The lastest Covid outbreak sweeping China has begun
impacting the global textile and apparel supply chain, an industry expert has
warned, raising uncertainty over production delays and factory closures.
The Omicron
variant of the Covid virus is making its way across several big cities in China
after President Xi Jinping made a U-turn on his former zero-Covid policy of
containment earlier this month.
The spread of infections,
which has hit China’s capital city Beijing the most, is threatening widespread
business disruption to the world’s second-largest economy and largest apparel exporter. According to figures from the Financial Times, more than half the 22m population is
infected.
The increase in infection
rates means industry across China is facing disruption such as staffing
shortages, which is leaving businesses vulnerable to closures, while sickness
in the logistics sector is causing supply chain chaos.
Dr Sheng Lu, associate professor of fashion and apparel studies
at the University of Delaware, tells Just Style: “The latest Covid outbreak in
China has started affecting the global textile and apparel supply chain and
deserves a close watch. One imminent challenge is a nationwide labour shortage,
production delays, and even factory closures as Covid cases surge. When
Covid-19 first broke out in China in early 2020, garment-exporting countries in
Asia struggled to get enough raw textile materials as China was their top
supplier. The same situation could repeat this time.”
Lu says another big concern is
new uncertainties. “How soon would China’s Covid situation stabilise? Shall we
worry about a severe economic recession in China? Will China’s Covid outbreak
result in new variants that complicate the world’s pandemic situation? Will the
Chinese government have another U-turn in its Covid policy?
“Given these mounting
uncertainties, fashion brands and retailers are likely to accelerate their
“China exit” strategy and prioritise mitigating supply chain risks in their
sourcing decisions.”
Indeed, Bob
Antoshak, partner at Gherzi Textil Organization, recently told Just Style
that the uncertainty that exists within China has contributed to sourcing
strategies closer to consuming markets, as witnessed in a revival of sourcing
in the Western Hemisphere and in support of the US retail market.
According to the FT, companies have now been left with no direction on how
to handle the sudden surge in cases, after previously operating under strict
guidelines handed down by local governments. Some factory bosses have dropped
restrictions such as PCR testing and fencing off workers from the wider
population. Experts have said factories could face worker shortages until
February, after the lunar new year. The Omicron outbreak has brought forward
the annual movement of more than 290m migrant workers from the coastal
provinces back to poorer regions in the west, which occurs ahead of the festive
period.
By Just Style