Quote:
Originally Posted by mhays
If it's just selling bonds that will be repaid at a fair markup, then no. Your mortgage banker isn't subsidizing your house; they're trying to make a good business deal.
However this would be repaid by taxes essentially funded by local entertainment spending (directly and indirectly). The spending would generally not be net additional--it's money fans would spend on something else if the team isn't around--so it's basically an added tax even if paid by the players and team officials. Major league economic assessments typically treat all team-related revenue as new money, which is blatantly false.
(I'm mostly speaking generally...I don't know the inner workings of the Oregon deal.)
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Yeah not trying to agree or disagree with it, but it’s the same thing as say, giving a major corporation tax exemptions to move/stay in a city, with the result being income taxes and other direct revenues increase. Hopefully providing a net benefit.
But the equation is drastically different from an actually private funded stadium where the state only GAINS in tax revenue/spending. Better than zero sum.
I just know some here don’t like the idea of stadium handouts, which this clearly is. Until these last few weeks I was also under impression mlb to pdx had private financing/backers for all stadium facilities, so this caught me by surprise.