pattern of international competition in the textile industry, we examine the response of two states—the relatively liberal Canadian state and the neomercantilist French state—to this complex set of changes. The textile case indicates that it is a mistake to assume that states have but two options: protect or adjust. Links may be established between hightechnology and traditional industries that make it possible for inputs from the former to restore the competitive position of the latter. If such links are forged, then states may use trade barriers to allow producers time to adjust. French and Canadian textile policies reveal the conditions under which such states, although constrained by established policy networks, are nevertheless induced to respond in similar fashions to contemporary changes in the world economy.

Type
Organizing International Trade in Textiles
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1983

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References

The support of the German Marshall Fund and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada in the preparation of this study is gratefully acknowledged.

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2. The “new” protectionism is, of course, hardly new. But in its most recent form it is distinguished from traditional tariff barriers in its emphasis on quantitative trade restrictions. In terms of optimal resource allocation such restrictions are regarded in the economic literature as far more negative than across-the-board tariffs. See, for example, Balassa, Bela, “The New Protectionism: Evaluation and Proposals for Reform,” in Amacher, R. C., Haberler, G., and Willett, T., eds., Challenges to a Liberal International Economic Order (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1980), pp. 279302Google Scholar; Blackhurst, R., Marian, N., and Tumlir, J., “Trade Liberalization, Protectionism and Interdependence,” GATT Studies in International Trade no. 5 (1977)Google Scholar, and “Adjustment, Trade and Growth in Developed and Developing Countries,” ibid, no. 6 (1978); Nelson, Douglas R., “The Political Structure of the New Protectionism,” World Bank Staff Working Paper no. 471 (07 1981)Google Scholar; and Yoffie, David B., “The Newly Industrializing Countries and the Political Economy of Protectionism,” International Studies Quarterly 25 (12 1981), pp. 569–99CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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28. Eighteen VERs were negotiated between 1961 and 1970, of which 7 were limited to a single product. In contrast, the United States by 1980 had VERs with over 20 countries and many of these covered all fibers with several hundred product distinctions. See Yoffie, “Newly Industrializing Countries,” note 2.

29. With the exception of the manmade fiber division, neither industry had been significantly affected by Canada's open-door policy on foreign investment. Until the 1970s, Celanese and DuPont were the two largest subsidiaries of foreign-based transnationals in Canada although Courtaulds of the U.K. also had facilities for producing cellulosic fibers in Canada. It should be noted, however, that the Canadian branch plants were not export-oriented; like their domestic competitors, they looked primarily to the Canadian market.

30. These were the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Union, whose membership was 29,291 in 1977; the United Textile Workers of America, with 6, 771 workers; and the textile and clothing affiliates of the Québec Conféderation des Syndicate Démocratiques, which had 15,007 members.

31. Pestieau, Caroline, The Canadian Textile Policy: A Sectoral Trade Adjustment Strategy? (Montreal: C. D. Howe Research Institute, 1976), pp. 1415Google Scholar.

32. See, for instance, Biggs, Margaret, The Challenge: Adjust or Protect (Ottawa: North-South Institute, 1980)Google Scholar. Neither Biggs nor other liberal critics of the policy have bothered to examine the possibility of protection while adjustment occurs.

33. The Canadian textile industry is vertically integrated and, in most divisions, highly concentrated. Dom Tex dominates cotton and cotton-blend production; Celanese and DuPont account for the lion's share of manmade fiber production. Five firms, including Celanese, account for over 90% of manmade fabric production and three firms account for 75% of domestic worsted fabric production. The knitting and hosiery divisions, however, are more akin to the highly fragmented clothing industry.

34. The pressure from import competition, which affected textiles in 1974, came mainly from other advanced capitalist economies, notably the United States, which continue to dominate the world textile trade. The surge of low-wage imports was most pronounced in clothing but this did not affect the Canadian market until late in 1975.

35. A more cohesive and powerful labor movement may well have permitted a more forceful articulation of labor's own interests and led to the adoption of more effective labor adjustment measures, as the Dutch case suggests. See Langdon, Steven, “Industrial Restructuring in the Dutch Textile Industry,” paper presented to the European Politics Group conference, Canadian Political Science Association, Ottawa, 12 1981Google Scholar.

36. In the late 1970s Consolidated Textiles took over the other major medium-sized firm, Bruck Mills, which had been operating in the red throughout the decade. Brack was initially acquired by Japanese interests, just after the 1971 policy came into effect, who thought that the policy would operate in a more protectionist manner. Its acquisition should thus be seen as an attempt to jump the “nontariff” wall. ConsolTex and Carrington Viyella had a clearer understanding of the intent of the new policy from the beginning.

37. Peter Clark, who, as a former senior Finance Department official, had been one of the Canadian negotiators of the original multifiber arrangement.

38. Textile and Clothing Board, Annual Report, 1981, p. 73.

39. The new board has been in operation for just over a year as we write; therefore it is too early to assess its effectiveness. However, a report in the Ottawa Citizen (19 October 1982) suggests that the depth of the domestic recession is pushing a growing number of clothing manufacturers to look to mergers and new techniques as a means of survival and the CIRB has the instruments to assist them.

40. Capronnier, François, La Crise de I'Industrie Cotonnière Française (Paris: Génin, 1969)Google Scholar, and Sheahan, John, Promotion and Control of Industry in Postwar France (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1963)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

41. See Mytelka, Lynn K., “The French Textile Industry: Crisis and Adjustment,” in Jacobson, H. K. and Sidjanski, D., eds., The Emerging International Economic Order: Dynamics, Constraints and Possibilities (Beverley Hills, Calif.: Sage, 1982)Google Scholar, for further details.

42. Preferential treatment in the colonies and later the former colonies was pursued throughout the 1960s and 1970s through the Yaoundé and Lomé Conventions; see Mytelka and Dolan, “Political Economy of EC-ACP Relations.”

43. Workers were put on short hours at reduced pay rather than into retraining programs for transfer to higher skilled jobs in other industries. This induced workers to remain in the textile industry when economic conditions would have facilitated mobility. For a more detailed discussion of “chômage partiel” see Mytelka, “The French Textile Industry.”

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45. France, Ministère du Développement Industriel et Scientifique, Service Central de la Statistique et des Informations Industrielles, Les Structures industrielles françaises, 1970, Textile Bonneterie (Paris, 1970), table 11, p. 11 and p. 54Google Scholar.

46. By running down their machinery and making no allocations for depreciation, and by undertaking no reinvestment, these firms were able to sell below their rivals and were accused of selling at or below cost. See also note 48 below.

47. This should not be confused with “efficiently.” See Mytelka, Lynn K., “Direct Foreign Investment and Technological Choice in the Ivorian Textile and Wood Industries,” Vierteljahresberichte no. 83 (03 1981), pp. 6181Google Scholar.

48. Many of the larger firms accused small, marginal companies of exacerbating the effects of international pressures by the “irrational and abnormal competition… of marginal firms which use outdated, largely amortized machinery in their effort to survive.” Dollfus-Mieg & Cie., Annual Report, 1968, pp. 5–6Google Scholar; our translation.

49. Interviews with officials at Agache Willot, Lille: 22 November 1978, and at Dollfus-Mieg, Paris: 28 November and 5 and 18 December 1978.

50. For more details on this period see Mytelka, Lynn K., “In Search of a Partner: The State and the Textile Industry in France,” in Cohen, Stephen and Gourevitch, Peter, eds., France in a Troubled World Economy (London: Butterworth, 1982), pp. 132–50Google Scholar.

51. Union des Industries Textiles, L'Industrie Textile Française, Données 1979 (Paris, 1979), p. 9Google Scholar.

52. Unemployment in the textile industry rose from an average of 15,347 persons unemployed per year during the years 1958–74 to 27,813 in 1975, 29,394 in 1976, and 35,195 in 1977: ILO, Yearbook of Labour Statistics (Geneva, 1978), pp. 305–9Google Scholar. In addition a large number of workers were on short hours.

53. Job security provisions enacted since 1968, they argued, made layoffs and firings so difficult that modernization was not possible. Similarly, modernization implied the use of highly automated textile equipment, which must run 24 hours a day, seven days a week to be amortized. This means four or five shifts and again social legislation stood in the way as women, who constitute more than 50% of the labor force in textiles, are prohibited from working the night shift.

54. France, , Projet de Loi Portant Reglement Définitifdu Budget de 1975, Annexe, , Rapport au Parlement sur les fonds publics attribués à titre d'aides aux entreprises industrielles (Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1977)Google Scholar, and subsequent years–Budget de 1976, Budget de 1977, and Budget de 1978.

55. For an analysis of the distribution of loans by firm size see Mytelka, “The French Textile Industry.”

56. FSAI, Bilan de l'Action du fonds special d'adaptation industrielle au cours de l'Année 1979 (Paris: Ministère de l'Economie et du Finance, 1980)Google Scholar, Annex I.

57. Ibid., p. 3.

58. Interview with M. Crinetz, Ministère de Finance, Paris: June 1980.

59. CIDISE, Bilan de l'Action du C.I.D.I.S.E. au course de l'Année 1979 (Paris: Ministere de l'Economie et du Finance, n.d.), p. 2, and Bilan de l'Action du C.I.D.I.S.E. au cours du ler Trimestre 1980 (Paris: Ministère de l'Economie et du Finance, n.d.), p. 3.

60. Interview with M. Delerive, Director of CIRIT, Paris: June 1980.

61. Ibid.; and interview with M. Bonnaillé, Syndicat Général de l'Industrie Cotonnière Française, Paris: June 1980.

62. France, Projet de Loi… Budget de 1978, p. 50.

63. See S. Cohen and C. Goldfinger's critique of the pluralist-incrementalist model, which focuses on changes in the French social security system “required” by the liberalization of the French economy: Cohen, and Goldfinger, , “From Permacrises to Real Crisis in French Social Security,” in Lindberg, L. N., Alford, R., Crouch, C., and Offe, C., Stress and Contradiction in Modern Capitalism (Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, 1975)Google Scholar.

64. See Martin, Andrew, “The Dynamics of Change in the Keynesian Political Economy,” in Crouch, Colin, ed., State and Economy in Contemporary Capitalism (London: Croom Helm, 1979)Google Scholar.

65. See Hobsbawm, Eric, “The State of the Left in Western Europe,” Marxism Today 26:10 (1982)Google Scholar, for an interesting discussion of the difference between traditional and “neosocialist” parties.