This is an attempt to get quick answers to some common questions, to reduce repetitive discussion from newcomers who often don't understand the issues, and to provide single, authoritative answers so that rec.sport.baseball doesn't get overwhelmed with several people making the same point, whether correct or incorrect.
Constructive comments, corrections, and suggested additions are welcome; please send them to me at grabiner@alumni.princeton.edu. In particular, I would appreciate suggestions from people who have some expertise. I have left square brackets in several sections; comments there would be particularly appreciated.
If you want to comment on an economic or legal point, make sure that you understand the underlying economics or law first.
You can get a current copy of this FAQ in the Usenet group rec.sport.baseball, or from
http://remarque.org/~grabiner/laborfaq.html
http://remarque.org/~grabiner/laborfaq.txt
The new agreement was reached on August 30, 2002, after a strike had been declared but before the first games were cancelled. It was officially ratified by the owners on September 5, 2002. The most important issues, the luxury tax and revenue sharing, were resolved on terms between the union's and owners' pre-strike offers. The contract will run through December 19, 2006; thus, if the contract expires in 2006 with no agreement, players will have some time to sign contracts in the 2006-2007 off-season before a lockout is possible.
The luxury tax will be imposed on the portion of payrolls over $117M in 2003, $120.5M in 2004, $128M in 2005, and $136M in 2006. If the 2007 season is played under an expired contract (as happened in 2002), there will be no tax in 2007. The tax rate depends on the number of times a team has gone over the cap. For the first time a team goes over, it will be 17.5% in 2003, 22.5% in 2004 and 2005, and zero in 2006. For the second time a team goes over, it will be 30%, but no tax in 2006 unless the team was also over in 2005. For the third or fourth time, it will be 40%, but again no tax in 2006 unless the team was also over in 2005. Payrolls are figured based on the average value of multi-year contracts for all players on the 40-man roster, earned bonuses, and benefits; as a result, the tax payrolls are higher than the officially reported payrolls, with three teams over the $117M figure based on 2002 salaries. Team payrolls are based on the money actually being paid to players; if a team trades a high-salaried player away, along with $5M to help pay the player's salary, the $5M counts against the tax limit for the team paying it. (The luxury tax in the previous CBA charged the entire salary to the team for which the player was playing, regardless of which team paid the salary; the old rule still applies to players traded before September 30, 2002.) The tax money will be used for MLB-wide expenses: player benefits, an industry growth fund, and the development of players in countries lacking organized high-school baseball.
The Yankees were the only team to pay the tax in 2003, with a payroll $66M over the limit and thus a tax of $11M. In 2004, the Yankees were $83M over the limit and thus a tax of $25M; the Red Sox were $14M over, and the Angels were $4M over, both paying small taxes. In 2005, the Yankees paid $34M at a 40% rate; the Red Sox paid $4M at a 30% rate. The Yankees and Red Sox will pay tax at the 40% rate in 2006; no other team will pay any tax.
The net effect of the tax is that there is only a small incentive for teams not to go over the limit once while making a short-term push to win, but a strong incentive for teams not to go well over the limit for a long period, and a possible strong incentive not to go over the limit at all in 2003-2005. A team which is near the limit in 2005 will pay no tax at all in 2006 if it can stay under in 2005, but will pay a 30% tax in 2006 if it goes one dollar over the limit in 2005. If the team plans a payroll $20M over the limit in the next year, there will be a $6M cost for going $1 over the limit in the current year, but only an additional $1.75M or $2.25M cost for going another $10M over that limit.
Revenue sharing will be increased to 34% of local revenue, up from the current 22%; this will be phased in to take full effect in 2005. Based on 2002 figures, there would be $258M of shared revenue after the full phase-in. Shared revenue will be distributed equally, so an increase of $10M in local revenue will mean an increase of $3.4M in payments or a decrease of $3.4M in receipts for any team.
Contraction will not occur through the 2006 season; in return, the union will allow the owners to contract two teams in 2007 if they choose to do so, with the decision to contract to be announced by 2006.
Teams not signing draft picks in the first two rounds will receive compensation picks. For a first-round pick, the compensation pick will be in the same spot as the unsigned pick; for a second-round pick, the compensation pick will be following the second round. If the compensation pick is unsigned, there is no further compensation. This should decrease signing bonuses for high picks because it reduces the players' leverage. A 2003 first-round pick can no longer threaten to cost his team the rights to a potential star. However, if the team does not sign the player, the replacement pick in the next year will have full leverage, and may thus demand a higher signing bonus, in addition to the one-year delay the team will have in getting a good player, and the extra expense in scouting the player.
Originally, there was a plan not to have draft-pick compensation for free-agent signings. This would have been a gain for the union because it increases the value of free agents. It would have also removed the draft from being a subject of bargaining with the union, because it no longer affects the value of free agents. However, there had been confusion over whether there would be compensation for unsigned compensation picks, and the union agreed to the owners' interpretation, not allowing compensation for unsigned compensation picks, in return for restoring draft-pick compensation for free agents.
A study committee will determine a structure for a proposed worldwide draft. Both sides had agreed in principle to a worldwide draft, but the details have not been worked out and the implementation could be complicated.
Salary arbitration has been retained in its old form. The owners had proposed to set eligibility at three years of major-league service rather than the top 17% of players with two years of service, and to allow a player to be released after figures had been exchanged for a hearing. Neither proposal would have had a major financial effect, but both were important issues of principle for the union, and both were dropped. (Releasing a player after figures were exchanged would not be common. The owner can already release the player before figures have been exchanged, when he has a good idea of how much the player will earn in arbitration. But this rarely happens; arbitration affects the salaries of players who are not free agents and thus usually earn less than their value to the team.)
There will be steroid testing, first by a survey, and if the survey finds that over 5% of the players use steroids (as happened in 2003), then players will be subject to random tests with possible penalties. The survey could have had public-relations value, as it will allow baseball to make the claim that players have been tested and steroid use is not widespread. This was the union's proposal on steroid testing. A new plan was developed in 2005, and strengthened later in the same year; see section A8.
The commissioner will have $10M as a discretionary fund, to be distributed among teams according to his own policies. The owners had originally proposed a fund of $100M, but reduced this proposal as they reduced revenue-sharing rates in negotiations, so that more revenue would be available for sharing. The final proposal has the $10M officially obtained from the central fund, which covers MLB-wide revenues such as merchandising and national TV contracts; however, the official source does not matter, since both revenue-sharing money and the central fund are distributed equally. The discretionary fund has been used to compensate the Toronto Blue Jays for losses resulting from the weak Canadian dollar.
Any negotiated agreement requires that both sides be willing to negotiate. If one side takes a position which the other side considers unreasonable, and refuses to compromise, there will be no agreement. Every labor negotiation before 2002, except for 1985, involved the owners taking such a position.
In the 2002 negotiations, the main issues were increased revenue sharing and a luxury tax. Both are issues on which the union has been willing to negotiate, and the owners were willing to negotiate on the values. The bargaining on the luxury tax is a good illustration of succesful bargaining. The union did not want a tax to carry over to 2007 and thus proposed plans with no tax in 2006; the owners wanted a tax for every year of the agreement. The final compromise has a tax in 2006, but the tax will not carry over if the 2007 season is played under an expired agreement.
In contrast, in the 1994 negotiations, the owners proposed a salary cap which would have resulted in a 15% reduction in total salaries. The union opposes a salary cap on principle, and had no reason to believe that one was necessary; the owners' official figures showed that MLB had been profitable for nine consecutive years, and the union had access to the actual numbers which presumably showed higher profits. The owners refused to make any proposal other than the salary cap until November 17, 1994, three months into the strike, and that proposal had a luxury tax which was so strong that it would have been a virtual cap. With the owners making demands that the union could not accept, the strike continued until stopped by the court ruling that the owners had not been negotiating in good faith and could not unilaterally impose the cap. (In contrast, if negotiations had reached an impasse after the productive bargaining of August 2002, the owners probably could have imposed their last proposal, as it was the result of good-faith negotiations.)
The previous long strikes and lockouts were the result of similar issues. In the first strike, in 1972, the union requested that pensions and health-care benefits be increased to keep up with the increased costs; the money was already available because of a surplus in the pension fund. The owners refused to make the increased payments until after the union struck. In 1976, the union had won the right to free agency with the Messersmith-McNally decision, and the owners locked the players out in spring training while proposing that free agency be severely limited. In 1980 spring training and 1981 during the season, the owners proposed that a team signing a quality free agent could protect 15 players on its 40-man roster, and the team losing the free agent could take any of the others as compensation. The union saw this as destroying the value of free agents, and struck. In 1990, the owners first proposed a salary cap, and a lockout was already under way before the proposals changed.
While a strike or lockout could result from demands which were made by either side, it appears from the previous paragraph that the owners were making all of the rejected demands. The reason is that the union never demanded, nor received, any significant concessions in these negotiations. The union's most important gains were grievance arbitration in 1970 and salary arbitration in 1973, both obtained in negotiations without strikes; and free agency in 1975, which was the result of an arbitrator's ruling. The 1976 negotiations defined the terms of free agency (which was completely unrestricted under the 1975 ruling, although neither side expected that to remain), and the union's goal in subsequent negotiations was primarily to preserve the status quo. Even in 1972, the union's goal was essentially to get benefits to keep up with their costs.
The only short strike which actually affected games was in 1985. There was no issue seen as non-negotiable, with the main issue the delay of arbitration eligibility from two years to three. An agreement was reached after only two days. Similarly, on May 23, 1980, the union had announced a strike on the issue of free-agent compensation. When the owners and union agreed to create a study committee, postponing implementation for one year, the non-negotiable issue was gone, and the strike was settled after five hours. (The settlement was temporary, as the study committee was not able to reach a recommendation acceptable to both sides, leading to the strike in 1981.)
A salary cap is an agreement which places an upper limit (and sometimes a lower limit) on the money each team can spend on player salaries. In the 1994 negotiations, the owners proposed to limit each team's salaries to 50% of average team revenues for the previous year; every team would be required to have salaries between 84% and 110% of that level. (Before the strike, the players got 58% of average team revenues, according to the owners' methodology; the actual reduction in salaries would be greater because salaries of players on the 40-man roster and incidental expenses such as meal money would be counted against the cap.)
A decision by an individual team to set a budget is not a cap. Several teams did this, publicly announcing their budgets, with no complaints of collusion.
For example, if the Tigers refuse to spend more than $80M on salaries, they can do that under the old agreement. If that means that they have $75M already allocated and there is a player (either one of their own players or a free agent who is interested in playing for them) who wants $10M, they have to do without that player. And if the Yankees think that the player is worth $10M to them and are willing to pay that, he will become a Yankee. The Tigers cannot do anything to stop this except for going over their budget. They might decide to do this; for example, if the player at stake is a hometown hero, he could produce a lot of revenue for the Tigers.
A salary cap would force every team to have the same budget. Thus, in the above example, say that the cap is $80M. Now the Tigers cannot pay more than $5M for the player. If the Yankees are already at or near the cap, they cannot make a better offer; if he receives no better offer, the player will probably sign with the Tigers for $5M. If the Yankees have $7M or more free under the cap, they can offer $7M to the player, and the Tigers will not be allowed to match the offer; now the player will sign with the Yankees at a reduced salary.
This is an essential feature of the salary cap; the Yankees and Tigers have an agreement which affects what the Yankees can pay for a Tigers player.
A very high tax rate would have the same effect as a cap. Consider the example in the section on the cap, but now assume that the Tigers are over the limit and subject to a 100% tax rate on any increase in their payroll. Thus, if the Tigers want to sign the player for $10M, they would pay an additional $10M in tax, for a total cost of $20M to make an offer of $10M. Meanwhile, if the Yankees are under the limit, they could offer $7M to the player at a cost of only $7M to the team. This would make it almost impossible for teams which are in the high tax range to compete for free agents, but not completely impossible as a cap would. If the Tigers really want to keep the player, they can offer $10M and pay an extra $10M in tax, but they would expect to lose a lot of money by doing this.
A lower tax rate will reduce salaries but not prevent teams over the limit from competing. For example, if the tax rate were 11% rather than 100%, the Tigers could offer $9M (paying taxes of $990K) for a player worth $10M. This would reduce the player's value to the Tigers by 10%. He might accept that offer to stay with the Tigers, either for non-economic reasons or because no team offered the $10M.
If the tax money is redistributed to small-payroll owners, or the tax is imposed on small-payroll owners and redistributed evenly, it may have the same effect on them. For example, if the Yankees are under the tax limit and will get 11% of the difference between their payroll and the league average, they will lose $990K in tax receipts if they sign the player for $9M. In this case, the player's value to the Yankees is also reduced by 10%. If every player's value to every team is reduced by 10%, salaries should drop by 10% across the board, and owners' profits should increase by the amount that salaries drop.
The effect on the players of a tax on revenue, or of revenue sharing, would be similar. If the Tigers pay a 10% tax on revenue or must share 10% of their revenue, then the player who adds $10M in revenue is only worth $9M, because the Tigers don't get to keep the other $1M. (The effect on the owners would be different, because owners with high revenues would pay a higher fixed sum with a tax on revenues than with a tax on payrolls. The revenue-tax plan would do more to help low-revenue teams make a profit and reduce high-revenue teams' profits.) This is why the union offered lower tax rates in plans which accepted the owners' revenue sharing plan in the previous labor negotiations.
This effect may have contributed to the decline in free-agent salaries in recent years. _Sports Business Journal_ reports that the average free agent in 2004 took a 26.6% pay cut. All teams paid revenue-sharing money, and the Yankees, who paid the most for free agents, are facing a 30% tax in 2004 and a 40% tax in 2005 and 2006.
Note that the effect of all of these proposals depends on the *marginal* tax rate. A 5% payroll tax across the board and a 50% tax on the top payrolls might raise the same amount of revenue, but the 50% tax on the top payrolls might do more to reduce salaries because it would force teams down to the tax level.
The owners made their opening proposal on January 9, 2002, and an essentially similar proposal on February 26, 2002. The proposed tax was 50% on the portion of payrolls over $98M; this would have affected seven teams based on 2002 payrolls. In the union's opening proposal, on March 13, 2002, there was no tax.
Both sides revised their proposals on or about August 13, 2002. The owners proposed a tax threshold of $100M, but phased in over three years to start at $115M in the first year; the tax rate would still be 50%. The union proposed a threshold of $137M, with taxes of 10%, 25%, and 35% in the first three years, and no tax in 2006 in order to guarantee that there would be no tax if the 2007 season were played under an expired contract. The owners' $100M would have affected seven teams in 2002; the union's $137M would have affected only the Yankees. The owners also proposed a minimum payroll of $45M; this would have affected only one team in 2002.
In further proposals, on August 16, 2002, both teams agreed to the general form of the tax, with the threshold increasing over time, and the tax rate increasing each time a team went over the threshold; they still disagreed on thresholds, rates, and whether there would be a tax in 2006. The owners proposed a threshold of $102M in 2003 with a cost-of-living adjustment if the difference between the highest and lowest payrolls decreased; the rate would be 37.5% the first time a team went over the threshold, then 42.5%, 47.5%, and 50%. The union proposed $130M, $140M, and $150M for three years, with a 15% rate for the first time a team went over the threshold, then 25%, and then 30%. The owners' $102M would have affected seven teams based on 2002 payrolls; the union's $130M would have affected two teams.
The remaining bargaining before the final agreement involved continuous adjustments of the numbers, with no agreement on whether there would be a tax for 2006 until the final compromise which produced a tax in 2006 but a guarantee of no tax in 2007. The owners agreed to set fixed numbers rather than the conditional cost-of-living increase in a proposal on August 25, 2002. The union agreed to rates which were close to the present rates on August 25, 2002, but there was still a significant gap in the thresholds; the final numbers were about halfway between proposals on the two sides.
The owners' opening proposal increased revenue sharing from the old 22% to 50% after local expenses. The shared revenue would be distributed equally among all teams, except for $100M to be placed in a fund to be distributed at the commissioner's discretion. The owners estimated that this would provide $253M to redistribute to other teams. The union's opening proposal set revenue sharing at 22.5% with no discretionary funds, and with funds distributed according to the old formula, giving more to lower-revenue teams. The union claimed that the amount of shared revenue would be $165M.
In further negotiations, the owners reduced the discretionary fund and the revenue-sharing rate, leaving the amount shared close to constant. On August 13, 2002, the owners proposed an $85M discretionary fund with shared revenue of $298M. On August 16, they reduced the revenue-sharing rate to 37% but still estimated shared revenue of $282M, which may indicate some change in the formula. On August 25, the rate was reduced to 36%, with estimated shared revenue of $263M.
The union's first increase in revenue sharing, on or about August 14, 2002, proposed that an additional $40M be given to low-revenue teams from MLB's central fund; this would increase shared revenue to $228M. The union then proposed increased revenue sharing with a phase-in; it claimed that it had always proposed the phase-in, but the owners disputed that claim. The last announced proposal, on August 25, had a rate of 33.3%, phased in until 2006; the 33.3% rate would have resulted in $242M of shared revenue in 2002.
By the August 30 strike date, the disagreement on revenue sharing was very small, although the phase-in may still have been a significant issue. In the final negotiations, the phase-in was reduced from four years to three.
High revenue sharing, such as the 50% in the earlier proposals, would cause a severe reduction in salaries. It would also cause a major redistribution of revenue; the Yankees have by far the largest TV contract and also have high ticket revenue, so they would lose a lot of revenue.
While contraction was ultimately postponed until at least 2007, the threat of contraction in 2002 and 2003 was an important issue both in the labor negotiations and in negotiations among owners. The owners have the right to contract two teams in 2007 without the union filing a grievance, but they may still have to deal with lawsuits from other parties such as the cities with which they have signed stadium leases.
The owners announced on November 7, 2001 that two teams would be contracted before the 2002 season. The two teams were not announced, and the details had not been worked out. The owners claimed that they did not need the union's approval to contract two teams because the labor contract had not yet expired (it expired November 8); the union challenged this and asked for an arbitrator to rule on it. The owners and union tried to negotiate a compromise but failed; the arbitrator's ruling was postponed several times, and may have been put on hold pending the outcome of the labor negotiations. The labor agreement made the ruling moot.
In addition, the commission which owns the Metrodome obtained an injunction forcing the Twins to honor their lease for the 2002 season, which they had already exercised the option to renew; this injunction was upheld by the Minnesota Court of Appeals, and the Minnesota Supreme Court refused to hear the case. As a result, contraction was postponed to 2003. The Twins renewed their lease for 2003, and the stadium commission settled a lawsuit against MLB with an agreement that the Twins could not be contracted in 2003.
If two teams are eliminated, profits for the remaining teams will increase, because the national revenue will be divided among fewer teams, and the revenue-sharing money which would have gone to these teams is more than the shared revenue which they provided for other teams. However, the owners of the teams involved will need to be paid enough by the remaining teams to make the deal acceptable.
The two teams were believed to be the Expos and Twins. The Expos had no local buyer available; the owners probably wanted to either be bought out or move the team. (Instead, MLB took over the team.) The Twins had been discouraging potential buyers at the time contraction was under discussion, but Donald Watkins had been negotiating for purchase. It is probable that the Twins could receive more if they are contracted; if MLB contracts the Expos, it must contract a second team as well, and thus the Twins will have bargaining power and may receive more than their market value. Watkins himself said that he would pay market value, not contraction value, for the Twins. If Watkins buys the Twins and refuses to be contracted, some other team may be contracted and the value of the Twins will go up.
Contraction was unlikely to happen in 2002 from the beginning; it was more likely to be an opening move in the new labor negotiations. The owners reportedly told the union in September that it was not feasible to contract for 2002; contracting after this promise could have been seen as failing to bargain in good faith, a violation of labor law.
The threat of contraction also risks the owners' goodwill. The senators from Minnesota threatened to introduce a bill removing MLB's anti-trust exemption; in the past, such bills have been threatened by senators and congressmen to ensure expansion to their home states. The Twins offered to pay employees several months' salary after their jobs are lost to contraction, in order to discourage them from leaving for more secure jobs. Businesses are less likely to buy season tickets, and players may be less likely to sign with teams that may not exist.
The Twins' 2002 attendance is a good illustration of the cost of goodwill; even though the Twins had a huge lead for most of the season, and their ticket prices have gone up at about the rate of inflation, they drew fewer fans than the 1987 and 1991 Twins which also won titles unexpectedly.
Note that this study committee directly represented the owners; it had four independent representatives (one of whom was on the board of directors of two teams) and twelve representatives of eleven different teams.
The panel recommended a 50% luxury tax on payrolls over $84M, a limit slightly higher than the limit for the 34% tax in 1999 which had expired in 2000. The Yankees had a payroll of $115M ($107M not including benefits) at the time of the proposal, but few other teams would be affected. In addition, revenue sharing would be increased to 40-50% of local revenues after ballpark expenses. National revenue would no longer be shared equally; extra payments would be made to low-revenue clubs which maintained a payroll of at least $40M. There would also be an annual "competitive balance draft", in which the worst eight teams could take a player from a playoff team's system if that player was not on the 40-man roster. Draft-pick compensation for free agents would be eliminated. Teams would be allowed to move, possibly into large cities such as New York.
As issues not related to competitive balance, players outside the US would be subject to the amateur draft, and players would be required to declare themselves eligible for the draft; both changes would decrease signing bonuses by reducing amateurs' leverage. Currently, high-school players who are drafted can threaten to go to college if they do not get a sufficiently large signing bonus.
The effects of the salary limits would be to force most teams to the $40-84M range. Neither the cap nor the floor is absolute, but the 50% tax is a fairly strong incentive for teams to avoid it, and the cost of going below $40M, including lost revenue, would probably be more than a team can save in payroll. The increased revenue sharing would drive salaries down further. The combined effect would be that a team over the tax limit could pay a player only 1/3 of his value; if the player is worth $6M in extra revenue, the team would keep $3M, and would pay no more than $2M in salary and $1M in tax.
The $40M payroll floor would moderate the effects of the tax and revenue sharing. Without the increased revenue sharing, it would have little effect; only four teams opened the 2000 season with payrolls below $30M, and the limits would apparently include benefits of about $8M per team as well. Most mid-payroll teams (currently around $60M) would probably drop to slightly above $40M.
The financial incentive to make the playoffs would be reduced. A team which made the playoffs would lose its first-round draft pick as if it had signed a top free agent under the current rules, and might lose a prospect to a weaker team in the draft. Neither change would have an immediate effect on the team, so a good team could still win several consecutive titles, but it would pay several years later.
On November 15, 2005, the commissioner and union agreed to a revised steroid-testing policy. This policy was reached under threat of Congressional legislation which would have imposed even harsher penalties. A player testing positive for steroids will be suspended without pay for 50 days for a first offense, 100 days for a second offense, and for life for a third offense. Positive tests under the previous steroid policy will not count as prior offenses. A player banned for life may petition for reinstatement after two years, and this review will be subject to arbitration. The union yielded to the commissioner's proposal on the length of suspensions, in return for the right of arbitration. Players will also be tested for amphetamines, with a first offense leading only to more frequent additional testing, and suspensions for 25 days for a second offense and 80 days for a third offense. Players will be tested during spring training and randomly during the year, with at least one test during the season.
The first player suspended under the new steroid policy was Jason Grimsley, who was arrested for possession of human growth hormone and suspended for 50 days. (He was also released.) Only three players in the majors tested positive in 2006, in comparison with 13 for the year 2005.
If there is no new labor contract by August 1, 2006, the union has the right to consider the new steroid policy to end with the current labor agreement, on December 19, 2006. If that happens and the 2007 season is played under the expired agreement, the previous steroid-testing policy, which applied in the 2005 season, would apply until a new labor contract is reached. (While the union has the right to take that step, it is unlikely; there would be a significant cost in good will, and if the union wants to change the steroid policy, its main interest will be in getting a long-term change in the new labor contract.)
On January 13, 2005, the commissioner and union agreed to the previous steroid-testing policy. Players were tested randomly, both during the season and in the off-season, with at least one test during the season. The substances banned included anabolic steroids (including "designer steroids" such as THG), steroid precursors such as androstenedione, and masking agents and diuretics. Amphetamines were not banned. A player testing positive was suspended without pay for 10 days for a first offense, 30 days for a second offense, 60 days for a third offense, and one year for a fourth offense. In addition, the positive tests were made public, which will act as an additional deterrent; players testing positive and not suspended under the old agreement did not have their names made public. It was initially announced that players could not defer the penalty during an appeal, but that appears not to be the current rule; Rafael Palmeiro was allowed to appeal his suspension and served a suspension in August for a positive test in May.
The survey testing in 2003 had 96 tests out of 1438 which were positive for steroids or elevated testosterone levels; this testing was anonymous, and there were no penalties, but it did put into effect a policy with possible penalties. However, these penalties were very weak; first-time offenders would receive counseling but would not be suspended. Even the weak penalties may have had some deterrent effect, as only 12 out of 1133 tests in 2004 were positive. (The numbers of positive tests were released in a document that MLB gave to the Congressional investigation.) Thirteen MLB players tested positive and were suspended for ten days in 2005, with Rafael Palmeiro the only star.
The minor leagues have a stronger policy, with four tests per year, both during and outside the season, and a 15-game suspension for a first positive test. The older major-league policy is close to the minor-league policy; the new policy has much harsher penalties, but the minor-league policy may also be changed.
Leaked grand jury testimony in the BALCO case reports that several MLB stars were using steroids. This created a public perception that steroids were a serious problem in MLB. The union and owners both decided that it would be in baseball's interest to develop a new policy. It is rare for labor and management to agree to a change to a labor agreement, but the January 2005 steroid agreement was seen by both sides as in their interest. Similarly, the threat of Congressional action convinced both labor and management to establish the November 2005 steroid policy, as otherwise Congress could have changed the labor agreement on its own.
It is unlikely that any active players will be punished by MLB as a result of the BALCO case. There was some discussion of the Yankees threatening to void Jason Giambi's contract. However, the union would be able to challenge such a move, forcing the Yankees to demonstrate to an arbitrator that Giambi violated the contract. Victor Conte, the director of BALCO, pleaded guilty rather than allowing a trial, so there will be no open court testimony of MLB players' steroid use from that trial. Thus the Yankees' evidence could not be that Giambi admitted using steroids, only that the San Francisco Chronicle said that Giambi admitted using steroids. The Chronicle would be unlikely to provide the Yankees or MLB with its source, since the alleged source was grand jury testimony, which is required by law to be kept confidential.
Barry Bonds is under investigation for perjury for lying to the grand jury in the BALCO case. As long as that case is ongoing and there is the possibility of other cases, MLB will have difficulty taking its own actions, as players will refuse to testify at MLB hearings in order to protect their rights in court.
It is not written into the law; it is the result of a Supreme Court decision.
The Federal League, which played as a rival major league in 1914-1915, filed an anti-trust suit against MLB. In 1922, the Supreme Court ruled for MLB, on the basis that MLB was not interstate commerce and thus was not subject to federal anti-trust laws.
In later rulings, the Supreme Court has called the 1922 decision "an anomaly", but has let it stand as a precedent, saying that it is Congress's responsibility to overturn the exemption. Bills to overturn the exemption have frequently been introduced in Congress, but they did not make it out of committee. The Court's interpretation of this action was that Congress intends to keep the exemption.
In the previous labor agreement, players and owners agreed to ask Congress to overturn the anti-trust exemption with respect to labor relations in major-league baseball. This bill was signed on October 27, 1998. This also effectively enshrines in law the ruling that baseball is exempt from anti-trust laws in other areas.
They are not legally exempt; the Supreme Court has ruled that the 1922 decision applies only to baseball.
However, it is legal to agree to terms in a labor contract which would normally be in violation of anti-trust law, provided that the contract was obtained in fair collective bargaining. For example, if the anti-trust exemption were repealed, MLB and the players' union could still agree to maintain the current system of free agency and arbitration. However, it might not be binding on minor-league players, who are not union members. [Zimbalist claims that it wouldn't be; do any labor experts have an opinion?]
As an illustration of the labor exemption, the NFL and NBA drafts are legal even though they prevent drafted players from offering their services to multiple teams. However, Maurice Clarett temporarily won a court challenge in 2004 against the NFL's attempt to exclude him from the draft. The court ruled that he was not a party to the union agreement which included the draft (since he was not being allowed to join the union), and thus anti-trust law applied. (The ruling was overturned on appeal.)
By act of Congress, all sports leagues are exempt from anti-trust in their negotiation of national broadcasting contracts. This allows the leagues to negotiate internal restrictions, such as baseball's rule that The Baseball Network had exclusive rights to all games on its date. Such an arrangement would also be legal in the NFL or NBA; an NBA restriction on superstation broadcasts was upheld by the Seventh Circuit in September 1996.
The owners in MLB have full control over franchise movement and probably more control over ownership. When the NFL tried to block the Oakland Raiders from moving to Los Angeles in 1982, team owner Al Davis won a suit against the NFL for restraint of trade. Without the anti-trust exemption, a team in MLB could probably move to Washington, which is further from Baltimore than Los Angeles was from the existing team in Anaheim; instead, it was MLB's decision when to allow the Expos to move to Washington, and to negotiate compensation to the Orioles for their territorial rights. (I have no idea of the anti-trust status of MLB taking over the Expos; a court might have ruled under anti-trust law that the team had to be sold as soon as bidders were available.) Likewise, when Nintendo wanted to buy a majority share in the Mariners, MLB forced the deal to be restructured because of a policy against foreign ownership; this might have been challenged under anti-trust law.
The exemption also allows the owners to create exclusive deals, even when they are anti-competitive measures. The right to such deals could also hurt a rival league (although it might not matter; the USFL won $1 in damages in an anti-trust case). MLB could sign a contract with ESPN which allowed ESPN to broadcast a certain number of its own baseball games, and no games from any other league during the MLB season. The rival league would then be unable to negotiate with ESPN.
The owners are also claiming that their reserve rules are protected by anti-trust law. That is, players who do not have signed contracts but were not eligible for free agency under the expired CBA may not sign with teams in a rival league; MLB can claim that the players are still under contract. Blacklisting players who move to the rival league would also be possible. For example, in the 1950's, several players signed with the new Mexican League. The Commissioner barred any Mexican League players from playing for MLB for five years, and this was upheld by the courts.
The minor-league agreements might also be forbidden by anti-trust law, because they bind a player who is not a member of the union to a single team's minor-league system.
An agreement which would normally be in violation of anti-trust law is allowed if it is reached in collective bargaining with a union. The NBA's salary cap was recently upheld in court because it was reached in such an agreement. (If the cap is imposed after a failure to negotiate in good faith, it is forbidden by labor law rather than anti-trust law.) A June 1996 Supreme Court decision affirmed this principle; a union cannot file an anti-trust suit on behalf of its members.
However, anti-trust law may still have an effect on labor relations. The NFL players decertified the union in 1987, which removed the labor exception and allowed the players to sue the NFL under anti-trust. The baseball players could have done the same to overturn the imposed cap if anti-trust law had applied in 1994. It now applies to MLB's labor negotiations.
Collusion would be forbidden by the anti-trust laws if they applied to baseball; instead, it is officially forbidden by the collective bargaining agreement. When the owners colluded in the free-agent market in 1985-1987, they paid their penalty under the terms of the CBA, which limited the penalty to the actual damages. If the players' union had been able to sue under anti-trust law, the damages would have been tripled. (The current CBA specifies triple damages for collusion.)
The answer to this question is usually "none", regardless of X. Most commonly, X is something like "higher salaries" or "a smaller TV contract"; in these cases, "none" is correct.
Baseball owners, like most business owners, are interested in maximizing profits or minimizing losses. Thus they set ticket prices with that goal in mind. Since having an additional fan attend the game does not have much effect on the cost of holding a game, this means that prices are set to maximize revenues.
For example, if there are two million fans willing to pay $10 to see the game, but only 1.6 million willing to pay $12, then it would not be a good economic decision to raise ticket prices from $10 to $12, because it will decrease revenues and profits. But suppose instead that there are 1.7 million willing to pay $12. In that case, ticket prices will be raised to $12, because the increase will generate an extra $400,000 of revenue.
Now, suppose something happens which affects the team's profit, without affecting the number of fans who want to attend games at any given ticket price. For example, the team could get less money from a new TV deal, or could have its payroll increase as several good young players became eligible for arbitration and others were kept as free agents, or the owner could lose money when one of his other businesses went bankrupt. The ticket price which maximizes revenue would not change, so the owner would continue to charge the same price, but make a lower profit.
When would a change affect ticket prices? Only if it affected the demand for tickets. This might happen if the team was improved by signing free agents; however, the teams which lost those free agents would have the opposite effect, so this would not cause ticket prices to change on a league-wide basis. The opening of a new stadium, or improvements in an existing stadium, might result in higher ticket prices for a better product; this is one of the main causes of recent ticket price increases. The end of a recession in the city would increase disposable income, and thus might increase the optimal ticket price.
Even in these cases, it isn't clear that ticket prices will go up. If the change means that 20% more people are willing to buy tickets at any price, then revenue for a fixed price will go up by 20%, so the optimal price won't change; however, revenues and thus profits will increase.
However, there is a current trend which may cause prices to go up. In some cities, the team is so popular that the park sells out regularly. If the team becomes more popular, demand will go up at a constant ticket price, but revenue will not go up with demand because some people who want to buy tickets cannot get them. (Some of the extra revenue would be collected by ticket agencies and scalpers instead of the team, since there are people who do not have tickets but who are willing to pay more than the ticket prices.) Thus these teams will have to increase ticket prices to maximize revenue, even if demand goes up by the same constant factor at all prices. This is why Fenway, the smallest park in baseball, has by far the highest ticket prices.
Yes, they have gone up faster than inflation in recent years, primarily because of new parks, and the increasing popularity of the game in older parks which sell out. This is a new trend; a study in Baseball and Billions, by Andrew Zimbalist, compares average ticket prices to the cost of living from 1950 to 1990. There are minor fluctuations (adjusted prices were highest in 1970 by a small amount), but they have been essentially constant over time.
There are 10 teams which played in the same park in 1991 and 2006 (not counting Oakland, which raised its average ticket price by removing the cheap seats in 2006). Only the Royals and Blue Jays increased prices at about the rate of inflation over those 15 years. Most of the others are big-city parks which sell out. The Red Sox have the largest increase, but this is because they sold out almost every game even back in 1991, so the only way they could capture the increased demand was to raise prices. The Twins are the one unusual case; they have capitalized on their 2002-2004 success by raising ticket prices rather than drawing more fans at the same price.
However, the new parks usually have much higher ticket prices than the old parks they replace; most new parks had about a 50% ticket price increase. Fans are paying more for a better product when they pay the higher prices for games in modern ballparks. Once the new parks have opened, there is no tendency for ticket prices to outpace inflation. Of the 14 teams that opened a new park between 1992 and 2001, two have lowered prices (and neither was just a lowering from an overpriced first year), one barely raised them, eight were close to inflation, two were significantly above, and only the Orioles, who actually lowered their prices when Camden Yards opened, raised prices far more than inflation.
You will often see comparisons which say, "It costs a family of four $170 to attend a game today," along with some ticket price from the past. This comparison is meaningless unless it is adjusted both for inflation and for the difference between what is being purchased. The Fan Cost Index used in these figures is the cost of a once-a-year family trip, not a trip for regular fans; it includes tickets, food for everyone, and several souvenirs. If the tickets alone cost $25 thirty years ago and $90 now, the price has not increased in real value; the family which now makes $90,000 probably would have made only $25,000 back then in similar jobs, and now pays $1800 monthly to rent a house which rented for $500 then.
The value of a player to his team is his marginal revenue; this is the amount of revenue which the team makes with him but would not make without him. If he is a good player, his team will win more games if he plays for them, and will thus sell more tickets, collect more from concessions, get more TV viewers, and have a better chance at World Series money. If he has extra drawing power as an individual, he will also help sell more tickets. All of these may be worth a lot of money to the team. If the team expects the player to be worth $4M in additional revenue, it should be willing to pay the player up to $4M, since it will make a profit on the deal; if he asks for more than that, it should let him go.
For baseball players, such a high value is reasonable. A study in Baseball and Billions estimates that the value of an extra win to a team in 1984-1989 was $400,000, independent of the team's market size. Projecting this to current revenues, that would be $2M, which means that a player worth five extra wins (typical for a superstar) would generate $10M in extra revenue.
The market value of a player is what he would earn if there were open competitive bidding for his services. In theory, this should be the expected value of the player to the team for which he has the second-highest expected value, since the team for which he is most valuable can offer that amount and nobody will beat it. This would be the player's actual salary in a free market.
Players who are not subject to a free market may not make their expected marginal value. Players who aren't eligible for arbitration usually make much less, because they have very little option. Players who are eligible for arbitration still tend to make less than their marginal value (see below). Players who are under long-term contracts may make more or less than their marginal value in one particular year; however, when the contract was offered, it was probably offered for the expected value or less, and both sides are now taking the risk. If a team misjudges expected values and signs players for more than their value, it should pay for its bad business decisions.
The same principles apply to any worker who is free to market his or her services. If employers X, Y, and Z all believe that you will generate $30,000 in additional revenue if they hire you, then all three will be willing to match each other's salary offers if they are under that level. If Z is stupid enough to offer you $35,000, you'll take the offer, and if Z makes too many of these mistakes, its profits will drop, and its executives will lose their jobs or the company will go bankrupt. If Z offers you $35,000 because it believes you are worth $40,000, and it turns out to be right, its profits will go up, and if Z makes more of these good deals, X and Y will be in trouble.
Players with less than two years of service, and the 83% of players with the lowest service time among third-year players, have no negotiating rights with their teams. The teams can offer whatever they want, subject only to the minimum salary. The players' only leverage is to refuse to sign any contract at all; they may not attempt to negotiate with another team. Such players often don't get just the minimum salary, partly because of the team's interest in maintaining good will; paying a player $500,000 instead of $200,000 for $2M worth of production is still a good deal, and may make the player more likely to stay for below market value when he becomes a free agent.
The top 17% of third-year players, and all players with at least three years of service, are eligible for arbitration. They may still negotiate with their teams for salaries. However, their teams cannot force them to accept an offer or go without a job. If a player and his team cannot agree on a salary, the team may choose to release the player or offer arbitration. The player cannot force the team to offer arbitration. If the team releases the player, he becomes a free agent, his old team may not negotiate with him until May 1, and the team which released him is not entitled to any compensation.
A player with less than six years of service must accept arbitration; a player with six years or more may refuse arbitration and become a free agent. The signing team may be required to give a draft pick as compensation to the team which lost him, according to a complicated formula for Type A, B, and C free agents; this was temporarily eliminated in the current CBA but then restored. Except for the value of the draft pick, this is essentially a free-market negotiation. The player can demand X years for Y million dollars, but he won't get it unless at least one owner thinks he is worth that much.
A player in the middle of a long-term contract can ask to renegotiate the contract. However, the team is under no obligation to renegotiate; it can require the player to fulfill the previous contract. The team might agree to renegotiation in the interest of good will, hoping to retain the player when the contract expires. This rarely happens, but it has happened occasionally. An important example is Rickey Henderson, who signed an artificially low contract because of collusion, and wanted to renegotiate for his fair market value after the collusion had been exposed.
The arbitration procedure was added to a previous CBA at the request of the owners; it was modified in the old CBA.
Arbitrators are members of the American Arbitration Association. Any member of the AAA may volunteer to be in the "pool" of arbitrators eligible to hear baseball cases. Lists of volunteers are examined by representatives of the players and the owners; an arbitrator must be approved by both groups to be in the pool. (This discourages arbitrators from appearing biased for either side; such arbitrators will be dropped from the pool.) The arbitrator for an individual case is chosen at random from the pool. Cases are heard by a panel of three people, with one arbitrator chosen from the pool, and one chosen by each side.
Arbitration can be offered only by the team; a player cannot force his team to offer arbitration, although he can refuse an offer of arbitration if he is eligible for free agency. The player and the team submit their proposed salaries to an arbitrator, and present their cases. The CBA specifies that team finances, including the luxury tax, may not be considered in arbitration; thus players do not have their arbitration salaries reduced because the team's payroll causes a tax to be imposed. The arbitrator must choose one figure or the other; this discourages unreasonable demands from either side. Contracts awarded in arbitration are always for one year, with no incentive clauses. However, the team and player may settle on some figure in between the two, or on a long-term or incentive-based deal, before the decision has been announced.
The arbitrator's decision is based on the salaries of comparable players. Thus, if other players and owners negotiate or arbitrate contracts which are unreasonably high or low, these will be considered as comparisons. This is why owners and fans talk about arbitration as "enshrining previous mistakes." However, a single anomalous contract is not likely to have a major effect on arbitration, since an arbitrator can recognize it as an anomaly.
Arbitration is unlikely to force an owner to pay a player more than his value. If the owner expects that the player will request and earn more than his value in arbitration, he can release the player instead of offering arbitration. This is a good economic decision if the player would have earned more than his value; that is, if the amount of salary saved is more than the amount of revenue lost. This rarely happened before the strike, but it has become more common recently. A fair number of players were released in 1995 rather than being offered arbitration. In 1997 and again in 2003, some of the top free agents were not offered arbitration; their teams thus gave up the draft pick they would receive as compensation, but avoided the risk of paying these players arbitration salaries which would be more than the teams were willing to pay.
It is often pointed out that players get huge raises in arbitration, but this is the result of the artificially lowered salaries for non-arbitration-eligible players. A player with two years of service will have to accept whatever the team offers, which may be near the minimum if he is not a star; when he has three years of service, arbitration increases his salary closer to his fair value.
While most businesses have an incentive to report high profits, MLB teams have an incentive to report low profits, and can manipulate reported profits more easily and legally than publicly traded corporations. Public corporations must make their audited records available; privately held businesses such as MLB teams need only report to their own owners. Public corporations improve their stock value, and thus their market value, by reporting profits; privately traded businesses are not valued in a stock market, but by potential buyers who know the true finances. The value of an MLB team does not depend directly on reported profits, but teams reporting losses are in a stronger position for negotiating with the public for new stadiums, lease concessions, and other benefits. In addition, the revenue-sharing rules give teams an incentive to minimize reported sharable revenue.
MLB claims to have operated at a loss every year from 1975 to 1985, then at a profit every year from then until the strike, although the profit was only $22M in 1992 and $36M in 1993. The strike led to large losses; the reported figures were $375M in 1994, $326M in 1995, and $185M in 1996; attendance was still down by 15% in 1996 from its pre-strike level. Reported losses have continued since then, $176M in 1997, $138M in 1998, $212M in 1999, about $500M in 2000, and $519M in 2001. The small reported profit in 1993 would be consistent with 12 of 28 teams losing money, which is what Bud Selig claimed. MLB's official figures claim that 25 of 30 teams lost money in 2001.
Other sources claim much smaller losses. Forbes magazine, estimating finances from publicly available data, reported a profit of $130M in 2000, with ten teams losing money; a profit of $75M in 2001, with eight teams losing money; a loss of $39M in 2002, with sixteen teams losing money; a loss of $57M in 2003, with fifteen teams losing money; a profit of $132M in 2004, with ten teams losing money; and a profit of $360M in 2005, with five teams losing money. Older figures show similar differences. Financial World magazine reported profit of $168M in 1993, with eight teams losing money, a loss of $123M in 1994, and a profit of $59M in 1995. The Rockies' ownership claimed during the strike that seven teams lost money in 1993; The Sporting News reported in August 1995 that only three teams were losing money.
Which numbers are correct? It's difficult to tell without open books; however, it is almost certain that some of the teams which MLB claims are losing money are not actually losing any. When the owners opened their books to economist Roger Noll in the 1985 negotiations, he found enough hidden revenue and accounting techniques to turn the claimed $50M loss for 1984 into a $9M profit. Since the current books have not been opened for public analysis (although Noll looked at the 1993 books, and 2001 figures were released to Congress), it is impossible to tell how much such techniques are still being used. The 2001 figures were audited, but this means only that all transactions were counted, not that they were fairly valued.
The details of Noll's analysis are given in Baseball and Billions.
One of the biggest problems in determining a team's real profit or loss is the use of related-party transactions; that is, transactions between two entities which provide money to the same people. For example, AOL Time Warner owns both the Braves and TBS, so the Braves' TV contract can be set arbitrarilty to cause either the Braves or TBS to show an artificially low profit. In MLB's official 2001 figures, the Braves' contract was at about the MLB average, despite the superstation; the Cubs (WGN is also owned by the Tribune Company) and the Dodgers (owned by Fox) showed similarly small deals. Similarly, Wayne Huizenga used to own both the Marlins and their stadium, so he could set the stadium rent at whatever price he wants, and assign luxury box revenue to either the team or the stadium. He could thus cause the Marlins to show an artifically high or low book profit. This is the basis for his claim that the Marlins would lose money in 1997 even if they sold out every game. Andrew Zimbalist anayzed the reported numbers, and concluded that the Marlins' actual profit in 1997 was $13.8M with a reported loss of $29.3M. Another possibility is for the team to pay a large salary or loan interest to the owner or to relatives of the owner, instead of distributing the same money as profits; the Brewers were reported to be doing this.
Undervaluation of related-party transactions may also reduce a team's revenue-sharing payments, and thus add to the team's actual profit. If a local TV contract is undervalued by $10M and revenue is shared at 30%, the team saves $3M which would otherwise go to the revenue-sharing pool. MLB is reportedly auditing the Yankees' deal with YES in an attempt to collect the shared revenue on the undervaluation.
Another problem, which could be resolved by open books, is the use (or abuse) of accounting practices. For US (but not Canadian) tax purposes, half the purchase price of a team may be attributed to player contracts. This is considered to be a purchase of short-term assets, which may be amortized. Amortization is normally used to reflect the declining value of assets which will expire, so that a new patent is worth more than a similar patent which will expire in one year. This does not make sense in MLB, because the true asset is not the specific players, but the right to acquire players for below their market value. Similarly, teams which own their stadium can depreciate the stadium, reducing its book value by a fixed percentage every year; while depreciation of buildings does make sense because buildings do eventually need to be replaced, the rate allowed by accounting principles is much faster than the actual deterioration rate of the building. The depreciation and amortization losses are paper losses, useful for their tax benefits, which will be regained by the owner when the team is sold at its real franchise value. MLB's own figures released to Congress in 2001 show $116M in interest and $174M in depreciation and amortization.
Also, part of the profits of owning a baseball team (as with other investments) comes from the appreciation of the franchise value. If you buy a team for $100M, break even in cash flow for five years, and then sell it for $150M, you have made a substantial profit, just as if you had bought $100M worth of real estate and it became worth $150M. And if you buy the team for $100M by taking out $40M in loans, show an operating loss equal to the after-tax interest you pay on the loans, and then sell it for $150M and pay off the loan balance yourself, you have made exactly the same real (economic) profit; the $40M loans allowed you to invest an extra $40M somewhere else.
It is possible for a team to lose money without overpaying for players, because the true values of the individual players, plus non-salary expenses such as stadium rent and player development, are not guaranteed to cover the total revenue in a particular team. If there are teams in this position, they could benefit from revenue sharing, or from a tax or salary cap which lowered salaries, and such moves might be necessary to keep teams in these cities.
But it is also possible that teams which are losing money are losing it because they are paying players, particularly free agents, more than their value. Some of these may simply be unlucky decisions, paying large contracts to players who got hurt or declined unexpectedly. This is a risk which should be calculated in the value of the contract, along with the potential gain if the player performs unexpectedly well; once this risk is considered, the problem won't consistently affect any team, although it may lead to single-year losses.
It is also probable that many players are overpaid because of poor talent judgment; for example, paying a 32-year-old player the value of his performance at ages 26-29, expecting him to repeat it, is usually a bad economic move. Such moves are made almost every time a free agent over 30 is signed. Owners who lose money because of such bad moves have the same interest in making a profit as other owners, and may be more likely to make a profit by a salary cap. From a free-market point of view, this is not a good idea; the free market will drive out incompetence, as such owners can make a profit by selling their teams to competent ownership or replacing their general managers.
Collusion occurs when a group acts in concert in business. Thus, if several owners agree not to make offers to each other's free agents, or to limit their offers, they are guilty of collusion; this is what happened in 1985-1987. (The cases were based on actual evidence of such communications, not simply the fact that some players received no offers.) It would also be collusion if the owners agreed to follow a salary cap without getting it in the CBA.
It is not collusion if owners act independently to reduce expenses. Many teams have publicly announced their budgets; this is fine as long as no team can control another team's budget. Likewise, if a free agent asks for $3M and he receives no offers because no owner thinks he is worth that much, this is not collusion; it happened to Jody Reed and Chris Sabo.
There were rumors of collusion in the April 1995 free-agent signings, because so many players took large salary cuts. Charges were filed by the union, and there were some complaints by agents. However, this is probably not collusion; most of the owners discovered that they had less money after the strike and would make less in 1995, and were thus more careful where they spent it. There were similar rumors of collusion charges in the 2003-2004 off-season; again, lower salaries may just be a market adjustment to the increased luxury tax and revenue sharing, but the union could file official charges if it finds evidence.
There is a clause in the CBA forbidding players or teams from acting in collusion. It was put there at the request of the owners, to prevent players from staging joint holdouts. In 1985-1987, the players charged the owners with violations of this clause. As specified in the CBA, the hearings were held before an arbitrator, not in a lawsuit.
If labor negotiations reach an impasse, management may implement its last offer. This was the basis for the owners' imposition of the cap on December 23, 1994. (MLB made it clear that the salary cap was still the "last offer," although tax plans had also been offered.) One part of Judge Sotomayor's decision was that the owners would have had to bring a future declaration of impasse before her, rather than simply declaring it. In early August 1996, the owners announced that they would make a "last offer" and ask Judge Sotomayor to declare an impasse if the players refused, but this never happened because what followed was two weeks of productive bargaining, eventually leading to the final agreement.
In order to impose its last offer, management must negotiate in good faith. The National Labor Relations Act has the following definition: "To bargain collectively is...to meet at reasonable times and confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours and other terms of employment...but such obligation does not compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of a concession."
Another important point is that management may not use poverty as a tactics in labor negotiations unless it opens its books. The owners did open the books to the union, but under an agreement that the union would not disclose the results.
Both management and labor are forbidden from engaging in unfair labor practices. One common example of an unfair labor practice is retaliation based on union activity, by either management or labor. Another example is a breach of contract in order to gain more negotiating leverage. The owners refused to make a pension payment on August 1, 1994, before the union went on strike in 1994. The union filed a complaint, and the owner settled by making the payment with interest.
The MLB umpires' contract expired on December 31, 1999. After the contract expired, MLB could lock the umpires out. Fearing a lockout but forbidden to strike under their labor contract, the umpires' union asked umpires to resign effective September 2, 1999, and most of the union umpires honored this by submitting resignations.
When MLB ignored the action, many umpires rescinded their resignations; meanwhile, MLB started hiring replacements for the umpires who were resigning. The last 22 umpires to rescind their resignations were too late, as MLB had already hired replacements for them. On September 2, 1999, the replacements began work.
The umpires' union chose to threaten a labor action at a time at which they would have more leverage; the players' union did the same in 1994. The players' August 12 strike threatened the 1994 playoffs, the most profitable part of the season, but allowed enough time for the playoffs to be played on schedule if there was a quick settlement. Similarly, the umpires threatened to resign on September 2, which could force MLB to use inferior umpires for the pennant races and post-season if there was no settlement.
An important difference between the two labor actions is that the umpires' union had a no-strike clause in its contract. Such clauses normally forbid any concerted labor action, in order to prevent sick-outs and other labor disruptions which are not technically strikes but have the same effect. The players played 1993 under an agreement not to strike (which they made in return for an agreement by the owners not to lock them out or unilaterally impose conditions). The players' union made the same offer in 1994, but the owners refused, and the players then struck in 1994. In contrast, the umpires' action was effectively a breach of its own labor contract.
Since the union was not legally on strike, it has probably forfeited the rights it would normally have as a union on strike. MLB has replaced resigning umpires with new, permanent employees; these umpires cannot be considered strike-breakers because there was no strike. In fact, several have joined the union; strike-breakers in the previous strike were not allowed to join it. Likewise, it is illegal for an employer to dismiss a worker for union activity, but this is unlikely to apply to the umpires who resigned. (There has been some discussion about MLB's need to be careful in selecting which umpires to replace; it cannot selectively retaliate against union activists.)
The old umpires' union filed a charge with an arbitrator alleging that the umpires were unfairly dismissed. MLB offered to re-hire 13 of the 22 resigning umpires and allow the others to retire, but the old union refused this offer, insisting on re-hiring of all 22. The arbitrator ruled that the resignations were valid, but that seven umpires must be reinstated and two must be given back pay as if they had retired rather than resigned; two AL umpires had not officially resigned, and seven of the NL umpires were refused re-hiring arbitrarily.
Both sides appealed this ruling in court, and it was mostly upheld on December 14, 2001; the nine were ordered re-hired with back pay, and three others would have their cases re-heard by another arbitrator because the first arbitrator applied the wrong rules for umpires with less than five years of service. The nine who were ordered re-hired received their back pay; five were re-hired, while four retired with the back pay. The three whose cases were re-heard settled their cases; they were re-hired without back pay. The remaining ten umpires were not entitled to reinstatment or back pay.
The ten umpires who received nothing appealed their cases, while MLB appealed the order to give back pay to the nine umpires who were ordered re-hired. The arbitrator's ruling was upheld by the District Court on December 9, 2002, and by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. MLB appealed to the Supreme Court, which declined to hear the case in January 2005.
Meanwhile, umpires dissatisfied with Richie Phillips, the union leader who proposed the mass resignations, called for a new union. The new union won a majority of votes in an NLRB election. The old union challenged the election on the grounds that the owners improperly supported the new union, but the election was upheld by the NLRB and on appeal. The new umpires' union signed an agreement on August 30, 2000.
The union reached a new labor agreement with MLB on December 22, 2004, which also included a nearly final settlement of the outstanding labor action. Of the ten umpires who received nothing in 2002, three were guaranteed re-hiring within MLB's next five openings for umpires, six were allowed to retire in 2004 with severance pay, and one, Rich Garcia, who had already been re-hired as an umpire supervisor, will also receive severance pay. The only remaning issue was the amount back pay for the five umpires who were ordered re-hired in 2001; that was determined in court in the umpires' favor on August 24, 2006, with the umpires received $3.1M in back pay rather than the $1.9M that MLB claimed was owed.
The reference for some of the data cited here (ticket prices and contract terms in particular), and a source of much more data about baseball finances, is Doug Pappas's Business of Baseball Pages, http://www.roadsidephotos.com/baseball/index.htm The details of proposals in labor negotiations are from Associated Press news articles.
Thanks to Ken Emery, Alan Foonberg, Ted Frank, Mike Jones, Thomas Kettler, Brian McAllister, Sherri Nichols, Subrata Sircar, Thomas White, and Mark Wolfson, for comments on the original draft or subsequent versions, or substantial contributions to existing sections. Thanks also to everyone on the net who has contributed information which has been used here (there are too many people to list individually).
This document is Copyright 2006, David Grabiner. The document may be copied and distributed freely in unmodified form, provided that this notice remains intact. It may not be sold or included in a collection which is sold without the permission of the author.
The opinions in this document are those of the author, not necessarily those of Princeton University. Legal opinions included here should not be considered legal advice.
This document may be cited as,
David Grabiner, "Frequently Asked Questions about the 2002 Baseball Labor Negotiations", [date under "Last Modified"], available electronically from http://remarque.org/~grabiner/oldlaborfaq.html
http://remarque.org/~grabiner/oldlaborfaq.txt
Please note that this document was written as a reference point for an ongoing discussion rather than an authoritative article. If the facts may have changed, please check the "Last Modified" date to make sure that the current version is being cited. You may also want to check with the author or confirm facts from another source.