Fashion
Indian textile hubs under strain due to tariffs, await job loss: GTRI
Indian goods worth $60.2 billion started facing 50 per cent US duties from August 27. Thirty per cent of US-bound exports remain duty-free. Pharmaceuticals, active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), electronics lead $27.6 billion worth duty-free exports.
India’s competitors are poised to gain and will replace India in key sectors. The country’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth could drop from 6.5 per cent to 5.6 per cent, but 20 per cent export-to-GDP ratio provides cushion, the report noted.
US tariffs will hit 66 per cent of India’s exports worth $86.5 billion, with textile-apparel, carpets, handicraft, leather and the gems sectors are at risk, according to think tank Global Trade Research Initiative.
Labour-intensive sectors are bracing for 70 per cent export collapse.
Textile hubs like Tiruppur, Noida-Gurugram, Ludhiana, Jaipur and Bengaluru will be under pressure.
The most severely affected sectors are those where the United States accounts for over 30 per cent of India’s global exports, predominantly labour-intensive industries, which now face 70-80 per cent expected declines in annual exports.
Sectors with less than 20-per cent share in exports to the United States, though relatively insulated, still face 50-70-per cent potential declines due to their integration in global value chains. These include organic chemicals.
Textiles and apparel
India’s textiles and apparel sector, whose annual exports to the United States are worth $10.8 billion with 35 per cent of the share of total exports to that country, will see 63.9 per cent tariffs. Tiruppur, Noida-Gurugram, Ludhiana, Jaipur and Bengaluru will be under pressure. Bangladesh, Vietnam, Mexico, and CAFTA-DR countries are expected to replace Indian suppliers, GTRI report said.
With margins in the single digits, the new tariff effectively shuts Indian apparel out of its largest market. Tiruppur exporters are rushing shipments while cancelling new styles, while Noida-Gurugram players have frozen planned capacity expansions and is considering downsizing.
Ludhiana reports a slump in yarn and fabric demand, with working capital under stress; and Bengaluru units are preparing for shift cuts as buyers push for offshore production. Industry estimates warn of hundreds of thousands of jobs at risk across these hubs if US demand collapses.
Exporters have front-loaded shipments ahead of the deadline, but consider the government’s temporary 11-per cent cotton duty waiver (August 19-September 30) insufficient to offset the loss. A few firms are shifting US-bound programmes to Bangladesh, Indonesia, Vietnam and Guatemala, while others may start using factories in Ethiopia and Kenya (around 10-per cent tariff). Industry bodies are seeking emergency credit and tax relief.
Carpets
The carpets sector, with $1.2 billion worth annual exports to the United States and 58.6 per cent share, faces collapse, it noted. Livelihoods in Bhadohi, Mirzapur and Srinagar will be jeopardised, while Turkey, Pakistan, Nepal and China gaining.
Bhadohi-Mirzapur exporters report containers ready but orders cancelled or delayed, while Kashmir’s hand-knotting community faces potential mass unemployment as orders dry up. Moradabad, linked through metalware and accessories, is also seeing a slowdown.
Larger firms are exploring new markets in the Middle East and Europe, product diversification into synthetic rugs, and offshore machine-made production in Turkey or Egypt to maintain US access. However, for traditional hand-knotted producers, relocation is not an option due to the highly specialised and localised nature of their craft.
Handicrafts
Handicrafts ($1.6 billion; 40-per cent share) and furniture and bedding ($1.1 billion; 44.8-per cent share) risk factory closures across Jodhpur, Jaipur, Moradabad and Saharanpur, with Vietnam, China, Turkey, and Mexico filling the gap.
The effect is widespread across India’s craft hubs. Rajasthan faces severe disruption, with many workshops preparing for closures. Uttar Pradesh has seen orders paused and production cuts in brassware and wood-carving units. The tariff threatens not only incomes but also the survival of centuries-old craft traditions.
Leather and footwear
Leather and footwear ($1.2 billion; 20-per cent share) will lose ground to Vietnam, China, Indonesia and Mexico, threatening Agra, Kanpur and Tamil Nadu’s Ambur-Ranipet clusters, the GTRI report observed.
Industry bodies are pushing for diversification into the EU, the United Kingdom and Gulf markets and exploring ‘Made in Europe’ partnerships to retain competitiveness in the US market.
Furniture and Bedding
India’s exports to the United States of this sector was $1.1 billion in FY25, with the latter having 44.8-per cent share in India’s exports. Tariffs rise from 2.3 per cent to 52.3 per cent, affecting manufacturing hubs in Jodhpur and Moradabad.
Mattresses, already under US anti-dumping duties since 2024, will now face a prohibitive cost barrier, effectively pricing Indian products out of the American market, the GTRI report said.
Jodhpur and Saharanpur workshops report packed containers with buyers withdrawing orders, forcing overtime cuts and layoffs. The Delhi-National Capital Region upholstery belt is holding finished goods in warehouses as US buyers re-price contracts, while protests in Jaipur’s handicraft districts highlight fears of widespread job losses.
Thousands of livelihoods linked to timber, textiles, and artisanal supply chains risk collapse if US demand vanishes, according to the report.
For bedding and home textiles, Pakistan, China, Turkey and Vietnam are poised to replace Indian suppliers, while Vietnam, Indonesia, Mexico, and China will dominate mattresses and boxed foam products, it noted.
Organic Chemicals
Organic chemicals ($2.7 billion; 13.2-per cent share) will see tariffs jump from 4 per cent to 54 per cent, crippling chemical hubs in Gujarat, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh and yielding ground to EU, China, Mexico and South Korea.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Vietnam textile-garment sector targets $50 mn in exports in 2026
The goal, however, is challenging due to external pressures, including stricter technical barriers, reciprocal tariffs on goods exported to the United States, and the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) for selected industrial products.
Therefore, major export industries in the country have started restructuring and adjusting strategies early in the year to seize market opportunities.
Following a record export value of $475 billion achieved in 2025—up by 17 per cent YoY—Vietnam aims at adding nearly $38 billion to the figure in 2026.
Major export industries in the country have begun restructuring and adjusting strategies early in the year to seize market opportunities.
The textile and garment sector, which earned $46 billion in 2025, has set a target of $50 billion in exports in 2026.
The textile and garment sector, which earned $46 billion in 2025, has set a target of $50 billion in exports in 2026.
The sector is focusing on strengthening domestic supply chains, raising localisation rates and making more effective use of free trade agreements (FTAs), Vu Duc Giang, chairman of the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS), was cited as saying by a domestic media outlet.
Exports may grow by 15-16 per cent this year, driven by market expansion and a shift towards higher-value products, according to MB Securities’ Vietnam Outlook 2026 report.
Fibre2Fashion (DS)
Fashion
Netherlands’ goods exports to US fall 4.7% in Jan-Oct 2025
The data showed that the decline was driven mainly by weaker domestic exports, with goods produced in the Netherlands down 8 per cent YoY. In contrast, re-exports to the US rose 3.9 per cent during the period. Exports to the US have fallen every month on a YoY basis since July, CBS said in a press release.
Trade flows were influenced by uncertainty around US import tariffs. In the first half of 2025, trade between the two countries continued to grow, possibly as companies advanced shipments ahead of announced tariff measures.
Goods exports from the Netherlands to the United States fell 4.7 per cent YoY to €27.5 billion (~$33 billion) in the first ten months of 2025, driven by an 8 per cent drop in domestic exports, according to CBS.
Re-exports rose 3.9 per cent, while tariff uncertainty weighed on trade.
Imports from the US increased 1.9 per cent to €48.1 billion (~$57.7 billion).
Meanwhile, imports from the United States rose 1.9 per cent YoY to €48.1 billion (~$57.7 billion) in the first ten months of 2025.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
Philippines revises Q3 2025 GDP growth down to 3.9%
The Philippines’ economic growth for the third quarter (Q3) of 2025 has been revised slightly lower, with gross domestic product (GDP) expanding 3.9 per cent year on year (YoY), down from the preliminary estimate of 4 per cent.
Gross national income growth for the quarter was also revised to 5.4 per cent from 5.6 per cent, while net primary income from the rest of the world was adjusted to 16.2 per cent from 16.9 per cent.
The Philippine Statistics Authority has revised down the country’s third-quarter 2025 GDP growth to 3.9 per cent from an earlier estimate of 4 per cent.
Gross national income growth was also lowered to 5.4 per cent, while net primary income from abroad eased to 16.2 per cent.
The PSA said the adjustments reflect its standard, internationally aligned revision policy.
The Philippine Statistics Authority said the revisions were made in line with its approved revision policy, which follows international standards for national accounts updates.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (HU)
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