The Economic Impact of Intercollegiate Athletics on Former Students

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College graduates do not benefit economically from the intercollegiate athletic programs of their alma mater.

Students provide substantial funding for their institution's intercollegiate athletic programs via tuition and fees. In fact, a typical student is required to pay for such activities. Will this financial burden paid for during undergraduate years help them in the real world?

Whether measuring the incomes earned by alumni, their upward economic mobility, or their record in paying off federal student loans, there is no subsequent economic payoff to graduates of institutions that spend large sums of money on athletic programs. And, in all actuality, evidence suggests that graduates of campuses with FBS ('big-time) football programs end up earning less than graduates of comparable non-FBS institutions.

The statistical analysis provided in this book is derived from a sample of almost 700 four-year institutions between 2004 and 2022. The authors present the information and provide analysis, focusing on five different measures of economic success the alumni (for example, the incomes alumni earn after graduating). The book uses this data to explain that there is either no definitive positive connectionand, in fact, there might be a negative relationshipbetween intercollegiate athletic programs and the economic success of their alumni.

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Explores the connection, if any, between intercollegiate athletic programs and graduates' economic success Dissects data from 700 four-year, not-for-profit collegiate athletic programs Questions the costs imposed on students and society to fund and support intercollegiate athletic programs

Autorentext

Richard J. Cebula is Editor-in-Chief of The American Journal of Economics and Sociology and is Affiliate Professor in the Economics Department at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville.

Robert N. Fenili is a semi-retired veteran economics consultant and expert witness who has spent most of his career in Washington, DC.

James V. Koch is Board of Visitors Professor Emeritus and President Emeritus at Old Dominion University. He spent 15 years as a college president. He is the author of The Caterpillar Way.

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Inhalt

Chapter 1: Beer And Circus?.- Chapter 2: Where We Are.- Chapter 3: Where We Are.- Chapter 4: The Incomes Earned By Graduates.- Chapter 5: Intercollegiate Athletics And Earning More Than High School.- Chapter 6: Intercollegiate Athletics And Upward Economic Mobility.. Chapter 7: Intercollegiate Athletics And Student Debt.- Chapter 8: Portents For The Future.

Weitere Informationen

  • Allgemeine Informationen
    • GTIN 09783032034526
    • Sprache Englisch
    • Genre Economy
    • Lesemotiv Verstehen
    • Größe H210mm x B148mm
    • Jahr 2025
    • EAN 9783032034526
    • Format Fester Einband
    • ISBN 978-3-032-03452-6
    • Titel The Economic Impact of Intercollegiate Athletics on Former Students
    • Autor Richard J. Cebula , Robert N. Fenili , James V. Koch
    • Untertitel Unfulfilled Promises
    • Herausgeber Palgrave Macmillan
    • Anzahl Seiten 276

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