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Competitive Balance: Results of Two Natural Experiments from Rugby Union
Date Issued
2014-09
Date Available
2014-10-02T11:56:36Z
Abstract
The paper presents results from two natural experiments on the impact of revenue
sharing and salary caps on competitive balance in sports leagues arising from the introduction of professionalism in Rugby Union in 1995. The first involves the English Premiership, which traditionally applied a binding salary cap, and the French Top 14, which only introduced a (non-binding) salary cap relatively recently, while the Premiership also has a higher level of revenue sharing than its French counterpart. The second involves French rugby and soccer as the French soccer league is generally recognised as having a more even distribution of revenue and greater competitive balance than other major European soccer leagues. We find short- and long-run competitive balance is higher in the Premiership, than in the Top 14, while French soccer appears more evenly balanced than rugby. Unlike soccer, balance within and between leagues in rugby has not been negatively affected by European competitions. This could change as the Anglo-French teams’ share of European competition
revenues is set to increase from 2014/15 while broadcast revenues for both leagues are also set to increase substantially.
sharing and salary caps on competitive balance in sports leagues arising from the introduction of professionalism in Rugby Union in 1995. The first involves the English Premiership, which traditionally applied a binding salary cap, and the French Top 14, which only introduced a (non-binding) salary cap relatively recently, while the Premiership also has a higher level of revenue sharing than its French counterpart. The second involves French rugby and soccer as the French soccer league is generally recognised as having a more even distribution of revenue and greater competitive balance than other major European soccer leagues. We find short- and long-run competitive balance is higher in the Premiership, than in the Top 14, while French soccer appears more evenly balanced than rugby. Unlike soccer, balance within and between leagues in rugby has not been negatively affected by European competitions. This could change as the Anglo-French teams’ share of European competition
revenues is set to increase from 2014/15 while broadcast revenues for both leagues are also set to increase substantially.
Type of Material
Working Paper
Publisher
University College Dublin. School of Economics
Series
UCD Centre for Economic Research Working Paper Series
WP14/13
Copyright (Published Version)
2014 the authors
Web versions
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
WP14_13.pdf
Size
125.62 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
d96be65bfc214bbc540090b381054da9
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