ECON 2P03 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Cleveland Stadium, Texas Stadium, Deadweight Loss

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Chapter 5- the cost and benefits of a sports franchise to a city. Naming rights: divide the histor(cid:455) of stadiu(cid:373)s i(cid:374)to three (cid:862)eras(cid:863, #1: (cid:271)ase(cid:271)all fields that all have (cid:862)field(cid:863) or (cid:862)park(cid:863) i(cid:374) their (cid:374)a(cid:373)es, (cid:374)a(cid:373)ed after team owner, #2: multipurpose facilities with names like texas stadium, cleveland municipal. Era #1- the entrepreneurial period lasted from 1890-1930: owners built stadiums to house their teams and keep bystanders from watching for free. Era #2: the civic infrastructure period lasted from 1953-1980, cities named facilities after themselves, local geography or for patriotic reasons. Era #3: the public-private partnership began after 1980 and is still ongoing, naming rights sold to private sponsors. Financing facilities: cities can issue and sell bonds to borrow money to build facilities, they can also raise money through taxation, sales taxes are possible but there is the issue of deadweight losses.

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