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Competitive Balance

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Title: Competitive Balance


1
Competitive Balance
  • The distribution of wins
  • in professional team sports most consistent with
  • the maximization of
  • league profits.

2
Neal, Walter. The Peculiar Economics of
Professional Sports Quarterly Journal of
Economics 78 (February, 1964) 1-14.
  • Louis-Schmelling paradox
  • The inverted joint product or the product joint
  • Joint product - two products technologically
    resulting from a single process.
  • Product joint - An indivisible product from the
    separate processes of two or more firms.
  • Professional baseball produces several
    interrelated streams of utility
  • In-person viewing of the game
  • Broadcasts of games
  • League standing effect
  • Fourth Estate Benefit
  • Conclusion The several joint products which are
    products joint of legally separate business firms
    are really the complex joint products of one
    firm, and this firm is necessarily an
    all-embracing firm or natural monopoly.

3
Neale (1964), cont.
  • Four possible cases of interleague competition
  • Major League Baseball solution the joining of
    two leagues into one monopoly.
  • The professional football solution of the 1940s
    The bankruptcy of one league.
  • Survival of two or more leagues that are not
    economically competitive due to geographic
    distances or the institutions of sport and
    culture.
  • Survival of two or more leagues that are
    economically competitive and which could be
    sportingly competitive.
  • The second case is the most common solution.
    Geographic distances and culture institutions
    seem to be overcome overtime (exception CFL and
    Japanese baseball).
  • In general, additional leagues bid up costs and
    reduce revenues, hence reducing the profitability
    of each league.

4
Uncertainty of Outcome
  • Why is balance important? Uncertainty of
    outcome is crucial to the demand for sporting
    events. The works of Knowles, Sherony and
    Haupert (1992), and Rascher (1999) found that
    Major League Baseball attendance was maximized
    when the probability of the home team winning was
    approximately 0.6. These studies suggest that
    consumers prefer to see the home team win, but do
    not wish to be completely certain this will occur
    prior to the game being played.
  • Knowles, Glenn, Keith Sherony, and Mike Haupert.
    1992. The Demand for Major League Baseball A
    Test of the Uncertainty of Outcome Hypothesis.
    The American Economist, 36, n2, Fall 72-80.
  • Rascher, Daniel. 1999. A Test of the Optimal
    Positive Production Network Externality in Major
    League Baseball. Sports Economics Current
    Research, Edited by John Fizel, Elizabeth
    Gustafson and Lawrence Hadley. Praeger 27-45.

5
Perfect Competitive Balance
  • Teams in larger markets generate greater revenue
    from an additional win than teams in smaller
    markets. If marginal cost is the same for all
    teams, then teams in larger markets would
    maximize profits at a higher winning percentage
    than teams in smaller markets.
  • Review Figure 5.1

6
Measuring Competitive Balance
  • Standard deviation S(PCT actual - PCT
    mean)2/number of teams0.5
  • Idealized standard deviation (if every team was
    equal) (.500)/ N0.5
  • Where N number of games each team plays in a
    season
  •  With a normal bell shaped distribution
  • 2/3 of league will be within one standard
    deviation
  • 95 will be within two standard deviations
  • 99 will be within three standard deviations

7
The Noll-Scully Measure
  • CBit s(wp)itactual/ s(wp)itideal
  • with s(wp)itideal µ(wp)it / vN
  • Where
  • s(wp)it is the standard deviation of winning
    percentages within league (i) in period (t)
  • µ(wp) it is league (i)s mean
  • N is the number of teams

8
What determines competitive balance in
professional sports?
  • Schmidt, Martin B. and David J. Berri. (2003)
    On the Evolution of Competitive Balance The
    Impact of an Increasing Global Search. Economic
    Inquiry, 41(4) 692-704.

9
Competitive Balance in the AL
  • Figure 1 - Noll-Scully Competitive Balance (CBt)
    Measures
  • American League (AL)

10
Competitive Balance in the NL
  • Figure 1 (cont.) - Noll-Scully Competitive
    Balance (CBt) Measures
  • American League (NL)

11
A Simple Empirical Model
  • Table I - OLS Trend Estimates for (CBt)
  • Dependent Variable (Sample - 1911 2000)
  • CBt AL Constant Time
  • 2.742 -0.012 (0.109) (0.002)
  • CBt NL Constant Time
  • 2.439 -0.008 (0.108) (0.002)
  • Standard errors are beneath each coefficient.
  • The results indicate that competitive balance
    improved throughout the 20th century.

12
What explains the pattern?
  • Institutional factors
  • The Reserve Clause
  • Reverse-order draft
  • Free agency
  • Revenue sharing
  • Payroll and Salary Caps
  • Expanding Populations or Talent Compression

13
The Belief in Institutions
  • Consider Commissioner Bud Seligs comment on the
    recent (2002) Major League Baseball labor
    agreement
  • . . . the issue here was competitive balance and
    I feel this deal clearly deals with that.
  • From the news conference announcing the
    agreement, Friday, August 30th, 2002.

14
Major League BaseballsBlue Ribbon Panel
  • Convened to examine
  • The Economic Stability of MLB
  • Competitive Balance in MLB
  • Four members
  • Yale president Richard C. Levin
  • Former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker
  • Former Senator George Mitchell
  • Columnist George Will

15
The Blue Ribbon PanelThe Conclusions
  • a significant disparity exists in the resources
    member teams
  • For example, for the 2000 season the salary of
    the highest paid player in MLB exceeded the
    entire payroll of the Minnesota Twins (BRP 2000
    p. 9).
  • such differences in market size has allowed a
    collection of teams to consistently field
    playoff-contending teams.
  • teams located in smaller-markets are incapable of
    fielding teams that can challenge for post-season
    success. Consequently, for the smaller-market
    teams the outcome of the season is known before
    the season is started.

16
The Blue Ribbon PanelRecommendations
  • The Blue Ribbon Panel recommended a number of
    changes
  • recommended that foreign players be subject to
    the draft
  • teams maintain the rights of draftees beyond the
    one-year period they currently hold.
  • an annual "competitive balance draft," under
    which the eight clubs with the worst records
    could draft players not on the 40-man roster of
    the eight playoff teams.
  • Most of these seem to limit player movement or to
    convey greater rights to Major League Baseball
    teams

17
The Coase-Rottenberg Theorem
  • When there are no transaction costs the
    assignment of legal rights have no effect upon
    the allocation of resources among economic
    enterprises. Stigler (1988)
  • When there are no impediments to the buying and
    selling of playing talent, the assignment of the
    rights to this talent will have no effect upon
    the allocation of players among Major League
    Baseball teams. Rottenberg (1956)

18
On an empirical level
  • the impact of the reverse-order draft in 1965
  • El-Hodiri and Quirk (1971), Demsetz (1972), and
    Quirk and Fort (1992) all found no tangible
    impact
  • Daly and Moore (1981) and Daly (1992) both found
    an improvement
  • the impact of the free agency in 1976
  • Szymanski (2003) examines (20) empirical studies
    on the impact of the introduction of free-agency
    in 1976 on competitive balance and finds that (9)
    estimate an improvement, (4) document a decline
    and (7) found no impact

19
If not institutional factors, what?
  • Evolutionary Biologist Stephen Jay Gould
  • the distribution of athletic talent in a
    population should be normally distributed.
  • At the right-tail of the distribution would lay
    those with the greatest level of athletic ability
    and assuming that there is a bio-mechanical limit
    to potential ability or talent, the athletes in
    the far right-tail tend to be relatively equal.

20
Goulds Hypothesis (Part 1)
  • At the beginning of the 20th century, people
    playing Major League Baseball were only white
    Northeastern American males.
  • The population baseball could draw upon was
    relatively small and correspondingly, there
    existed a large degree of heterogeneity between
    players.
  • As the probability of winning is closely aligned
    with playing talent, such diversity may lead to
    low levels of competitive balance.

21
Goulds Hypothesis (Part 2)
  • As the population of players Major League
    Baseball has to choose from rises, new players
    are added to the population in much the same way,
    i.e., normally.
  • The absolute number of players close to the limit
    would rise and, given player demand, as would the
    average players talent level or ability.
  • The Gould hypothesis, therefore, argues that as
    the talent pool rises greater player homogeneity
    should be observed.

22
Goulds Hypothesis (Part 3)
  • In which case, one should see a corresponding
    rise in the probability of a poor team beating a
    stronger team
  • as the poor team is now stocked with players
    closer in talent to those of the stronger team.
  • Following the theme, increased player demand
    through, for example, expansion should decrease
    competitive balance.
  • Such increased homogeneity in talent reduces
    individual player differences between competing
    teams and therefore would increase the likelihood
    of a less talented team beating a more
    talented team.
  • This suggests that, for example, racial
    integration would increase competitive balance
    because teams were able to choose from a larger
    talent pool.

23
No .400 Hitter since 1941
24
Cursory Evidence
25
Competitive Balance Across Sports
26
Baseballs Labor Pool
  • Globalization of baseball is now evident on the
    playing fields in the United States.
  • Players still hail from the traditional areas of
    recruitment, such as the United States, Dominican
    Republic, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, and Cuba
  • Many players from Mexico, Australia, Japan, and
    Korea also play in the Major Leagues. Even such
    countries as Spain, Belgium, the Philippines,
    Singapore, Vietnam, Great Britain, Brazil,
    Nicaragua, and the Virgin Islands have produced
    professional baseball players.
  • In 2000, the number of foreign-born players on
    Major League Baseball rosters was 312,
    constituting 26 percent of all players (Levine et
    al, 2000).

27
Schmidt Berri (2003)
  • Competitive Balance and Major League Baseballs
    Labor Pool are cointegrated
  • MLBs Labor Pool is weakly exogenous
  • Other factors, captured through various dummy
    variables, appear not to be relevant.
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