In 2005, the port province of Jiangsu in east China exported
8.09 million pairs of shoes to the European Union, a drop of 11.8
percent from the previous year, according to local customs
statistics.
Last December, shoe exports to the European Union (EU) plunged
to 539,000 pairs, down 35.1 percent from 2004.
Despite the drop in quantity, prices for the exported shoes were
on average 31.1 percent higher than for the same period last year,
averaging US$1.6 per pair.
According to a report by the Nanjing Customs, the decrease is a
result of the EU's control on Chinese shoes exports for the period
Feb. 1, 2005 to Jan. 31, 2006.
The anti-dumping investigation, launched by the European Union
on Jun. 30, 2005, also contributed to the drop, the report
shows.
Europe is the third largest market for the province's shoes
exports, after the United States and Japan.
Last year, Jiangsu's sales of 25.3 million pairs of shoes to the
United States and 15.7 million pairs to Japan made up more than
78.5 percent of total shoe exports.
(Xinhua News Agency January 21, 2006)