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Bangladesh’s exports of readymade garments to the European Union have decreased by 1.24 per cent to $11.36 billion year-on-year in the first half of 2023-24 fiscal year.
Exporters say a fall in overall imports by the EU, especially Germany, has caused Bangladesh’s RMG exports to the region to drop.
What really happened is that the purchasing power of the EU customers has waned for different reasons, said Faruque Hassan, president of Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association.
“They imported a very good amount in 2022. Some inventories remained in their stock at the time. This is one of the reasons behind the EU importing less from Bangladesh and other big exporters, including China and Vietnam. It didn’t happen to Bangladesh only.”
Citing data from the Export Promotion Bureau, the BGMEA said on Friday that Bangladesh’s apparel exports to EU country Spain increased by 6.56 per cent, France 2.15 per cent, the Netherlands 9.11 per cent, and Poland 19.14 per cent.
But exports to Italy fell by nearly 3.9 per cent.
The biggest importer Germany bought $2.86 billion worth of Bangladeshi garments, 17 per cent less than the same period previous year.
“Germany is the single largest market of Bangladeshi garments in the EU. Our exports to the EU fell because of the fall in exports to Germany,” said Mohiuddin Rubel, a director of BGMEA.
Bangladesh’s RMG exports to Canada also fell by 4.16 per cent to around $742 million in the July-December period.
The exports to the US, however, increased by 5.7 per cent to cross $4 billion.
The UK took Bangladeshi garments worth $2.71 billion with a 13.24 per cent growth.
In the non-traditional markets, Bangladesh’s exports in the July-December period grew by around 12.3 per cent to $4.53 billion with a nearly 10 per cent rise to Japan, 24.7 per cent to Australia and over 19 per cent to South Korea.
“We’ve done well in the non-traditional markets, including Australia. Overall, it was good for us amid a fall in demand in the EU,” said Faruque.
The BGMEA president hopes the EU’s demand will increase soon as they will run out of stock with a rise in retail sales.
“Besides this, the election in Bangladesh has ended and the new monetary policy has cut the lending rate.”