Transcript ppt
Daniel Ciancioso
Case written by:
Victor Matheson
Super Bowl is the most significant sport event in US
Highest ticket prices
Advertising
Neutral site with location changes every year
2000-2009 average television viewership
Super Bowl: 90 million
World Series: 19 million
NBA Finals: 14.3
Stanley Cup: 4.1 million
NFL claims Super Bowls generate large benefits
NFL/ W.P. Carey MBA Sports Business Program
$500.6 million from Super Bowl XLI in Phoenix (2008)
NFL SMRI study
$670 million in taxable sales in South Florida 1999
$396 million increase in economic activity
Average income of Super Bowl attendees vs. tourists
$144,500 compared to $40,000-$80,000
NFL has strong financial incentives
NFL uses Super Bowl to get public subsidies
325 million tax increase for $1.1 billion AT&T Stadium
$400-$500 million boost to local economy
New NFL stadiums
$5 billion in taxpayer money since 1995
11 cities hosted Super Bowl in the last 15 years
6 were awarded immediately after new stadium
Tampa, Dallas, Indianapolis, Phoenix, Houston and Detroit
Super Bowl XXVIII in Atlanta
Number of visitors
x Spending per visitor
= Direct Impact
+ Indirect Impact (Multiplier Effect)
= Total Economic Impact
$306,680.00
$252.00
$77,000,000.00
$89,000,000.00
$166,000,000.00
*Numerous difficulties with this estimation method
1)Substitution Effect
2)Crowding out
3)Leakages
Consumers spend money on a sporting event that would
have been spent elsewhere
Ex/Christmas present
Few local attendees/week long event
75% available tickets to individual teams
17.5% for participants
1.2% for
5% for host team
25% for sponsors, networks, VIPs and host committee
Crowds and congestion assorted with a sporting event
displace regular economic activity
Some people less inclined to visit host city during that time
because of large crowds
Super Bowl in warm cities with large tourism
80% Economic impact should only include extra rooms sold
to sports fans over what would have been there
Sep. 11th Example
New Orleans auto dealer convention
Much of the money made in the host city may immediate
leak out of the city
The event may generate income for the city but not its local
residents
Hotels raise rates 3-4x normal level during Super Bowl
Shareholders, not local hotel members see that money
Capacity constraints
Labor and capital must be imported to meet demand
Jacksonville Jaguars
6 cruise ships holding 7,600 guests
Casual visitors
Tourists who attend sporting event on travel, not sport
Spending counted in typical economic impact study
Not significant issue during Super Bowl week
Time switching
Planning to visit a city anyway but rearranges to coincide
with sporting event
Event doesn’t influence if but when
Once sports fan has seen the city, crossed off vacation
destination
Independent scholars not connected with NFL
examine ex post impact of hosting Super Bowl
Employment, personal income, per capita income,
taxable sales, tax revenues, visitor statistics
Conclusion: Super Bowl generates a fraction of
economic impact claimed by NFL boosters
2000: Baade/Matheson
25 Super Bowls 1973-1997
Average economic impact of $30 million (1/10)
2002: Coates/Humphreys (per capita income)
All post-season play in North America
Hosting Super Bowl no effect on per capita income
Winner experiences $140 in per capita income
2005: Matheson said $50-$60 increase in per capita income
Not statistically significantly different from zero at 5%
Negative effect?
2009: Davis and End study of hosting and winning Super Bowl
Winning had positive coefficient at 5%
Hosting had a negative coefficient at 5%
Hard to isolate within large, metropolitan economies
$500 million is less than 0.2% of Miami’s annual GDP
Super Bowl only lasts for a few days
Taxable sales
Available monthly
Cover individual cities instead of entire metro areas
Used to finance many publicly funded sports facilities
Single largest component of GDP is consumer spending
NFL claimed $670 million increase in South FL 1999
(Miami Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach)
NFL did not to account for factors besides Super Bowl
Inflation, population growth, routine economic expansion
Over 90% of increase because of these variables
Broward and Palm Beach had taxable sales lower than
expected despite Super Bowl ($14 and $16 million)
Only Miami had increase($67 million)
Taxable sales were $1.26 higher the year after the Super
Bowl!
Assessing impact of Super Bowl in Glendale, Arizona
Powerful memories and good feelings
Return visits, family and business relocations
Word-of-mouth marketing
Game serves as an advertisement to the city
30-second shot of downtown Miami- $3 million
Value of commercial
Diminishing marginal returns
NFL convinces cities that a new stadium will bring a
significant economic impact to host city
Because Super Bowl is used to extract public financing, we
should be skeptical
NFL measures activity that does occur because of the Super
Bowl but not activity that doesn’t
Scholars not connected with NFL found observed effects of
the game on real economic variables to be generally
positive, but a fraction of what is claimed by the NFL