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One jump ahead of China.


Domestic producers of polyethylene film and bags are having a tough time with imports. Asian producers, especially Chinese, are underselling U.S. processors and even causing plant closures here. That's the complaint of domestic manufacturers who allege To state, recite, assert, or charge the existence of particular facts in a Pleading or an indictment; to make an allegation.


allege v.
 the Chinese are engaged in the unfair trade practice known as "dumping," and they want the U.S. government to stop it.

Chinese bags are making inroads inroads
Noun, pl

make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings

inroads npl to make inroads into [+
 because they are not only cheap but high quality. Senior Editor Jan Schut went to China this summer to find out how they make such good bags and sell them for so little. She found those bags aren't coming from subsidized sub·si·dize  
tr.v. sub·si·dized, sub·si·diz·ing, sub·si·diz·es
1. To assist or support with a subsidy.

2. To secure the assistance of by granting a subsidy.
 state industries but from a bunch of small, private firms that don't pay much for land, construction, labor, resin, or the locally made machinery. And these processors are surprisingly adept at squeezing more film out of a pound of resin.

Read Jan's article and you'll recognize a familiar historical tide that is unlikely to be held back by trade sanctions Trade sanctions are trade penalties imposed by one or more countries on one or more other countries. Typically the sanctions take the form of import tariffs (duties), licensing schemes or other administrative hurdles. . China is a poor nation that is climbing the same economic ladder that others have climbed before in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov. . China has thousands of mom-and-pop entrepreneurs and millions of workers who endure long hours and Spartan living conditions living conditions nplcondiciones fpl de vida

living conditions nplconditions fpl de vie

living conditions living
 for skimpy skimp·y  
adj. skimp·i·er, skimp·i·est
1. Inadequate, as in size or fullness, especially through economizing or stinting: a skimpy meal.

2. Unduly thrifty; niggardly.
 profits or wages. But Chinas youthful private industry is not competing on price alone--it has quality, too. To get quality at that price, they need--and have--lots of labor and run their machines at painfully slow rates. We couldn't make money that way, and they don't make a lot. That may not add up to unfair trade practices, but it still threatens livelihoods here. How can we compete? As we have done before,we will keep a step ahead through innovation. We will make our plants even more productive and will develop new products for them to make. We will focus less on commodity films and more on high-value, multi-layer structures that use cutting-edge materials and tooling. Someone else can always do the simple jobs cheaper. We must do the sophisticated jobs better.
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Title Annotation:Editorial
Author:Naitove, Matt
Publication:Plastics Technology
Date:Oct 1, 2003
Words:341
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