China Textiles
China has a long and rich history in production of silk, bast
fiber, and cotton textiles. The earliest silk producer, China began
exporting to West Asia and Europe around 20 B.C. Ramie, a grass
used to produce woven fabrics, fish lines, and fish nets, was first
cultivated around 1000 B.C. and is found in the southern provinces
of Hunan, Hubei, Sichuan, Guangdong, and Guizhou, and the Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region. Cotton spinning and weaving was the
largest domestic industry in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. After a respectable but inconsistent
performance from 1949 to 1978, textile production increased
significantly with the introduction of the agricultural
responsibility system (see Glossary)
in 1979
(see Crops
, ch. 6). By
1979 supplies of textiles had improved, the cloth-rationing system
(in force since 1949) ended, and the industry began to flourish.
From 1979 to 1984, the output value of the textile industry
rose approximately 13 percent annually. In 1984 China had about
12,000 enterprises producing cotton and woolen goods, silk, linen,
chemical fibers, prints and dyed goods, knitwear, and textile
machinery. Textile production was 15.4 percent of the country's
total industrial output value in 1984. Textile exports in 1984
(excluding silk goods) totaled US$4.15 billion, up 21.7 percent
over 1983, and accounted for 18.7 percent of the nation's total
export value. By 1986 textiles had replaced oil as the top foreignexchange source.
Traditionally, the coastal areas had the most modern textile
equipment and facilities. Shanghai Municipality and Jiangsu
Province were the nerve centers of the industry, accounting for
31.6 percent of the total gross-output value for textiles in 1983.
Other major textile areas were Shandong, Liaoning, Hubei, Zhejiang,
and Hebei provinces.
After 1949 cotton textile production was reorganized and
expanded to meet consumer needs. Cotton cultivation increased in
the areas around the established spinning centers in the port
cities of Shanghai, Qingdao, Tianjin, and Guangzhou. New spinning
and weaving facilities opened near the inland cotton-producing
regions. In 1983 China produced 4.6 millions tons of cotton, more
than double the 1978 total.
China still was the world's largest silk producer in 1983,
manufacturing approximately 1 billion meters of silk textiles.
Shanghai Municipality and Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces were the
main silk centers. That year China also produced approximately
100,000 tons of knitting wool, 140 million meters of woolen piece
goods, 3.3 million tons of yarn, and 541,000 tons of chemical
fibers.
Data as of July 1987
|