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Paperback Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports and Who's Paying for It Book

ISBN: 0465071430

ISBN13: 9780465071432

Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports and Who's Paying for It

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Book Overview

A welfare system exists in this country that transfers hundreds of millions of dollars from taxpayers to individuals who hardly require government assistance. State and local officials, mesmerized by... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Tax money for big league millionaires? I don't think so.

By ANDREW CLINE Mark S. Rosentraub, Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports And Who's Paying For It: Basic Books, 1997, $27.50, 513 pages. Within the past generation, the pro sports team owner has become one of the top threats to state and local taxpayers. He has achieved this position by hiring hack economists to conduct trumped-up economic studies purporting to show that new sports arenas will bring large financial returns to the general public. In his new book, Major League Losers, economist Mark S. Rosentraub shows very persuasively how pro sports arenas do not generate the economic returns to the general public that the owners claim, and therefore public subsidies are not justified. Major League Losers is more than an economics book, and Rosentraub more than an economics professor. The book is written not for the policy wonk or academic, but rather for the sports fan and the taxpayer. Rosentraub covers the issue from the perspective of a concerned citizen and avid sports fan who just happens to be an economist rather than an economist looking to win tenure. Rosentraub, a professor at Indiana University at Indianapolis and an Indiana Pacers season ticket holder, begins his book by laying down a little background so the reader will not jump straight into a bunch of economic mumbo jumbo. In the first chapter Rosentraub outlines in simple terms how a city's economy works and how professional sports fit into that economy. In the second chapter he gets into a bit of psychology by explaining why sports occupy so exalted a position that they can garner public subsidies when other, far more important industries cannot. The next chapter covers the theory of supply and demand, or why all cities that want pro sports teams cannot have them. In this chapter Rosentraub serves up a history of the big sports leagues, showing how each formed and evolved and how each was designed as a cartel that would maximize owner profits by minimizing competition. Chapters four and five get into the nitty-gritty of economic analysis. In them Rosentraub explains just how little pro sports actually means to a city's overall economy. Professional sports, the author shows, never make up more than one half of one percent of all jobs in any community in which they exist. Nor do they account for two-thirds of one percent of the total payroll of any community in which they exist. Also, when it comes to generating job growth, pro sports produce jobs only in a very tiny area localized usually within the stadium's own zip code. There is no large ripple effect throughout the community. In fact, pro sports can sap jobs from outlying areas because people who would have spent their money on movies and restaurants in the suburbs will instead spend that money at the sports stadium, reducing business for suburban entertainment and food venues. In chapters six through ten, Rosentraub uses the specific examples of Indianapolis, Cleveland, St. Louis, Toronto, Montreal, Cinc

An important work about major league scam artists

In today's big-time professional sports business, the relationship of pro sports owners and public officials has become significantly intertwined, as more and more public monies are risked to keep or attract a pro sport franchise in a community. Author Mark S. Rosentraub has written a sober study of the complexities of this "welfare for sports owners" that will stand as the classic definitive study of this issue. Rosentraub thoroughly analyzes the economic complexities of public subsidies of pro sports, with his well-reasoned recommendation that public subsidies do not return on the investment at a level high enough to warrant the tremendous risk of the hundreds of millions that owners usually want. The details are all here on the fascinating stories of owners and public officials from the communities of St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Arlington, Texas, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Ontario, Toronto, Cleveland, and others. Rosentraub also explains the powerful, almost mythical interest of a community in a professional sports franchise, that helps to better understand this sordid joining at the hip of this business with a community. This is a solid, complete analysis of this very controversial topic that should be required reading by business majors, and especially mayors and other public officials who may think a professional sport franchise will "save" their community. Rosentraub should be called in, before they sink their precious tax dollars into this black hole. Look for the author to be in heavy demand on the talk show circuit and in open debates with owners. At almost 500 pages, Rosentraub's obvious hard work clearly shows his preeminent status as the play-by-play announcer par excellance of pro sports franchises.
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