sport antitrust case;
amateur sports demand;
antitrust laws;
NCAA student-athlete pay;
Alston v. NCAA;
SUPERSTARS;
QUALITY;
LEVEL;
D O I:
10.1177/15270025231217970
中图分类号:
F [经济];
学科分类号:
02 ;
摘要:
From the "landmark" Alston v. NCAA antitrust decision, we examine whether the legally hypothesized fan wage-repugnance effect implies procompetitive benefits in NCAA sports output markets via increased output demand from student-athlete wage restriction. In Alston v. NCAA, the Courts took this benefit as given but failed to recognize the empirically-verified relationship between league talent and fan demand. We assume a legally-hypothesized wage-repugnance line exists and present a theoretical output-demand model functionally dependent upon allocations in a wage-constrained labor-input market. Even given fan repugnance, wage restrictions do not necessarily generate procompetitive benefits. For families of model parameterizations, wage restrictions impose anticompetitive harm.
机构:
Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, sport Adm, Chapel Hill, NC USAUniv North Carolina Chapel Hill, Dept Exercise & Sport Sci, Sport Adm, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA