Could jersey prices really be the issue? Or is there more at play?<\/p>\n
\u00a0Controversy arose earlier this week on Monday when England revealed their jerseys for the upcoming World Cup. The jerseys, it turned out, cost a surprising 90 pounds (150 US Dollars) and caused a frenzy<\/a> from not just the English media, but for the British Prime Minister David Cameron as well.<\/p>\n Many have called the jerseys (which Nike manufactured) a rip off. Citizens of England are calling for boycotts and sports minister Helen Grant has asked Nike to lower the prices of the jerseys.<\/p>\n Cameron himself pointed out the stigma that it will have on the parents. “Parents are under enormous pressure to buy the latest kit and we shouldn’t be taken advantage of,\u201d he said in a Reuters article<\/a>.<\/p>\n But amidst all the controversy and the media speculation, a few things stick out more than others.<\/p>\n For one, Nike is not doing anything new when it comes to the skyrocketing prices of jerseys. Soccer has grown popular with each passing year and more importantly, it is slowly becoming popular in the United States. The big demand of jerseys from fans all over the world calls for higher prices for the merchandise and with more call for the merchandise comes more demand for better quality.<\/p>\n \u00a0Both elements go hand in hand. It is the same dilemma<\/a> that other companies such as Adidas are also facing and competition just amps up the prices even more. That is how supply and demand works for items within the marketplace.<\/p>\n But it is not the prices of the jerseys that is the important subject.<\/p>\n Another important aspect of this controversy is Nike and England\u2019s Football Association\u2019s reasoning for the high prices. According to a comment made by both the FA and Nike<\/a>, the jerseys have climacool ventilation holes designed in them to better accommodate the weather the players will face during their time in Brazil.<\/p>\n Once again, this becomes a discussion about FIFA\u2019s choices when it comes to host nations. Joseph Blatter and company always make it a point to say that the choices made when it comes to host nations focuses on countries that deserve to have soccer impact their citizens.<\/p>\n \u201cThis is the development of football and don\u2019t speak about money. This has nothing to do with money, as it had nothing to do with money here in Africa. It has to do with the development of the game,\u201d he said back in 2010 during the host bids for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups in Qatar and Russia.<\/p>\n He went on to defend this by mentioning the great impact<\/a> the World Cup had on South Africa earlier in 2010. About $100 million legacy fund went to South Africa and $20 million of that had already been used to build a new South African Football Association headquarters and stated the rest would go to “social and community projects.”<\/p>\n