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At this time, the Dunham’s Sports website does not offer online ordering. This website displays only a sample of the awesome products available in our stores. Stop by your local Dunham’s for all the Big Names and Low Prices available. Nike Adult Core Baseball Pants Price: $30.00 Nike Youth Core Baseball Pants Price: $25.00 Nike Air Monarch IV Men’s Training Shoe Original: $64.99 Nike Huarache Keystone 3/4 Baseball Cleat Original: $50.00 Nike Zoom Rival Track Spikes Price: $65.00 Nike Golf Men’s Durasport III Golf Shoe Original: $75.00 Nike Men’s F1 Impact Golf Shoe Original: $160.00 Nike Core DF Open Bottom Baseball Pant Price: $30.00 Nike NPC Heist Slider 1.5 Price: $35.00 Nike Youth NPC Heist Slider Price: $30.00 Nike MVP Edge Bat Bag Price: $30.00 Nike Vapor 2.0 Elite Bat Pack Price: $75.00 Nike Vapor Select Bat Pack Price: $50.00 Nike Youth Vapor Keystone Baseball Cleat Price: $30.00 Nike Youth Hyperdiamond Keystone Baseball Cleat Original: $30.00

Nike Women’s Hyperdiamond Keystone Baseball Cleat Original: $40.00 Nike Vapor Strike 2 MCS Baseball Cleat Price: $55.00 Nike Air Huarache Pro 3/4 Metal Baseball Cleat Price: $95.00 Nike Pro Classic Bra Price: $35.00 Nike Pro 3″ Short Price: $28.00 Nike MVP Edge Batting Gloves Price: $25.00 Nike MVP Youth Edge Batting Gloves Price: $20.00 Nike MVP Elite Batting Gloves Price: $45.00 Nike Boy’s Long Sleeve 3.0 Hoody Price: $40.00 Nike Girl’s Knockout 3.0 Fleece Pant Price: $40.00 Nike Girl’s Long Sleeve 3.0 Hoody Price: $40.00 Nike Women’s Downshifter 6 Running Shoe Original: $60.00 Nike MVP Select Baseball Duffel Price: $55.00 Nike Huarache 2KFilth Low Baseball Cleat Price: $65.00 Nike Men’s Cool Tight Sonic Flow Price: $40.00 Nike Men’s Fly Sonic Short Price: $40.00 Nike Women’s Pro Cool 3″ Tracer Short Price: $32.00 Nike Women’s Pro Classic Tracer Bra Price: $35.00 Nike Women’s Tempo Short Price: $30.00

Nike Women’s Pro Cool 3″ Short Price: $28.00 Nike Men’s 9″ HBR Basketball Short Price: $35.00 Nike Women’s Pro Classic Bra Price: $30.00 Nike 9″ Layup Basketball Short Price: $30.00 Nike Men’s Short Sleeve Swoosh Athlete Tee Price: $35.00 Nike Men’s Lunar Cypress Golf Shoe Original: $140.00 Nike Women’s Revolution 3 Running Shoe Original: $60.00 Nike Men’s Revolution 3 Running Shoe Original: $60.00 Nike Men’s Downshifter 6 Running Shoe Original: $60.00 Nike Boy’s and Girl’s Revolution 3 Running Shoe Original: $58.00 Nike Pitch Soccerball Price: $16.00 Nike Shin Sock Shin Guard Price: $11.99 Nike Youth Charge Shinguard Price: $12.00 Nike Strike Soccer Ball Price: $30.00 1 2 » span 2 » View AllWhen I was growing up, sneakers were ubiquitous, unbranded, ugly and cheap. Kids loved them because they were so easy to run around in, and parents loved them because they saved wear and tear on your “real” shoes.

But over the years, the lowly sneaker has morphed into the designer athletic shoe, and in the process, given birth to a whole new category of what economists call “luxury goods.” No company has benefited more from this fashion trend than Nike, which reportedly controls one-fifth of the global athletic wear market. Nike’s most famous brand is Air Jordan, named for the equally famous Michael Jordan, who led the Chicago Bulls to six NBA championships in the 1990s and is generally credited with being the greatest player ever to play the game.
best shoes for running flat foot In February, Nike began releasing a series of “retro” Air Jordans, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of earlier models.
best walking boots uk 2014The “Powder Blue” Air Jordan 10 hit retail stores in late February;
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first day sales reportedly topped $35 million worldwide. Air Jordans are manufactured in China and reportedly cost Nike a bit more than $16 a pair. The Air Jordan 10s are listed on Amazon for $250 to $550 a pair, depending on the style and color. If that strikes you as a rather hellacious markup, welcome to the world of “luxury” goods, where the selling price is determined not by the cost of the goods, but by the status that buyers think they confer.
buy nike shoes online sa Psychologists tell us that there are two main reasons why we buy luxury goods, even when many of us really can’t afford them.
air jordan golf shoes where to buyThe first is called “signaling” — using luxury goods to “show off” and send a clear signal that you measure up to your peers, or to others in your community.
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Similarly, we often purchase luxury goods to “mark” significant accomplishments in our lives. The second reason is triggered by moments of low self-esteem. As a recent article on luxury goods in Time Magazine put it, “when you’re experiencing low self-esteem, you’re more likely to feel a stronger desire to acquire high-status goods ...” So, it would seem that no matter whether you are feeling way up about yourself or way down, you are likely to treat yourself to a pair of Air Jordans that you probably don’t need and maybe can’t afford. Beyond the gaudy prices, there are a couple other hidden costs attached to buying MJ’s latest shoes. For one thing, spending on luxury goods doesn’t flow back through the economy the way it used to. Nike’s stock, for example, has tripled in recent years. But since the wealthiest Americans now own 90+ percent of all common stocks, they take home nearly all of the gains when stock prices surge. On the other hand, people in the middle class and working class have to rely on the growth of good jobs for their financial well-being.

Unfortunately, buying overpriced shoes from Nike does not payoff in jobs either. Nike imports all of its shoes, and, consequently, employs a lot fewer American workers per dollar of sales than most large companies. So, from our vantage point, buying luxury goods tends to make other people rich and over-rewards CEOs — Nike’s Mark Price has earned $61 million in just the last three years. Buying luxury goods usually undermines American jobs, since almost anything you buy instead probably entails a lot more home-grown labor. In professional sports, athletes often re-up their contracts with the team that gave them their start for less money than they could get elsewhere. It’s known in the sports business as the “hometown discount.” If Michael Jordan and Nike want to continue selling us Air Jordans at outlandish prices, then perhaps they should take a little less in profits and hire American workers to make the shoes that they sell in America. It could be their way of giving the home team a hometown break.