The Guardian September 29, 2004


Designed to kick the corporates!

The No Sweat Sneaker, produced in a 100 percent union factory 
in Jakarta, is here. Distributed in Australia and New Zealand by 
ESP P/L, a business long involved in marketing environmentally 
friendly products, No Sweat Sneakers are the world's most 
revolutionary sneaker. Okay they may look like a Converse All-
Star copy, but these sneakers come with a feature that no other 
sneaker in history has ever had.

Each shoebox contains a detailed fact sheet that tells consumers 
exactly what wages and benefits that the union workers who 
produced the sneakers get paid. ESP P/L has challenged Nike and 
Reebok to do the same.

"If the people behind a little business like No Sweat can do this 
and make a profit, there's no reason why the Nikes and Reeboks of 
this world also can't", said ESP's Nick Savaidis. "We hope every 
sneaker/sports shoe brand in the world will imitate this 
innovation. In fact, we dare them to!

"The shoes are produced at a union shop in Jakarta, Indonesia. 
The workers, represented by the SMTP, receive a benefit and pay 
package starting at some 785,000 rupiah per month. That's almost 
30 percent above the minimum wage in Indonesia, with 100% health 
care for employees and 80 percent coverage for family members. 
Plus a pension! Additional benefits include things less common in 
a western collective labour agreement, like a 30 litre a month 
rice allowance."

In the USA, No Sweat's co-founder, Jeff Ballinger said, "It's 
time for Nike to come clean with consumers. They've had 10 years 
to fix this problem and have spent all kinds of money assuring 
consumers that they have. Let's see what they've got. All they 
need to do is put it in the shoebox."

Ballinger wrote the original exposé of Nike for Harper's Magazine 
in 1992. While working in Indonesia for the US peak union body, 
AFL-CIO, he discovered one excellent union shop, producing shoes 
primarily for the local market. Twelve years later, that factory 
has become the source for No Sweat's new sneaker. 

The fair trade sneaker comes at a fair price too. At $60 a pair, 
the No Sweat Sneaker is a competitive alternative to the Nike 
owned Converse All-Star as well as to any other sneaker or 
skateboard shoe in the market place.

"It's not rocket science", said No Sweat's operations manager 
Anne O'Loughlin, who just returned from Jakarta after inspecting 
the union shop in person, "You give everyone — workers, 
consumers and investors — a fair share. Then you do it again the 
next day. Is there really any other sustainable business model?"

No Sweat sneakers are available for sale in Australia and New 
Zealand through select stores and websites. For your nearest 
stockist or further information, check out the website 
http://www.nosweatstuff.com.au or call 03 9887 5258.

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