Tuesday, September 27, 2011

NBA Economics

Malcolm Gladwell has written a piece for Grantland that examines the New Jersey (soon to be Brooklyn) Nets. "David Stern would have you believe the Brooklyn-bound franchise embodies everything wrong with the league's finances. It's not true."

Please do read the story to see how NBA Commissioner David Stern is holding up the Nets as a case example of owners losing money when in fact both former owner Bruce Ratner and new owner, Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov, are set to make unreal amounts of money in real estate thanks to the new Brooklyn stadium, the Barclays Center.

The below quote doesn't do justice to Gladwell's essay as a whole in any way, but it is interesting enough to share on its own.

"One of the great forgotten facts about the United States is that not very long ago the wealthy weren't all that wealthy. Up until the 1960s, the gap between rich and poor in the United States was relatively narrow. In fact, in that era marginal tax rates in the highest income bracket were in excess of 90 percent. For every dollar you made above $250,000, you gave the government 90 cents. Today — with good reason — we regard tax rates that high as punitive and economically self-defeating. It is worth noting, though, that in the social and political commentary of the 1950s and 1960s there is scant evidence of wealthy people complaining about their situation. They paid their taxes and went about their business. Perhaps they saw the logic of the government's policy: There was a huge debt from World War II to be paid off, and interstates, public universities, and other public infrastructure projects to be built for the children of the baby boom. Or perhaps they were simply bashful. Wealth, after all, is as often the gift of good fortune as it is of design. For whatever reason, the wealthy of that era could have pushed for a world that more closely conformed to their self-interest and they chose not to. Today the wealthy have no such qualms. We have moved from a country of relative economic equality to a place where the gap between rich and poor is exceeded by only Singapore and Hong Kong. The rich have gone from being grateful for what they have to pushing for everything they can get. They have mastered the arts of whining and predation, without regard to logic or shame. In the end, this is the lesson of the NBA lockout. A man buys a basketball team as insurance on a real estate project, flips the franchise to a Russian billionaire when he wins the deal, and then — as both parties happily count their winnings — what lesson are we asked to draw? The players are greedy."

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