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.
קראו את השיטה במלואה
התחברו עם חשבון חינמי כדי לקרוא חלק זה.
מפת שיטות
סביבת השיטות הקרובות — בחרו צומת כדי לחקור.
מקורות
- 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 ↗
- Crompton, J. L. (2006). Economic impact studies: Instruments for political shenanigans? Journal of Travel Research, 45(1), 67-82. DOI: 10.1177/0047287506288870 ↗
איך לצטט עמוד זה
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Sport Event Economic Impact Analysis (Input-Output Multiplier Estimation of Visitor Spending). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/he/sport-leisure-studies/sport-event-economic-impact
איזו שיטה?
הציבו שיטה זו לצד קרובותיה הקרובות וקראו אותן זו לצד זו — הספרייה מניחה את הספרים על השולחן; הבחירה בידיכם.
- Competitive Balance IndexSport Leisure Studies↔ השוואה
- SPLISS FrameworkSport Leisure Studies↔ השוואה
- Sport Sponsorship Effectiveness AnalysisSport Leisure Studies↔ השוואה