試す 金 - 無料
Why It's So Difficult for Robots to Make Your Nike Sneakers
Mint Mumbai
|April 23, 2025
The robots struggled to handle the soft, squishy and stretchy parts that are integral to shoemaking
President Trump is betting that the threat of stiff tariffs on low-cost countries in Asia and elsewhere will pressure American companies to bring manufacturing—and jobs—back to the U.S. But high U.S. labor costs mean companies would have to find ways to replace human workers with machines. For some industries, that has proved surprisingly difficult.
Indeed, a yearslong effort by Nike to shift part of its manufacturing from China, Indonesia, and Vietnam to North America illustrates how tough it is for U.S. brands to wean themselves off the flexible, low-cost contract manufacturers that use armies of laborers to churn out an array of products for American consumers.
Starting in 2015, Nike poured millions into an ambitious effort to partly automate what has always been a highly labor-intensive industry. At the time, rising labor costs in China and advances in manufacturing techniques such as 3-D printing opened the possibility of finding a new way to make shoes that would rely on fewer workers.
The shoe giant turned to Flex, an American manufacturer that had helped Apple set up a complex factory in Texas to make Mac Pros. The goal: Make tens of millions of Nike sneakers at a new high-tech manufacturing site in Guadalajara, Mexico, by 2023.
The plant would still include thousands of workers, but far fewer than are needed in Asia to make the same number of sneakers. If successful, the project could be a model for production in the U.S., according to some involved in the effort.
Nike's competitors also sensed an opportunity to rethink a manufacturing model built around massive Asian factories where armies of cheap, skilled laborers stitch fabrics and glue soles to shoes by hand.
このストーリーは、Mint Mumbai の April 23, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Mint Mumbai からのその他のストーリー
Mint Mumbai
No silver bullet
Is silver set to emerge from the shadow of gold as a precious metal? Although its price fell about 2% on Tuesday, it has been enjoying a bull run that makes this dip seem more like a pause for breath than the start of a correction.
1 min
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Profits, credit lift fundraising by corporates
Corporate fundraising activity saw a significant revival in the September 2025 quarter.
2 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
MAKING SENSE OF IMF RATING AND GDP DATA
India's Q2 growth surpassed expectations, but the IMF rated GDP data quality a 'C'. While India is addressing many of the issues, it's a reminder that the country cannot afford long gaps in statistical improvements.
4 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Chinese rare-earth dealers are dodging Beijing’s export curbs
Chinese rare-earth magnet companies are finding workarounds to their government's onerous export restrictions, as they seek to keep sales flowing to Western buyers without falling afoul of Chinese authorities.
4 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Lenskart tops Nykaa on margins
In Lenskart Solutions Ltd's first results post-listing, investor focus should be on the comparison of pro forma financials.
2 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
State-owned banks flag deposit rate woes on policy eve
State-owned lenders have alerted the banking regulator that their inability to cut deposit rates as fast as loan rates is taking a toll on interest margins, three people familiar with the development said.
3 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
India’s battery dreams trip on visa hurdles for Chinese pros
Problems in renewal of visas for Chinese technicians have slowed the pace of buildout of India’s lithium-ion battery manufacturing factories for electric vehicles and energy storage, according to two people aware of the matter.
2 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
All eyes on RBI as fresh fall brings rupee closer to 90
The Indian rupee came within kissing distance of 90 to a dollar on Tuesday before likely central bank intervention rescued it from the brink, but not before it touched a new all-time low.
3 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Samsung debuts 1st trifold smartphone
Samsung Electronics Co. unveiled its first so-called trifold smartphone, flaunting its engineering prowess in foldable devices even as the broader category has yet to catch on with consumers.
2 mins
December 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Meesho under fire from investors over SBI Funds allotment
Meesho Ltd's anchor book faced a setback after several major investors pulled out when the Indian e-commerce firm was said to have allocated about a quarter of the shares in this tranche to SBI Funds Management Pvt,, the country’s largest asset manager, according to people familiar with the matter.
1 mins
December 03, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
