South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Baseball lockout shows what’s wrong with economy

- By Allison Schrager Bloomberg Opinion Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

For the first time in more than 25 years (2020’s pandemic shutdown excluded) there is no baseball. I know it’s the offseason, but if the impasse between the players union and the owners continues there may be no baseball in April. The disagreeme­nt is largely about how younger players and superstars are paid. But the problems stem from big structural changes in the economy that impact every industry. And while the baseball lock-out will eventually be resolved, the economy-wide issues that unions are ill-equipped to address will remain.

The U.S. economy has undergone some big changes in the last few decades that impact every industry, even the classic American game. Better data and data analytics make it easier to spot talent and how much an individual worker or player contribute­s. There are also bigger rewards to being a superstar both individual­ly and as a team.

Talent tends to cluster, creating superstar companies (or teams) who earn outsize rewards. Increased globalizat­ion and technology contribute to a larger, more lucrative market that increases the value of being a superstar, especially if you work at a superstar firm and work with other stars. This leaves mediocre players and workers behind and unable to compete. This also explains why baseball is struggling to find a compensati­on formula that can satisfy both players and owners.

When players enter the majors, they sign a contract that allows them to renegotiat­e a pay increase through arbitratio­n after three years of service. After a minimum of six years of service they can become free agents and might sign a bigger deal with a different team. The union wants arbitratio­n and free agency to happen sooner. With the current arrangemen­t, many younger players are underpaid during their prime years. The analytics have revealed that most players become less valuable as they get into their 30s, when their contracts would typically expire.

That’s why many players have been extending their contracts and avoiding free agency. Under the rules, the ability to negotiate for higher pay tends to happen after their peak years. If they could get out of their contracts earlier, they could make hay in their prime. This might be acceptable to the owners on its own, but the union also wants to preserve the upside, or the extremely large salaries for the few players who do go on to become big stars and secure big deals after their contract ends.

There is no salary cap in baseball, but there is a “luxury tax” on team salaries intended to prevent an arms race that ends in the richer teams hoarding the best talent. If a team’s total salaries exceed a certain amount, currently set at $210 million, the team must pay a fine that goes up each year the threshold is violated.

So the owners would like to lower the luxury-tax threshold, introduce a salary floor, and base free agency on age instead of years in the league. This would keep salaries down for both young players and stars. Owners argue the players already have a good deal, industry pay has never been higher and the players’ share of revenue has been constant. Though that is largely because those few superstar salaries have gotten so high.

To be fair, it may not be possible to pay $43 million annually to the few stars and pay younger players more. Something has to give. The superstar economy creates a challenge for profession­al sports because it means a few breakout stars are paid a huge salary and wind up at a few exceptiona­l teams, and in sports you need many good teams for it to be interestin­g. Ironically, it may now be employers who benefit more from unions because collective bargaining usually limits how much superstars can be paid and keeps the league more competitiv­e.

But for players, the existing collective-bargaining model means that either top-tier players continue to be paid big salaries subsidized by younger players who support them or young players are paid their value and there is a limit on superstar salaries. Either option puts pressure on the solidarity of a union. The MLB will eventually reach some kind of agreement. But the plight of baseball shows that unions may not be the answer for workers in a superstar economy.

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