Saturday, May 31, 2008


Florida Marlins Finances

Pigs get fat, hogs get stadiums?


Please click on the spreadsheet to enlarge or print.



While most have heard of the Forbes reporting on the valuation and profitability of MLB and the Marlins, I think having their work summarized in a P&L financial statement format will help us fans understand this issue better. For those who really want to get into it - Free pocket-protector anyone? - please see the related postings on the right side of the page under Florida Marlins Finances.

Back in April 2008, we got some attention at 2 of the more serious baseball blogs: Sabernomics & The Hardball Times [THT]. Then in June, an interview with me was posted in THT. Aside from an initial concern over being labeled a 'fiend' on a web site whose title includes the word 'hard,' I am very appreciative to John Beamer from THT for the opportunity.


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Friday, May 30, 2008


A Lesson in Thinking

Please read Richard Posner's analysis of a proposal to pay kids to go school. Aside from the insights, admire the way he builds the argument:

  • Background into Friedman's proposals re welfare in the 1960's
  • How Friedman's cash grants morphed in the earned income tax credit
  • Why children affect a normally libertarian mindset
  • Why compulsory-schooling and child labor laws are necessary
  • Analysis of why some parents don't send their kids to school
  • How paying them could be expected to impact those factors
  • Identifying a potential unintended consequence - lowered truancy but continued poor quality of education

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Entire Posner Post
Paying Children to Go to School--Posner's Comment

The Mexican and New York City programs are well described in Becker's post and in a recent article in the Financial Times by Christopher Grimes, "Do the Right Thing," May 24, 2008, www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a2f1b24a-292a-11dd-96ce-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1. I cannot comment on the Mexican program; nor do I oppose social experiments financed by private money, as in New York. But I am skeptical about the New York program, and if I were a New Yorker I would be reluctant to support public financing of it.

Before Milton Friedman proposed to replace welfare programs with a negative income tax--that is, a cash grant with few if any strings attached--welfare programs were in part devices by which the government endeavored to buy good behavior from the poor. Hence food stamps, but not food stamps that could be used to buy liquor. Or money earmarked for health or education.

Friedman's criticism of such programs was that people have a better sense of their needs than government bureaucrats, so that if the government simply gave poor people money they would allocate it more efficiently than the welfare bureaucracy would do. This philosophy was eventually adopted by the federal government in the form of the earned income tax credit. The danger in giving the poor money (or anything else for that matter) is that it will reduce their incentive to work; this problem was addressed by the replacement of welfare by workfare at the state and later the federal level.

Friedman's analysis requires qualification, however, when the issue is the welfare of children. The reason is that not all parents balance their own welfare with that of their children in an impartial manner. That is why we have laws forbidding child neglect and abuse. It is also why we have compulsory-schooling laws and forbid child labor. These are paternalistic laws in a quite literal sense, but are justified to the extent that there is legitimate concern that not all parents are faithful agents of their children. Nevertheless, as a general rule parents both know better than welfare officials what is good for their children and love their children more than the officials, however well meaning, do, so any proposal to expand the role of government in controlling children should be viewed with caution.

Public school is both free and compulsory, and schooling adds considerably to a child's lifetime income prospects, so we must ask why some parents do not compel their children to attend school regularly. One reason might be that some of them do not value their children's welfare. Another that they cannot control their children. And a third that they do not think their children benefit significantly from regular attendance. I would guess that the second and third reasons are more common than the first.

Paying children to go to school would probably have at least some effect in countering all three cases. However, the benefits would be limited to children who, but for the payment, would attend school less frequently. I do not know how those children could be identified in advance, which means that the program would confer windfalls on some, perhaps many, children. (It would be odd to disqualify children on the basis of their good attendance!) In addition, there would be substantial costs, both direct and indirect, to the program. The direct costs would consist of the costs of distributing the money to the kids, making sure that it is not appropriated by the parents, and monitoring the children's school attendance. (So: more bureaucracy.) The indirect costs would include perverse incentive effects--some parents would spend less on their children to offset the payments that the children would be receiving for staying in school. Also, giving children their own source of income would reduce parental control and by doing so weaken already weak families. And some children contribute more to family welfare by occasional truancy than by consistent school attendance--for example, they may be older children helping to take care of younger siblings in households in which the parents work full time, or in which there is only one parent. Also, how does one end such a program? If the payments are suddenly withdrawn, will the kids feel aggrieved and resume truancy with a vengeance?

The largest indirect cost, I would guess, would consist in relaxed pressure to improve the public schools or to allow them to be bypassed by means of voucher systems. High rates of truancy may be due in significant part to low quality of schools. Paying children to attend school will reduce truancy rates some but without improving school quality, and perhaps without improving the education of the children receiving the payments. (School quality may actually decrease, with more crowded classrooms--crowded by kids who don't really want to be there.) Suppose that a school is in session 200 days a year, a student is truant 10 of those days, and if paid to attend would be truant only 5 days. Then the effect of the payment would be to increase the number of days the child was in school by only 2.5 percent. If it's a bad school, there might be zero benefit from this modest increase in attendance.

Granted, there are many children in New York who are truant for much longer periods. An article by Harold O. Levy and Kimberly Henry, "Mistaking Attendance," New York Times, Sept. 2, 2007, www.nytimes.com/2007/09/02/opinion/02levy-1.html?_r=2&ex=1189396800&en=1d2692cb89c474d7&ei=5070&emc=eta1&oref=slogin&oref=slogin, estimates that 30 percent of New York public school students miss a month of school every year. But they may be children who for mental or psychological reasons, or extreme family circumstances, cannot benefit significantly from additional schooling. The beneficial effects of paying children to go to school are likely to be concentrated on the kids who are casual rather than extreme truants, and those benefits, as suggested by my numerical example, may be slight.

Another component of the program is paying children for performing well on standardized exams. Such measures reward work more directly than paying for attendance, and also avoid the bad signal that is emitted by bribing people to do what the law requires them to do (i.e., attend school until 16 or 18, depending on the state), but they may largely reward intelligence rather than study. Working hard in school is no guaranty of getting good grades. Scholarships for promising students and awards for high performance have good effects, but the paid students are unlikely to qualify in competition with students who do not have to be paid to attend school.

Paying children to attend school is a band-aid approach at best. Far better would be a voucher system that would create competition among the public schools to serve children better.


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Wednesday, May 28, 2008


Morality & Globalization

Perception: Globalization may have been oversold. We are beginning to see unanticipated problems which should give us pause.

Economic Reality: The idea behind Globalization - defined as the increased integration of the world’s economy - is that resources should be allocated by markets, instead of government's. That idea has been and remains a great success.

"Countries don't get rich by staying isolated. Those that embrace trade and foreign investment acquire know-how and technologies, can buy advanced products abroad and are forced to improve their competitiveness. The transmission of new ideas and products is faster than ever. After its invention, the telegram took 90 years to spread to four-fifths of developing countries; for the cell phone, the comparable diffusion was 16 years."

The above quote is from a column by economist Robert Samuelson.

To take the globalization / free trade argument to another level, check out the posting by one of those heavyweight-ivy-league blogoshere-icon economist types - Greg Mankiw. He's for it and writes:
"Economists' devotion to free trade is based not only on the positive conclusion that it leads to a bigger economic pie but also on a couple of related philosophical positions."


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Tuesday, May 27, 2008


Iowa's Immigration Problem?

Perception: The Federal Government is addressing the problem of immigration which is costing US citizens and residents their jobs.

Economic Reality: A 3.5% unemployment rate is the equivalent of full-employment. Raids in Iowa have more to do with presidential politics than immigration.

Below is an excerpt from the WSJ Editorial - May 24, 2008:

"Federal immigration officials raided an Iowa meatpacking plant this month in what is being called the largest operation of its kind in U.S. history. Nearly 400 of the plant's 900 employees were arrested on immigration charges. Do you feel safer?

Ever since immigration reform died in Congress last year, the Bush Administration has made a show of stepping up enforcement. But do homeland security officials really have nothing better to do than raid businesses that hire willing workers – especially in states like Iowa, where the jobless rate is 3.5%? These immigrants are obviously responding to a labor shortage for certain jobs. Giving them a legal way to enter the country would free up homeland security money and manpower to focus on real threats."

See rest of the WSJ editorial [subscription required]


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Monday, May 19, 2008


Hanley Ramirez signing - Change in strategy?

Please click on spreadsheet to enlarge or print.


At first glance, the signing of Hanley Ramirez appeared to signal a shift in philosophy for the Florida Marlins management. If there was going to be a shift, this would have been the logical first step.

But as the numbers in my spreadsheet above indicate, this signing by itself does not represent any commitment of the $105 million in Revenue Sharing [RS] monies the Marlins will probably receive over the next three years prior to the planned new ballpark opening. The RS estimates are based on the statements by Pittsburgh Pirates President, Frank Coonlley, who disclosed that the Pirates would be receiving $35 million in RS monies in 2008. That level of RS monies are consistent with the Forbes estimates regarding Florida Marlins revenues from 2002 through 2007 - see the Marlins P&L I have compiled. By any criteria of how RS monies are allocated - Marlins have less Local Revenue and lower Payroll - the Marlins should receive a greater share of RS monies than the Pirates.

Put another way, in 2006 & 2007 the Marlins pocketed 100% of the Revenue Sharing monies received [about $72 million]. In the case of the 2007 season, they did so with a major league salaries level of $30 million. They then reduced their major league salaries by $9 million for the 2008 season. So even after the new Ramirez deal kicks in for the 2009 season [$5.5 million], they would still be under their 2007 salary levels - levels at which they were able to pocket all RS monies. Think about it, even after the Ramirez deal, the Marlins are currently on track to be under their 2007 major league salaries level of $30 million for the three years [2008 thru 2010] prior to their stadium opening.

Why is that important? Because part of the company line the Marlins will put out as valid reasons for not spending money on other players is that due to their low revenues and the Ramirez deal, they can not afford to do much else. The Ramirez deal, as of today, does not even bring them back up to their 2007 level of salaries, let alone dip into using their Revenue Sharing monies for the first time since 2005.

An article by Juan Rodriguez about the signing points out that Ramirez was worried about making a mistake by not holding out for an additional $30 million dollars. An ESPN article addresses how Ramirez would have benefited from the Ryan Howard arbitration awarded salary of $10 million for 2008. My spreadsheet provides a reasonable scenario under which Ramirez could have made an additional $30 million by going the arbitration then free agency route. But that route entailed a risk of injury and or sub-par performance. This is a good example of how to quantify the cost of avoiding risk.

The joy in South Florida over the Ramirez signing is probably the latest example of the Societal Stockholm Syndrome, the scenario whereby victims begin to feel sympathy for their captors.


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Tuesday, May 13, 2008


Sowell on Oil Supply & Demand

Perception: Increasing oil prices may be a complicated issue, but we know that certain parties - i.e. oil companies and President Bush - are exploiting the situation.

Economic Reality: Oil prices are not immune to increased demand price pressures. The incentives to address the problem politically [identify bad guys] differ from potential economic solutions - decrease demand [kill Commies] or increase supply [kill environmentalists]. Gee, can't we do both Santa? See the column by economist Thomas Sowell - an excerpt below:

"Is there anything complex about the fact that with two countries-- India and China-- having rapid economic growth, and with combined populations 8 times that of the United States, they are creating an increased demand for the world's oil supply?

The problem is not that supply and demand is such a complex explanation. The problem is that supply and demand is not an emotionally satisfying explanation. For that, you need melodrama, heroes and villains."


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Thursday, May 8, 2008


Ridicule Trumps Outrage

George Will sets his sights on Sen. Clinton:

Hillary Clinton, 60, Illinois native and Arkansas lawyer, became, retroactively, a lifelong Yankee fan at age 52 when, shopping for a U.S. Senate seat, she adopted New York state as home sweet home. She may think, or at least would argue, that when she was 12 her Yankees really won the 1960 World Series, by standards of "fairness," because they trounced the Pirates in runs scored, 55-27, over seven games, so there.
Here is the complete column.

May 08, 2008

The Demise of the Razorback Yankee

By George Will

WASHINGTON -- Hillary Clinton, 60, Illinois native and Arkansas lawyer, became, retroactively, a lifelong Yankee fan at age 52 when, shopping for a U.S. Senate seat, she adopted New York state as home sweet home. She may think, or at least would argue, that when she was 12 her Yankees really won the 1960 World Series, by standards of "fairness," because they trounced the Pirates in runs scored, 55-27, over seven games, so there.

Unfortunately, baseball's rules -- pesky nuisances, rules -- say it matters how runs are distributed during a World Series. The Pirates won four games, which is the point of the exercise, by a total margin of seven runs, while the Yankees were winning three by a total of 35 runs. You can look it up.

After Tuesday's split decisions in Indiana and North Carolina, Clinton, the Yankee Clipperette, can, and hence eventually will, creatively argue that she is really ahead of Barack Obama, or at any rate she is sort of tied, mathematically or morally or something, in popular votes, or delegates, or some combination of the two, as determined by Fermat's Last Theorem, or something, in states whose names begin with vowels, or maybe consonants, or perhaps some mixture of the two as determined by listening to a recording of the Beach Boys' "Help Me, Rhonda" played backward, or whatever other formula is most helpful to her, and counting the votes she received in Michigan, where hers was the only contending name on the ballot (her chief rivals, quaintly obeying their party's rules, boycotted the state, which had violated the party's rules for scheduling primaries), and counting the votes she received in Florida, which, like Michigan, was a scofflaw and where no one campaigned, and dividing Obama's delegate advantage in caucus states by pi multiplied by the square root of Yankee Stadium's ZIP code.

Or perhaps she wins if Obama's popular vote total is, well, adjusted, by counting each African-American vote as only three-fifths of a vote. There is precedent, of sorts, for that arithmetic (see the Constitution, Article I, Section 2, before the 14th Amendment).

"We," says Geoff Garin, a Clinton strategist who possesses the audacity of hopelessness required in that role, "don't think this is just going to be about some numerical metric." Mere numbers? Heaven forefend. That is how people speak when numerical metrics -- numbers of popular votes and delegates -- are inconvenient.

Gen. Douglas MacArthur said that every military defeat can be explained by two words: "too late." Too late in anticipating danger, too late in preparing for it, too late in taking action. Clinton's political defeat can be similarly explained -- too late in recognizing that the electorate does not acknowledge her entitlement to the presidency, too late in understanding that she had a serious challenger, too late in anticipating that she would not dispatch Barack Obama by Super Tuesday (Feb. 5), too late in planning for the special challenges of caucus states, too late in channeling her inner shot-and-a-beer hard hat.

Most of all, she was too late in understanding how much the Democratic Party's mania for "fairness," as mandated by liberals like her, has, by forbidding winner-take-all primaries, made it nearly impossible for her to overcome Obama's early lead in delegates. If Democrats, who genuflect at the altar of "diversity," allowed more of it in their delegate selection process, things might look very different. If even, say, Texas, California and Ohio were permitted to have winner-take-all primaries (as 48 states have winner-take-all allocation of their electoral votes), Clinton would have been more than 400 delegates ahead of Obama before Tuesday and today would be at her ancestral home in New York planning to return some of its furniture to the White House next January.

Tuesday night must have been almost as much fun for John McCain as for Obama. The Republican brand has been badly smudged by recent foreign and domestic policies, which are the only kinds there are, so McCain's hopes rest on the still-unattached cohort called "Reagan Democrats," who still seem somewhat resistant to Obama.

McCain's problem might turn out to be the fact that Obama is the Democrats' Reagan. Obama's rhetorical cotton candy lacks Reagan's ideological nourishment, but he is Reaganesque in two important senses: People like listening to him, and his manner lulls his adversaries into underestimating his sheer toughness -- the tempered steel beneath the sleek suits.


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Tuesday, May 6, 2008


The Audacity of Self-Reliance

The quote below is a good example of why Thomas Sowell is David Mamet's favorite philosopher.

"People on the far left like to flatter themselves that they are for the poor and the downtrodden. But what is most likely to lift people out of poverty-- telling them that the world has done them wrong or promoting the work ethic of the Korean girls, the dogged determination of my Harvard classmate with the newspaper in his shoe, or the self-reliance of my fellow junior high school student in Harlem who had too much pride to take charity?"

See the rest of Mr Sowell's column.


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Monday, May 5, 2008


Do all MLB Teams have to lie about their finances?

Answer: Only before they get their stadium built.

In attempting to deny profitability, Florida Marlins President David Samson ends up stating obvious lies as I document in my posting [Why Silence is Golden]. But apparently, it doesn't always have to be that way.

Pittsburgh Pirates Team President, Frank Coonlley, states the following in an April 18th article by Bob Biertempfel of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review:

  • The Pirates are profitable.
  • The Pirates have chosen to broadly define "on-field performance" to include paying down team debt.
  • Therefore, the Pirates don't believe that using Revenue Sharing monies to pay down their debt violates the CBA provisions on how they must spend their Revenue Sharing monies.
  • The Pirates expect to receive $35 million in Revenue Sharing monies in 2008.
Two things to note regarding the statements:
  • No one who follows MLB finances will be surprised by the things being admitted to.
  • All of the above is largely true of the Florida Marlins as well, except that the Marlins are accumulating revenue sharing monies to pay for their portion of the planned stadium constriction costs instead of the debt in the case of the Pirates.
Now Pirate fans can make informed opinions about their team's ownership and their current actions vs their promises when they were attempting to secure public monies for a stadium.

I wonder what us Florida Marlin fans will get first, a completed stadium [opening 2011] or a similar admission as to the real use of RS monies?


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Sunday, May 4, 2008