cpf2001
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 1,250
If the existence of someone else willing to give a person more compensation isn't an example of a market force, what on earth is it?I think whatever you are trying to get at has nothing to do with you being wrong about compensation.
I will add your understanding of what constitutes market forces in a free market economy is wildly inaccurate.
How do you negotiate salaries if you don't look at what competitors are paying and what similarly talented applicants are accepting?
If you're saying college hoops has the same cultural relevance and prominence today as it did in 1990, I just disagree. And that's money left on the table. Maybe we just run in entirely different circles, but early entry into the NBA changed things dramatically for a lot of basketball fans and reduced the draw to following college hoops.You would be wrong. The top basketball players used to go straight to the NBA and it had no impact on viewership or attendance. The fans support their teams. The players are replaceable. In fact, they get replaced regularly without impact to the revenues.
(Honestly, a lot of the disconnect here probably is just different circles and environments. I'm in no position to judge a claim that a bunch of current UGA and Bama fans in the Southeast would follow less-talented UGA and Alabama teams just as strongly for a long time. But I'm highly skeptical that USC or UCLA could sustain their fanbases like that, especially after the arrival of the Rams and Chargers. And I don't think the portion of the audience that doesn't have a strong connection to any given school but just tunes in to have some Saturday football would keep tuning in either.)