The James Madison Institute
Home
About Us
Issues
Publications
Events
Press Room
Contribute
Sitemap
Contact Us

Want to know how fast Florida's state government spends your money?

Learn More

04/01/01 - Backgrounder #31 - The Case against Public Subsidies for a New Florida Marlins Stadium

by Charles Rock
April 1, 2001

Introduction

There has been a decades-long spree of public spending on sports facilities in the United States. Since 1960 more than 90 new facilities have been built for teams in the four dominant professional sports—baseball, basketball, football, and hockey. Of the total stadium financing of $17 billion over this period, more than two-thirds was provided by taxpayers (Keating 1999). During the same period, almost three dozen existing stadiums and arenas for the pro teams were renovated at a further cost of $2.5 billion. Although taxpayers were more frugal in these cases and did not finance new facilities, they generously provided more than 90 percent of the total.

Full Text of "04/01/01 - Backgrounder #31 - The Case against Public Subsidies for a New Florida Marlins Stadium" (PDF, 145 KB)
You must have Adobe Acrobat installed to view this document.

Backgrounders



Page Tools
Printer-Friendly
Send To A Friend
Your Account
Create Your Account
Sign In To Your Account
MEMBERSHIP

Advance the cause of liberty with your tax-deductible membership to The James Madison Institute today.

NEWSLETTER

Stay ahead of the curve with a free subscription to our weekly e-newsletter, Madison Policy Digest. You'll get all of the latest Institute updates, along with a summary of Florida's top policy headlines from a free-market point of view.