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Squeeze play: tax handouts for sports zillionaires - great idea!


Ah, the national pastime. Baseball is enjoying a fine season, spurred on by the expansion of both leagues, a fortuitous act that welcomes the civilized sport to new venues and, incidentally, calls up a pride of eager young minor league pitchers to the Big Show. Small wonder that an all-star team of power hitters, led by Ken Griffey Ken Griffey may refer to:
  • Ken Griffey, Sr. (born 1950), a retired Major League Baseball player, and the father of Ken Griffey, Jr.
  • Ken Griffey, Jr. (born 1969), a current Major League Baseball player for the Cincinnati Reds
 Jr. in the American League American League (AL)

One of the two associations of professional baseball teams in the U.S. and Canada designated as major leagues; the other is the National League (NL).
 and Mark McGwire
    Mark David McGwire (born October 1, 1963 in Pomona, California) is a former professional baseball player who played the majority of his major league career with the Oakland Athletics before finishing his final years with the St. Louis Cardinals.
     in the National, is on pace to break Roger Maris's single-season home-run record.

    But the big baseball news has increasingly little to do with earned-run averages or pennant races, but with public financing of new stadiums. The idea of the ballpark as municipal development project has become as American as Cal Ripken Jr., who as a Baltimore Oriole Baltimore oriole: see oriole.  plays in Camden Yards, the Taj Mahal of government-subsidized sports palaces.

    The theory is that building a gleaming new stadium is a great high for fans. Let me confirm the allegation: I know I heartily enjoy a trip to Camden Yards, even though I have no interest in American League teams or players. But I also heartily enjoy, as does ex-Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, a trip to Morton's steak house. The question really is: Why is one a legitimate claimant for taxpayer funds?

    The main argument is that ballparks generate massive economic development, revitalizing cities almost as fast as the Florida Marlins can liquidate a championship team. New York New York, state, United States
    New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
     Mayor Rudolph Guiliani points to a study by his administration that shows consumer spending in Manhattan would rise $1 billion per year if a new Yankee Stadium This article or section is about a planned or proposed stadium.
    It may contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change dramatically as the construction and/or
     were built on the West Side - plus "thousands and thousands and thousands of jobs," in the mayor's precise calculation.

    The reality is that the studies trotted out to justify the public subsidy are as phony as the zeros they arbitrarily tack onto their empirical estimates. Not only don't city planners know what new benefits will materialize, they have little idea - or incentive to discover what existing spending will be quashed by the diversion. Folks who blow $100 on a Yankees-Indians game, two hot dogs, four beers, and a nonfat non·fat
    adj.
    Lacking fat solids or having the fat content removed.
     double latte are not going to spend that same sum that same night dining out at Elaine's. In New York, the opportunity cost of moving the Yankees' home to 33rd Street and 11th Avenue is painfully apparent to those in the Bronx, "a borough whose identity is inextricably in·ex·tri·ca·ble  
    adj.
    1.
    a. So intricate or entangled as to make escape impossible: an inextricable maze; an inextricable web of deceit.

    b.
     linked to the ball club," as The New York Times put it.

    Yet sports stadiums are perfect vehicles for city hall insiders to wheel and deal; the mayor gets a ribbon-cutting to die for, and all the local hacks can wangle a piece of the consulting or contracting business. City off@cials typically obtain box seats at the new park as freebies, without all the fuss and muss of an indictment for bribery. Add a media blitz: the daily newspaper and the AM sports-talk outlet will flack shamelessly for their financial self-interest in promoting local sporting events (and the accompanying ad revenues). How curious that William Wrigley and so many baseball owners in a far less lucrative sports era were able to build great ballparks with private funds - think of the billions and billions in public benefits that may have been lost!

    The comic aspect of taxpayer-funded sports stadiums is that it would be difficult to devise a source of revenue generation which would more perversely skew (1) The misalignment of a document or punch card in the feed tray or hopper that prohibits it from being scanned or read properly.

    (2) In facsimile, the difference in rectangularity between the received and transmitted page.
     incomes. The subsidies are borne by working stiffs who consider themselves lucky to sneak the family into the bleacher bleach·er  
    n.
    1. One that bleaches or is used in bleaching.

    2. An often unroofed outdoor grandstand for seating spectators. Often used in the plural.
     seats once a season at the Pleasure Dome they labor to provide through taxes, fees, and the like. The pretty new facility, however, will enable their bosses to sip sauvignon blanc while lounging in luxury boxes, while the team rakes in the bonus revenue. These funds are divvied up among millionaire owners and millionaire players, and then tucked away in diversified portfolios comprising shares in Chilean ostrich farms, Czech Howitzer howitzer: see artillery.  factories, and Wyoming ski resorts. The ballpark subsidy seems almost a perfect way to actually suck disposable income disposable income

    Portion of an individual's income over which the recipient has complete discretion. To assess disposable income, it is necessary to determine total income, including not only wages and salaries, interest and dividend payments, and business profits, but also
     out of a regional economy.

    Which is exactly what the real science on the matter has found. According to Andrew Zimbalist, the Smith College economics professor who edited a book on the topic of Sports, Jobs, and Taxes (Brookings, 1997), "There has not been an independent study by an economist for any stadium built over the last 30 years that suggests you can anticipate a positive economic impact.... The overwhelming majority of any new revenue generated by a [New York] stadium would go to Steinbrenner and the Yankees' players."

    The Camden Yards situation is illustrative, because it's a success by any measure - except economic rationality. Attendance increased by two-thirds, and great benefits were generated: $41 million in local spending by out-of-town fans. But the Camden Yards "investment" has created a paltry 460 permanent jobs in downtown Baltimore (offset by job losses elsewhere). While the Orioles sell an extra $16 million in tickets a year, the public loses $9 million on the stadium annually. On net, private Maryland incomes would be $11 million higher each year without Camden Yards, estimate Johns Hopkins economists Bruce Hamilton and Peter Kahn.

    So here's the play of the day: Public money is used to buy fluffier seat cushions for corporate fat cats attending their favorite sports show in architectural splendor, fattening fat·ten  
    v. fat·tened, fat·ten·ing, fat·tens

    v.tr.
    1. To make plump or fat.

    2. To fertilize (land).

    3.
     the bulging offshore accounts of team owners and players. And the cities tell us that they are starving for tax dollars. Imagine that.

    Contributing Editor Thomas W. Hazlett (hazlett@primal.ucdavis.edu) teaches economics and public policy at the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States).  at Davis.
    COPYRIGHT 1998 Reason Foundation
    No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
    Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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    Author:Hazlett, Thomas W.
    Publication:Reason
    Date:Jul 1, 1998
    Words:930
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