By Ceyda Caglayan
ISTANBUL (Reuters) — Turkish clothing manufacturers, the third-largest suppliers of apparel to Europe, face higher production costs and risk falling further behind their Asian rivals after the government hiked taxes on textile imports, sector leaders say.
Ankara raised tariffs by 30-100% on hundreds of incoming textile products last week, aiming to support local yarn and fabric manufacturers that appealed for support against a wave of cheaper imports.
Apparel officials say the new taxes are squeezing the industry, which is among Turkey's biggest employers, supplying heavyweight European brands such as H&M (ST:HMb), Mango, Adidas (OTC:ADDYY), Puma and Inditex (BME:ITX).
Job cuts could come, sector representatives say, as import costs rise and Turkish producers shed market share to rivals like Bangladesh and Vietnam.
Exporters can technically apply for exemptions from the tax, but industry sources say the exemption regime is costly and time-consuming, and in practice does not work for many companies.
The sector was already fighting soaring inflation, waning demand and lower profit margins due to what exporters see as an over-valued lira, as well as the effects of Turkey's years-long experiment with cutting interest rates as inflation rose, a policy recently revisited.
The price of a Turkish-made t-shirt is now 40% higher for a European shopper than one from Bangladesh, said Seref Fayat, chairman of Turkey's TOBB Clothing and the Apparel Industry Assembly. A couple of years ago the gap was 15-20%, another source said.
«Fashion brands can bear higher prices up to 20%, but anything more leads to market losses», Fayat said.
Timur Bozdemir, president of DF Manhattan Inc, which manufactures women's
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