This Is Why Your Converse Sneakers Have Felt on the Bottom

Authored by smithsonianmag.com and submitted by aljobar

Have you ever noticed that thin layer of felt on the bottom of a pair of Converse sneakers? It gets torn up almost immediately, of course, as you walk on the shoes. So, why is it there in the first place? It turns out that that felt is there not for functional reasons, but for economic ones—shoes with fuzzy soles are taxed less when imported than those with rubber ones.

Jeff Steck writes on Gazetc that the difference between importing a fuzzy shoe—like a house slipper—and a rubber one—like a sneaker—can be huge. Changing the shoe material can decrease the tariff from 37.5 percent down to just 3 percent. Steck writes:

To benefit from a lower tariff, it isn’t necessary to cover the entire sole with fabric. According to the inventors, “a classification may be based on the type of material that is present on 50% or more of the bottom surface.” (6,471,491) This explains why the “fabric” fuzz extends mostly around the edges of my shoes, where it can take up a lot of area without interfering too much with the traction of the bare-rubber centers.

This kind of finagling is something Steck calls “tariff engineering,” and it’s not uncommon. Here’s another example from Radiolab of how companies slither past tariff regulations. For Marvel, dolls (which represent humans) and toys (which represent non-humans) are taxed at different rates. Which means Marvel actually went to court to argue why their action X-Men action figures were not human—something a fan of the comic might find a bit strange.

So your X-Men action figures aren’t human, and your Converse sneakers are cute fuzzy house slippers. In other words, tariffs ruin everything.

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mav194 on October 30th, 2017 at 14:51 UTC »

OMG my job is relevant for once.

This is false (in my opinion). Customs Ruling N287357 issued on Jul 10, 2017 from New York to Converse Inc, states Chuck Taylors classified as 6404.11.9050 at 20% ad valorem duty. This falls under the "Sports footwear" subheading.

Source: I'm a licensed Customs Broker.

Edit: Yes the ruling states a rubber sole and OP references felt, but Chapter 64 Note 5 says "for the purposes of determining the constituent material of the outer sole...no account shall be taken of textile materials which do not possess the characteristics usually required for normal use of an outer sole, including durability and strength". Thus felt would not qualify for a change in classification in my opinion. I'm human and can be incorrect on all this though!

McJock on October 30th, 2017 at 13:34 UTC »

LPT: When importing plutonium into the US simply cover it with pastry so it is legally classified as a pie.

cerebraldoom on October 30th, 2017 at 12:33 UTC »

And it makes them slippery as shit for the first few days. PF Flyers does this too.