He does say that the end of quotas would increase China's share of the U.S. textile market (that is of the textiles that the U.S. does not produce for itself) would increase from 11% to 18%.
Lower incomes encouraged consumers to trade down to cheaper goods, and the elimination of textile quotas in January 2009 allowed China to increase its slice of that market.
The government-commissioned Davies report last year said quotas should be imposed unless top firms acted to increase the number of women on their boards to at least one in four by 2015.