1 / 13

Chapter 9

Chapter 9. Labor Market Imperfections. The Other Key to Leagues: Monopsony. One buyer of a good or service One company town Monopsonist pays less & buys less Monopsony comes from Lack of competing leagues Reserve clause binding players to teams

conway
Download Presentation

Chapter 9

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9 Labor Market Imperfections

  2. The Other Key to Leagues: Monopsony • One buyer of a good or service • One company town • Monopsonist pays less & buys less • Monopsony comes from • Lack of competing leagues • Reserve clause binding players to teams • The reserve clause gave teams a lifetime claim to players • You play for the Browns – or not at all • Results in exploitation of employees • Underpay • Poor working conditions

  3. The Impact of Rival Leagues • Undermines monopsony power • Salaries rise with serious challenges • In 1960, when the AFL appeared to challenge the NFL, players salaries increased until merger between the AFL & NFL in 1969, at which point players’ salaries dropped. • NFL salaries doubled between 1982 and 1986 because of the USFL • Introduced competition for players • In 1983, rookie salaries jumped in the NFL an average of 52% over 1982 salaries. • Between 1970 and 1976 salaries in the NHL more than tripled because of the WHA

  4. Introduction of Free Agency in MLB in 1977 • 1976 average compensation = $54,330 • 1977 average compensation = $77,292 • 1986 average compensation = $431,500

  5. Introduction of Free Agency in MLB in 1977

  6. Monopsony and Baseball • Initially players controlled the game • Governing body: National Assn of Professional Base Ball Players • It could not keep players from jumping contracts • Pittsburgh Pirates named for piracy of players from other teams • Then in 1887, National League of Baseball Clubs • Teams allowed to reserve 5 players • Reservation eventually extended to all player contracts • Becomes the Reserve Clause - part of the standard contract

  7. The Reserve Clause Seems Innocent • Bound players for length of contract plus one year • The key to binding players: • Players were not allowed to play without a contract • Other sports leagues copy

  8. Free Agency • No major sport still has a reserve clause • Free agency came to NFL (1994), NBA (1981), and NHL (1993) through the courts • MLB players had the toughest path • MLB was exempt from antitrust laws • Union got owners to agree to arbitration panel (video: “This Man Miller”) • Panel overturned the reserve clause • Introduction of Free Agency in 1977 • COLLUSION BY OWNERS TO DESTROY FREE AGENT MARKET: 1987 (article; video: Collusion!)

  9. Unrestricted Agency • Can sign with any team • Eligibility • MLB: After 6 years • NBA: After 4 years if a 1st round draft pick • Otherwise no restriction • NFL: After 4 years if contract has expired • NHL: Has a complex formula • Depends on age, position, and number of games played

  10. Restricted Free Agency • Player’s original team has right of first refusal • It can retain the player by matching an offer • Eligibility • MLB does not have restricted free agency • NBA: After 3 years if a 1st round draft pick • Otherwise does not exist • NFL: After 3 years if contract has expired • NHL: Has a complex formula

  11. Salary Arbitration • A way to deal with disputes • Arbitrators play the judge • Binding: sides pre-commit to judgment • Non-binding: only indirect pressure to accept • Exists in NHL and MLB • MLB: Uses Final Offer Arbitration (FOA) • Each side makes one offer • Arbitrator must choose one • Cannot impose/propose independent solution • Restores incentive to compromise

  12. Winning by Losing • Players have lost more than half the arbitration cases • But it still has had a huge impact on salaries • 111 player filed for free agency in 2009 • Only 3 actually went through arbitration because the rest settled beforehand. • Players’ union has said that FOA has had a bigger impact on salaries than free agency • The average salary increase for the 111 players was 143%

  13. Measuring Monopsony Power: Empirical Paper 2 • Krautmann, von Allmen and Berri (2009) compare 3 major sports leagues • Players who are not eligible for arbitration or restricted free agency • Are paid 66% of their MRP in the NBA • Are paid 50% of their MRP in the NFL • Are paid 19% of their MRP in MLB • When they are eligible • They receive 59% of their MRP in the NFL • They receive 86% of their MRP in MLB

More Related