Close Menu
Indian Textile Journal
  • Home
  • Market and Economy
    • Apparels & Garments
    • Fibres & Raw Materials
    • Home Textiles
    • Industry Update
  • Textile Machinery
    • Allied Equipment and Accessories
    • Automation
    • Dyeing, Processing & Finishing
    • Knitting
    • Printing
    • Spinning
    • Weaving
  • Tech Textiles
  • Sustainability
  • Resources
    • Trade Fair
    • Events
    • Videos
  • Interview & Opinion
  • Subscribe Now
  • Advertise
  • Digital
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Indian Textile Journal
Epson
  • Home
  • Market and Economy
    • Apparels & Garments
    • Fibres & Raw Materials
    • Home Textiles
    • Industry Update
  • Textile Machinery
    • Allied Equipment and Accessories
    • Automation
    • Dyeing, Processing & Finishing
    • Knitting
    • Printing
    • Spinning
    • Weaving
  • Tech Textiles
  • Sustainability
  • Resources
    • Trade Fair
    • Events
    • Videos
  • Interview & Opinion
  • Subscribe Now
  • Advertise
  • Digital
Indian Textile Journal
Home » Is MSP unsettling cotton spinners?
Industry Update

Is MSP unsettling cotton spinners?

By July 30, 20182 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link

Indian cotton textile sector is at an important stage, given the trade situation between the two other leading cotton producing and trading countries. In addition to the above global picture, Indian government has recently hiked its support price for cotton by about 28 per cent.

The unsettling trade situation between the world’s leading cotton exporter, United States of America and a leading user, China, should place India’s cotton and textile sector in a better situation. Indian currency has been weakening against dollar, which should benefit textile exports. However, this positive sense is not felt by the textile industry in India.

Recently, the Indian government announced minimum support price (MSP) increase for important crops such as paddy and cotton to support farmers. While providing support to India’s farm sector is welcomed by agriculture, textile and allied sectors, there is some feeling in the textile sector that the support to the farm sector should have been provided by some other mechanism and not by market intervention schemes such as MSP, as this will increase the price of domestic cotton.

Will the spinners be in a position to absorb this price hike, questions S Velmurugan, general manager of a large cotton spinning mill in Aruppukottai, India. The mill in the South Indian town of Aruppukottai has about 70,000 ring spindles and produces fine count yarns catering to home textiles sector. While the industry benefited due to established presence as a leading yarn exporter and relatively cheaper skilled labour force, Velmurugan states that those advantages have been slowly eroding due to countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, etc. The MSP increase would make the raw material relatively expensive, which will impact the sector.

These current situations are making it clear that the Indian cotton sector should focus on increasing its productivity, improving its quality, working on its contamination levels and diversifying its strength. Enhancing its product basket, strengthening its downstream processing and developing value-added textile sectors such as technical textiles could offer near to long term benefits for India’s textile industry.

Previous ArticleTextile sector faces up to Rs 1,500-cr losses
Next Article ZDHC recognises ECO PASSPORT by OEKO-TEX®

Related Posts

PDS earns Great Place to Work recognition in 10 countries

June 2, 2026

Cotton imports exempted from customs duty

June 2, 2026

Turkmenistan sees focus on high-tech Italian textile machinery

May 29, 2026
Recent Posts
  • Trützschler IDF 3 unlocks short fibre processing potential
  • World Environment Day 2026 – 5 wardrobe choices combining style and sustainability
  • MiRooh unveils cosmic candy bedroom collection
  • CMAI hosts AI Masterclass to guide clothing businesses into the digital era
  • PDS earns Great Place to Work recognition in 10 countries
  • NITMA welcomes cotton import duty waiver
  • Cotton imports exempted from customs duty
  • Trident Group and ICAR-NINFET explore tie-up for natural fibre home textiles
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

SISTER PUBLICATIONS

Construction World Equipment India Industrial Product Finder Infrastructure Today

© 2026 Indian Textile Journal. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.