Apr 25

Past Event

Are Baseball's Business Practices Ruining the Game?

Summary

May the Best Team Win, a new book from the Brookings Institution Press, shows how the business of baseball runs counter to the game's wholesome image. Almost every economic issue in the game—relocating teams, negotiating labor contracts, raising ticket prices—involves baseball's presumed exemption from the nation's antitrust laws that allows owners to operate the industry as an unregulated, legal monopoly. Despite some recent management improvements, the baseball monopoly continues to lead to abuses and inefficiency, according to Zimbalist, who argues that the game's future is uncertain unless corrective steps are taken quickly.

Panelists will discuss the effects of the anti-trust exemption as it applies to league expansion and contraction, how the league accounts for itself financially, the fragile nature of collective bargaining agreements, competition in cable markets, the stadium issue, and finally how these problems can be improved through new policies and legislation.

Details

April 25, 2003

8:30 AM - 10:30 AM EDT

National Press Club

Ballroom

529 14th Street NW

Map

For More Information

Office of Communications

202/797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Moderators

    • Stefan Fatsis

      Sports Business Reporter, Wall Street Journal; Sports Commentator, NPR's All Things Considered

  • Panelists

    • Andrew Zimbalist

      Author, May the Best Team Win; Robert A. Woods Professor of Economics, Smith College; Professional Sports Consultant for the NFL, NBA, and MLB

    • Clark Griffith

      Chairman, Sports Law Division, American Bar Association Forum on Entertainment and Sports Law; Former Co-owner, Minnesota Twins

    • Edward Gramlich

      Former Professor of Economics, University of Michigan; Former Staff Director, 1992 Economic Commission of Major League Baseball

    • Portrait: Henry Aaron

      Henry J. Aaron

      Senior Fellow

      Economic Studies