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Tag Archives: sports arenas

sports stadiums and money

Whenever I go to a Philly’s baseball game, the walk from the car to my seat takes awhile. Located in a “stand alone” sports complex off of Route 95, the stadium is one of several and the parking lots extend for acres.

I’ve discovered that there is a reason for my long walk.

It all relates to how the owners and occupants of sports arenas make money. First, it helps to use the arena a lot. If a football team has just 5 or 6 games a year, the arena could be in trouble unless they schedule other events like concerts. Baseball is a little better because you could have approximately 81 games a season. But still, fans have to spend money there. At a stadium like Fenway Park, because of its location, Red Sox fans can take their dollars outside to a local bar or restaurant.

And that takes me back to the Phillies and my long walks.

If a stadium is sufficiently isolated, you have to spend your food, drink and memorabilia money there. The “cost” in time and energy–the transaction cost–is just too great for fans to take their demand elsewhere. Consequently, as sports economist Roger Nolls says, “…the modern version of a baseball stadium essentially is a baseball field, the stands, a shopping center, and then acres of parking to make certain that no one can ever go anywhere else.”

An econtalk discussion with Roger Nolls started me thinking about how the acres of parking lots surrounding the Phillies’ arena complex affect where fans spend their money. Then, for more about stadium economics, I looked to this paper on sports facilities and their communities. And finally, although it is from 2008, this Forbes article says a lot when it discusses the most lucrative stadiums. (#1 was the Los Angeles Staples Center.) Also, here and here, there is more at econlife on the economic impracticalities of sports stadiums.

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sports stadiums and money

To keep a team, sometimes the stadium makes the difference. The problem, though, is who is going to pay. For the San Diego Chargers, the price tag would be an $800 million sports facility with the city absorbing 65% of the total. On a November 2012 ballot, the voters will be able to approve or reject the project.

Meanwhile, hoping to fill the void created by the departure of the Raiders and the Rams, a privately owned sports conglomerate says it will raise $1.2 trillion for a new Los Angeles sports arena.  Then, the Chargers could decide to move to LA.

Privately financed stadiums. A free lunch for the taxpayer? Not really.

One Harvard urban planning scholar tells us that even when a stadium is privately paid for like the NJ Meadowlands (where the Jets and the Giants play), Gillette Stadium (home of the New England Patriots) or FEdEx Field (the Washington Redskins), still we pay. Usually, a municipality inexpensively provides the land for as little as $1, develops transportation arteries to the new facility, gives tax breaks, and even agrees to subsidize ticket revenue if it falls beneath a certain total. Adding up all the extras, a “free” stadium might cost us many millions in outlays and forgone taxes.

In a past post, here, we looked at several unaffordable publicly financed sport facility projects.

The Economic Lesson

The tragedy of the commons relates to financing sports facilities. When the project is approved, no one individually bears the cost–except perhaps the politician who might not be re-elected if he/she votes no. So, the pool is abused, overused, and later all of us pay.

However, will the psychosocial benefit of having a local sports team outweigh all other costs?

An Economic Question: What are the non-money costs and benefits of a local sports team franchise?

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