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68.

Mr. Jordan quoted the production indices for various

individual items all of which showed significant increases.

He

wondered whether these figures showed that rather than domestic

production being forced out of the market it was in fact being

forced up into a different price bracket where it was competing

effectively with imports.

69.

Mr. Bodner cited the case of a big U.S. manufacturer

who had managed to keep in production by changing to the

production of rainbow-coloured and deep-dyed shirts. Although

U.S. producers were being forced into a different sector of the

market by competitive imports, the respite thus secured would only

be temporary if imports caught up with the particular style in

the higher price bracket and then undersold it.

70.

Mr. Stewart said there had been a lot of talk about

penetration by imports but was it not true that U.S. cuttings

of dress shirts and blouses had increased by 10% in 1968?

Mr. Nehmer gave figures for cuttings of dress shirts which showed

an increase from 11.3 million dozen in 1967 to 12.3 million dozen

in 1968. Sport shirt cuttings on the other hand had decreased

from 31.3 million dozen in 1967 to 30.7 million dozen in 1968.

Imports in any case had increased at a much faster rate.

Mr. Stewart observed that this showed imports had cut into

consumption, not into production.

71.

Mr. Schiff thought a more impressive picture

of the state of production could be achieved by visualising

the production index in chart form. There would be a

general flattening out of the production curve for

/apparel

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