The
corrupt NCAA.
"behind this facade the National Collegiate Athletic Association and
university athletic programs are simultaneously running two seemingly
diametrically opposed rackets; one taking advantage of the players and
the other ostensibly giving them unfair benefits.
The NCAA is a tax-exempt, non-profit association that
oversees the athletics of just under 1,300 universities. While the NCAA
is not technically a government organization, it might as well be. It’s
a burdensome bureaucracy that regulates the athletics of public
universities, which are substantially funded and
strictly regulated by the government. And like any government, the NCAA
regulates in an attempt to restrict competition. As Lawrence Kahn noted,
“Most economists who have studied the NCAA view it as a cartel that
attempts to produce rents by restricting output and limiting payments
for inputs such as player compensation.”"
The bureaucrats get rich while the athletes get next to nothing.
"And don’t let the term “non-profit” fool you. Some non-profits can be quite profitable. Indeed, the NCAA recently agreed to a $10.8 billion,
fourteen-year contract with CBS and Turner Broadcasting to televise
games. NCAA chairman Mark Emmert was rewarded for his efforts with a
cool $1.7 million last year."
Travesty.
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