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Baseball Primer Newsblog — The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand Wednesday, January 02, 2008N.Y. Daily News: Gonzalez: Taxpayers will fund Yankees’ VIP parking, NYC gets less moneyCripes...I’d give my left kinney for free valet parking at Yankee Stadium!
Repoz
Posted: January 02, 2008 at 07:22 AM | 26 comment(s)
Related News: General, Business, NY Yankees |
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It's true that the beer was Ballantine's and not some yuppie designer brand, but those were hard times, and there was a war going on. You had to make sacrifices somewhere.
And yet in those dreadful days of 91% tax rates, the clueless Yankees never figured how to get the government to use any of that dough to pay for Toots Shor's parking space. It took the re-invention of "free market" economics for them to come up with a solution for that....
It's still the most affordable major sport, by far, but they sure have eclipsed my old 'movie ticket' benchmark by a good margin.
As for this 'hidden subsidy', Inspector Renault would be shocked, eh?
... if you didn't have a job.
Yeah, that's one of history's great mysteries, how they ever found 70,000 unemployed bums in a city of 8 million people to fill up Yankee Stadium for all those afternoon World Series games.
I'm not even sure that's accurate if you consider that a game is only one act in a 162-act drama.
... if you didn't have a job.
Yeah, that's one of history's great mysteries, how they ever found 70,000 unemployed bums in a city of 8 million people to fill up Yankee Stadium for all those afternoon World Series games.
The 1951 World Series didn't draw 70,000 people for any game. And I thought we were talking about his "entire rookie season," not a handful of special games at the end of the year.
David, my post was nothing more than answering one non sequitur with another, and I think I know why attendance rises for night games. But the fact of those ticket prices remains regardless of who was likely to be buying the tickets.
David, I know all that, and believe it or not I knew all that before I made my first post in this thread. I probably even knew that before you were born. What was non sequiturish about your post was that it was an answer to a political question that hadn't been posed in the first place. Whatever political point there was in my original post had to do with taxpayer-subsidized parking, which I'm sure we both agree is deplorable.
In a market in which demand is subsidized, it is incorrect to state that prices are determined by supply and demand. Many of the new Yankee Stadium seats, including a significant majority of the most expensive seats, will be subsidized by the tax deduction the purchaser will receive.
From almost every angle, the modern major league baseball stadium is one big market-distorting government giveway to the people who need it least. And, indeed, the price of almost everything you'll see there, from the players' salaries to the prices of luxury suites, and the prices of concessions, is s distorted by one form or another of cartel, legalized price fixing, or other non-market mechanism. It resembles free market pricing barely more than grocery stores in Leningrad, ca. 1980.
and supply and demand set ticket prices?
- what a total shock. i can't hardly believe it. here and i thought it was because all those horrible terrible greedy baseball players don't want to play for mcdonald wages because they aren't playing for the Love Of The Game like all the ballplayers did back in the pure old days when they had unblemished impeccable good character and wouldn't never drink nor smoke nor swear nor screw nor even think for one second bout ANY kind of behaviour that wasn't done by the purest of saints
well, actually, sarcasm aside, there is more to it then supply and demand because teams like the marlins that don't draw flies STILL have real high prices for the seats. no dollar days that is fer SHER
In the case of the Marlins, they likely don't want to give the impression that they're "giving their product away." For 23 years I had about the lowest prices in Washington in my book store, but I never had any "sale" until the last six weeks of my operation, and for that exact reason. Once you start discounting, it's hard to stop, and after a while customers more tend to remember that you've eliminated the bargains than that you had them in the first place.
And in the case of the Big Three high demand teams (Yanks, Sox, Cubs), they could almost certainly raise prices even more, at least for some games, but they choose not to in great part because even the greediest owners have to pay some attention to public perception. The Cubs, of course, try to have it both ways by use of their phony "ticket agencies." But nobody ever accused the Cubs of subtlety.
In a "perfect" ecnomic model, I suppose, we'd have auctions for all the seats: First for the season tickets, then for the partial plans, then for the choice games, then for the rest. But of course there are many reasons that would never happen, not the least of which is that the owners might not like the results.
BBC:
"behaviour"
Did Brattain give you his spell checker?
660 spaces seems like a very large VIP area. Do the members of Michael Kay's posse all roll in separate cars? The Cubs' players and VIP parking area is smaller than the parking lot for the McDonald's across Clark Street. Although the Cubs may not own "their" parking area at all. . .
well when you only get a couple hundred people in a what 60,000 seat stadium, it might could be that you'd have SOME serious discount seats.
unless of course you get your money from the yanks and the sox and it makes zero difference whether or not anyone show up because you still make some 20-30 mill a year in profit
jwb,
if i could write like brattain i'd take spelling like him too
You can go to a Twins game for less than a first run movie ticket, especially if you take the train.
Lord, I hadn't even thought that Micheal F/in Kay will probably get one of these spots.
Now I'm really mad.
well when you only get a couple hundred people in a what 60,000 seat stadium, it might could be that you'd have SOME serious discount seats.
unless of course you get your money from the yanks and the sox and it makes zero difference whether or not anyone show up because you still make some 20-30 mill a year in profit
BBC,
Don't blame me for the Marlins. If it were up to me the only Major League Baseball you'd ever see in that entire sorry state would be in the month of March. If I were the Friendly Dictator of Baseball I'd move the Marlins to Brooklyn and the Devil Rays to Staten Island and let the whole thing sort itself out. And if Floridians yelled too loud I'd threaten to take away their dentures and be done with it. That'd learn em.
Subtlety has never been a big Chicago virtue.
Six of one and half a dozen of the other, since they're both in their early 60's.
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