From The Wages of Win blog:
- Player’s salaries have stayed even with inflation. Essentially this means their pay has not been going up.
- Owners have been increasing their spending. Management’s operating costs (per their own numbers) have been going up at five times the level of inflation (that’s a lot).
- Even in the ideal case for the owners with the new CBA these problems will repeat themselves in 2020.
[li]The Owners are asking the players to take a pay hit to make up for bad management practices.[/li]
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By using the owners' own numbers, the economic woes of NBA teams seem to be mainly because team operating costs are increasing at five times the rate of player salary costs.
It makes me wonder if the owners are using accounting tricks like paying themselves fat executive salaries in an attempt to seem less profitable so they can force a showdown.
Fully agreed.
There are two important factors here:
- plenty of owners don't care about running their franchises efficiently from an economic perspective. It's an afterthought. This creates a very perverse dynamic.
- there's a huge imbalance in the revenue potential between franchises.
More than renegotiating players salaries, the NBA needs two things:
- imposing a debt limit to teams + imposing management procedures/rules including caps on non-players salary expenses.
- stronger revenue-sharing
This is what is really important to the long-term viability of the NBA. Otherwise, owners can lower the share of the revenue going to players to 33% and in 10 years we'll be talking about how NBA teams are losing money.