Why do taxpayers pay billions for football stadiums? - YouTube

Channel: Vox

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gather around their televisions
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surrounded by loved ones, to watch the Big Game.
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And the pinnacle event of the
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most profitable sports league in the world
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is more often than not played in a new state-of-the-art stadium
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with super-sized digital displays
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retractable roofs
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luxurious box seats and suites.
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Teams generally earn the lion's share of the revenue from the stadium.
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But for 28 of the 32 teams
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it's the taxpayers in the team's host city who paid to build it.
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If the privately owned teams earn the stadium's revenue
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why are they built with public money?
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A new NFL stadium is being built nearly every year
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and their price tags are reaching into the billions.
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This chart shows all the different home fields
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NFL teams have played in since 1960.
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Stadiums built in the '70s and '80s
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have lasted, on average, over 30 years.
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But now a stadium's lifespan may be less than two decades
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Washington's owner started asking for a new stadium
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back when FedEx Field was only 17 years old.
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Though some stadiums, like the Giants/Jets
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MetLife Stadium are built with 100% private financing
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public tax dollars have financed the vast majority
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of NFL stadiums built in the last 20 years.
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That's over 7 billion in public money going towards
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building and renovating NFL stadiums.
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NFL owners argue that a new stadium
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will generate new construction jobs while the venue is being built
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all the new spending from ticket sales, hotels, parking, tourism
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would cascade into the community, the wider area
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and would create a boom in the local economy
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I asked an urban planning economist if stadiums really are a good public investment.
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Most of the stadiums we have built in United States,
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they do not provide any positive impact - most of them.
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What else you could have done with this money?
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Let's say they are raising 200 million dollar and there is investing in a stadium.
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Instead of doing that, if they spend that money on roads,
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infrastructure, shopping malls, or public parks.
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Things that benefit the whole public, not just football fans.
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For team owners, new stadiums mean millions more in profits.
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They sell the name of the stadium to other corporations,
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host the Super Bowl,
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and owners maximize revenue by building more and more luxury suites
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and club seating in the place of general admission seats.
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Over a third of the seats are premium in the Cowboys' 82,000 seat stadium
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and a luxury suite can cost as much as $30,000 per game.
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The push for new stadiums comes down to increasing
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profits for the owners, but cities try to meet these demands because there's more
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to a football franchise than the bottom line.
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Residents want teams and the
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hometown pride that comes with it.
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Even for people who never attended a game
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there's a shared experience, a collective enthusiasm for the home team.
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In one poll three-quarters of Indiananpolis citizens
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said losing the city's NFL team would hurt the city
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compared to 68% who said it would
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hurt to lose all the city's museums.
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This is coming from a city and state that funded 86% of their new stadium
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even though the previous stadium still owes millions in debt.
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Team owners, they have successfully tied this stadium
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to a civic pride. And that's why
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When cities refuse to build new stadiums
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owners threaten to move their teams to somewhere that will.
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That's what happened in 2016 to St. Louis
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and 2017 to San Diego and Oakland.
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New stadiums aren't the economic powerhouses owners promise they'll be.
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But as long as there are more cities that want a home team than there are franchises,
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it looks like the taxpayers are gonna keep footing the bill.