Sunday, June 1, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Parliamentobserver
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Business
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
Parliamentobserver
Home Economy

The USFL and Labor Markets

Dennis Rogers by Dennis Rogers
September 29, 2022
in Economy
0
The USFL and Labor Markets
0
SHARES
11
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Reprinted from YellowHammer

The reborn United States Football League has completed its first regular season. USFL players made $4,500 per game, or $45,000 for the season.

Related posts

FTC Building

FTC Cracks Down on Hidden Charges and “Junk Fees” in New Proposal

October 5, 2024
PR Firm Austin: Unleashing the Power of Communication for European Businesses

PR Firm Austin: Unleashing the Power of Communication for European Businesses

August 2, 2023

By contrast, top NFL players make one thousand times more than this. How can such salary differentials exist across the same profession?

Pro athletes earn what economists call rent, a concept first detailed by 19th Century British economist David Ricardo. A rent is a payment exceeding the minimum a person requires to work at a job. Any factor of production in the economy can earn rent.

The factors affecting the minimum someone requires to play football, the reservation salary (or wage), illustrate how the USFL can pay such lower salaries. The most important consideration for the USFL is whether a player plays in the NFL. With a NFL minimum salary of $610,000, no current NFL player should choose to play in the USFL instead.

Top college players earn more than $45,000 from Name, Image, and Licensing deals and should not leave early for the USFL. Enormous skill differences exist across potential pros. Players better than the “replacement” level will command higher salaries.

Some USFL players may get NFL tryouts based on their play. The opportunity to advance to the NFL is part of the USFL’s compensation. The original USFL “discovered” players who later played in the NFL, like undersized linebacker and 2022 Hall of Famer Sam Mills.

The attractiveness of jobs also matters. People will work for less in desirable jobs or desirable locations. Fame and popularity make being a pro athlete very desirable before considering the money.

Past pay and expectations also affect reservation salaries. Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers has made hundreds of millions of dollars in his career and likely would not play another year for $1 million. Ratcheting salaries down once players expect to be paid millions would be extremely difficult.

The NFL reservation salary for talented young players, if we could erase all expectations of playing for millions, is close to zero. Why then do NFL teams pay a $2.8 million average salary? Two forces explain this. The first is revenue; the NFL generates more than $10 billion annually. Play at a level to produce this fan interest and revenue requires talented players, who generate tens of millions for their teams.

So, teams can afford eight figure salaries. But why do owners, who like money, pay more than the reservation salary? Competition for talent, as in all labor markets, drives salaries up to the level justified by revenues. Successful teams generate more revenue and owners often value winning. And winning requires top players.

Sports salaries are almost entirely rent. Owners and players will maneuver to capture these rents for themselves. Competition is greatest when players can negotiate and sign with any team, or with free agency, which owners oppose.

For nearly 100 years, baseball’s reserve clause prevented free agency. The reserve clause let teams automatically renew a player’s contract for the next season for the same or higher salary. Teams always renewed good players’ contracts.

Sports illustrate how advancing one’s personal interest sometimes requires collective action. Absent free agency, a player’s only bargaining leverage is refusing to play.

While the loss of a star player can cripple a team, when players jointly withhold their services by going on strike can shut a league down. Unions help organize collective action by workers. Owners must also cooperate to prevent bidding for players.

The reserve clause worked only because no owner tried bidding players away from other teams with higher salaries. After baseball established free agency, the players periodically accused owners of collusion, or agreeing not to bid aggressively for free agents.

Like all activity in a market economy, everyone involved in pro sports must voluntarily participate. Since many kids dream of being pro athletes and sports generate billions in revenue, voluntary participation is not a problem.

But sports generate enormous rents and competition to capture these rents ensures enduring strife between labor and management.

Previous Post

Strike Three for the Federal Reserve

Next Post

Unit Auto Sales Rose in June, but Remain Weak

Next Post
Unit Auto Sales Rose in June, but Remain Weak

Unit Auto Sales Rose in June, but Remain Weak

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Interoperable, agile, and balanced: Rethinking technology policy and governance for the 21st century

Interoperable, agile, and balanced: Rethinking technology policy and governance for the 21st century

3 years ago
The Everyman’s Economics Book We’ve Been Waiting For

The Everyman’s Economics Book We’ve Been Waiting For

3 years ago
Washington’s Budget Deficits: Size and Composition Matter

Washington’s Budget Deficits: Size and Composition Matter

3 years ago
Why AI Failed to Live Up to Its Potential During the Pandemic

Why AI Failed to Live Up to Its Potential During the Pandemic

3 years ago

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Uncategorized

POPULAR NEWS

  • Klaus Schwab – The Most Dangerous Man in the World

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dr. Robert Malone v WEF

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ukraine Adopts WEF Proposals

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trudeau Backs Down After Banks Scream about Massive Withdrawals

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trudeau’s Approval Rating Hits 12-Month Low

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Parliamentobserver

We bring you latest news about ecology, economy, healthcare, politics, education, business.

Recent News

  • FTC Cracks Down on Hidden Charges and “Junk Fees” in New Proposal
  • Eden Announces Extended Memorial Day Sale, Promoting Access to Metabolic Health Treatments
  • Top 5 Advantages of Staying in a Sober Living House

Category

  • Business
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Uncategorized

Recent News

FTC Building

FTC Cracks Down on Hidden Charges and “Junk Fees” in New Proposal

October 5, 2024
Eden Announces Extended Memorial Day Sale, Promoting Access to Metabolic Health Treatments

Eden Announces Extended Memorial Day Sale, Promoting Access to Metabolic Health Treatments

May 27, 2024
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© 2022 parliamentobserver.com Submit news release

No Result
View All Result
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Business

© 2022 parliamentobserver.com Submit news release

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In