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Sport Event Economic Impact Analysis

Sport event economic impact analysis estimates the economic activity a region gains from hosting an event by tracing the new spending that visitors inject and propagating it through the local economy with input-output multipliers. John Crompton's foundational 1995 paper in the Journal of Sport Management is as much a warning as a method: it catalogued eleven recurring sources of misapplication — counting local residents' spending, using sales rather than income multipliers, ignoring time-switchers and casuals, omitting costs and opportunity costs — that systematically inflate headline numbers. His 2006 follow-up was blunter still, framing many impact studies as instruments for political shenanigans designed to justify subsidies rather than to find economic truth. Done correctly, the method isolates genuinely new, event-attributable spending by non-locals, applies an appropriate income multiplier, and nets out the public costs and displacement that boosters routinely ignore.

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Sources

  1. Crompton, J. L. (1995). Economic impact analysis of sports facilities and events: Eleven sources of misapplication. Journal of Sport Management, 9(1), 14-35. DOI: 10.1123/jsm.9.1.14
  2. Crompton, J. L. (2006). Economic impact studies: Instruments for political shenanigans? Journal of Travel Research, 45(1), 67-82. DOI: 10.1177/0047287506288870

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Sport Event Economic Impact Analysis (Input-Output Multiplier Estimation of Visitor Spending). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/sport-leisure-studies/sport-event-economic-impact

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ScholarGateSport Event Economic Impact Analysis (Sport Event Economic Impact Analysis (Input-Output Multiplier Estimation of Visitor Spending)). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/sport-leisure-studies/sport-event-economic-impact · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026