League Structure & Stadium Rent Seeking - The Role of Antitrust Revisited

David D. Haddock, Tonja Jacobi, Matthew J. Sag
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

North American sporting teams receive enormous public funding for new stadiums after threatening to depart their hometowns, or by actually moving to a new town. Whereas English sporting teams neither receive massive public grants for stadium building, nor move towns. We argue that these differences are caused not by any inherent cultural or political cross-Atlantic variations; rather, it is the industrial organization of sports in the two countries - the structure of league control - that enables rent seeking by American sporting teams but not by their English counterparts. We support our claim with cross-country time series data contrasting American professional football and baseball stadiums with English soccer grounds, and by contrasting data regarding the stadiums of geographically flexible NFL teams with those of functionally immobile major collegiate football teams.North American sports leagues are cartels: they control entry of teams, then collaborate to maximize effective rent seeking, stave off competition and keep prices high. In most of the world, entrance into leagues is based on competitive merit via a system known as promotion-and-relegation, whereby the worst performing teams in one competitive tier are demoted to the next lower tier at season’s end, and an equivalent number of top teams are promoted from the division below. The fluidity created by promotion-and-relegation severely undermines the credibility of a team’s threat to leave town, and creates alternative entry points into the league. This open entry mitigates pressure to engage in intercity competition over scarce team slots, and thus relieves the pressure to transfer wealth from the public to private sporting team owners through stadium funding. The stadium rent seeking issue illustrates shortcomings in antitrust law in remedying problems at the intersection of market and political organization. While it is clear that stadium rent seeking stems from a competition problem in the U.S., it is not clear if there is an antitrust solution - it is questionable whether antitrust law can recognize or remedy this damage to taxpayers. Although the anti-competitive structure of American leagues provides the platform for stadium rent seeking, the harm that results is arguably a political injury and not an antitrust offense. Nonetheless, we argue that imposition of a promotion-and-relegation system would be the least intrusive means for the U.S. and Canada to limit sporting league cartel behavior to its proper functions, such as arranging schedules and defining homogeneous rules. The uncertain availability of promotion-and-relegation is a solution under antitrust law makes it all the more imperative for Congress to address this costly injury.
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联赛结构和球场寻租-反垄断的角色重新审视
北美的运动队在威胁要离开家乡,或者真的搬到一个新的城市后,获得了巨额的公共资金来建造新的体育场。而英国的运动队既没有获得巨额的公共场馆建设拨款,也没有搬迁城镇。我们认为,这些差异不是由任何固有的文化或政治跨大西洋差异造成的;更确切地说,是两国体育的产业组织——联盟控制结构——使得美国运动队能够寻租,而英国运动队却不能。我们通过对比美国职业橄榄球和棒球场与英国足球场的越野时间序列数据,以及对比地理位置灵活的NFL球队与功能固定的主要大学橄榄球队的体育场数据,来支持我们的说法。北美体育联盟是卡特尔:它们控制球队的进入,然后合作最大化有效的寻租,避免竞争并保持高价格。在世界上的大多数地区,进入联赛是基于一种被称为升降级的制度,即在一个竞争级别中表现最差的球队在赛季结束时降级到下一个较低级别,而同等数量的顶级球队则从下一个级别提升。升降级带来的流动性严重削弱了一支球队威胁离队的可信度,并为进入联赛创造了另一个入口。这种开放的进入减轻了城市间竞争稀缺球队名额的压力,从而减轻了通过体育场资金将财富从公共转移到私人体育球队所有者的压力。体育场寻租问题说明了反垄断法在纠正市场和政治组织交叉问题方面的缺陷。虽然很明显,在美国,体育场寻租行为源于竞争问题,但目前尚不清楚是否存在反垄断解决方案——反垄断法是否能够承认或弥补这种对纳税人的损害是值得怀疑的。尽管美国联盟的反竞争结构为球场寻租提供了平台,但由此造成的损害可以说是一种政治伤害,而不是反垄断行为。尽管如此,我们认为,对于美国和加拿大来说,强制推行升降级制度是将体育联盟卡特尔行为限制在其适当功能范围内的最不具侵入性的手段,例如安排赛程和定义同质规则。根据反垄断法,晋升和降级是一种不确定的解决方案,这使得国会更有必要解决这一代价高昂的损害。
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