Athletes are Underpaid: The Economics of Player Salaries (2024)

Athletes are Underpaid: The Economics of Player Salaries (1)

There's a problem with the narrative around athletes and pay. Although big contracts make the news and we call rewarded athletes "overpaid", there is an army of athletes who will never touch those eye-popping salaries. As a whole, we contend, athletes are underpaid.

FrédéricBastiat wrote in his famous essay What is Seen and What is Not Seen, "Let us accustom ourselves, then, not to judge things solely by what is seen, but rather by what is not seen."

Most Athletes Never Go Professional

Starting with Pee Wee sports, there is a reasonably well defined route to major professional leagues.

Kids as young as 4 or 5 learn sport fundamentals and play for school sports teams and in pickup games in their neighborhoods. As they grow up, there are sports camps, AAU teams, college camps, and other competitive travel teams which put young athletes onto scouting radars.

Once scouts are paying attention, the next step is usually (with the notable exception of baseball) recruitment to an NCAA school. Most athletes will attempt to play for Division I-A schools (football) or Major Conference teams (basketball) if they dream of a pro sports career. Professional teams draft very few players after college is over. Even fewer will sign the huge contracts dismissed as absurd and obscene.

The odds are so stacked against being an "Athlete" as a career a few absurd contracts is the name of the game. For all the millions of children who grew up dreaming they'd be the next Michael Jordan, Emmitt Smith, Babe Ruth, Wayne Gretzky, or Pelé, almost zero will come close.

Sunk time and cost for athletes

It's a bias against the unseen - there has to be a reasonable reward at the end of the road for athletes that actually make it out of the various stages of athleticism.

There are cuts at every stage – it's an incredibly hard pyramid to climb. While there are millions of young athletes, there are far fewer high school athletes. Even more cuts happen at the college and professional level.

And at every level of cuts, there was more sunk time and money for an athlete to reach that level.

How Many Athletes are There in the United States?

How large is the professional athlete draft pool? In 2006, CNN pegged youth participation at around 41 million. Athletes in the NCAA number over 450,000.

There are more than 450,000 NCAA athletes. Most won't play professional sports.

Now, let's look at the four major sports:

Football (NFL): 32 players a round * 7 rounds means 224 players a year from the draft, plus a smattering of Free Agents - generally place kickers, punters, and the occasional retiree. Rosters are 53 players plus up to a 5 man practice team, leaving between 1,696 and 1,856 professional players in the NFL.

Basketball (NBA): 30 players a round * 2 rounds means 60 players a year in the draft. NBA rosters are usually around 12 - 15 players. There are between 360 and 450 players in the NBA.

Baseball (MLB): Baseball is the big exception to our draft rule, due to its varied league levels and development teams (Low-A, High-A, AA, AAA, Majors). There's no hard draft size, but in 2006 1,503 players were selected. (Many never made a major league roster.) MLB has 25 on active rosters and a 40 man roster (and 30 teams). Depending on your count there are 750 - 1,200 players in the majors at a time.

Hockey (NHL): 30 players a round * 7 rounds means 210 players a year in the draft. Hockey has a lively minor league, but major league rosters number only 23 players. There are only ~690 players at any one time on major league rosters.

Add that up: there are roughly 3,500 to 4,200 professional players in the four major American sports leagues.

Athletes are Underpaid and Minimum Salaries are Relatively Low

We pulled minimum salaries for the four major leagues for the 2018-2019 seasons.

The NHL comes in with a minimum salary of $700,000. Basketball players pull in an entry (2017-2018) $815,615 annually. The minimum in Baseball is $545,000. Football players make at least $480,000 annually (and $7,200 weekly for players on the practice squads).

Those numbers are huge - the 2010 median household income in the United States was $49,445.

Career Longevity: Forced Retirement in Your 20s

Of course, when talking about career longevity people tend to cherry pick the most durable player:

  • Robert Parish (21 seasons, NBA)
  • Brett Favre (20 seasons, NFL)
  • Wayne Gretzky (16 seasons, NHL)
  • Tim Wakefield (17 seasons, MLB)

The truth is most players will see no where near the longevity nor the contracts we see from the Peyton Mannings and the Alex Rodriguezes of the world. Most players will be closer to the minimum, and play out much shorter careers.

From what we can find, NHL players average 5.66 seasons, NFL players 6.86, NBA players 4.81, and MLB players (again, skewed by minor leagues) 5.6.

These numbers are also averages since median numbers are hard to find (but obviously medians will be less than averages). To give a hint to variability, the NBA study linked gives 4.81 as an average career but a standard deviation of 3.69. In other words, 68% of NBA athletes have career lengths between 1.12 and 8.5 seasons.

Remember, a college athlete drafted at 21 and out of the league 5 years later is 26 years old. Even with 5 years of large salaries, their future is not guaranteed. It's one of the reasons so many former players are broke, even many who earned salaries near the top of all players.

The Devastating Effect of Injuries on Young Athletes

In hockey, there are multiple junior leagues plus a waiver in the draft to allow teams to select professional athletes. In baseball, there are essentially two ways to get into the big leagues (outside of playing somewhere like Puerto Rico) - play in college, or get onto a low-A team in somewhere like the Cape Cod League.

Salaries are lower for many of these minor league teams, but they exist, unlike for the "minor leagues" in football and basketball. Football and basketball have historically been lucrative for colleges, had the most booster and recruiter involvement... and the most scandals.

One major factor in this is the NCAA's de facto monopoly on student athlete talent - the NBA has a minimum draft age of 19 years old, while NFL athletes must be at least 3 years post-high school. The leagues definitely benefit from this monopoly on young elite player talent.

While there is an NBA D-league, there is no need for a minor league in the NFL. Does the NCAA benefit? Of course they do. Member schools can hand out scholarships, which at face value are worth $30,000-$60,000... but realistically, many athletes are not going to school for a degree.

Anecdotally, many athletes end up with degrees in University Studies. For every Rhodes Scholar, there will be many athletes who never even complete a degree. The school makes money from football and basketball programs, the NCAA makes money from member dues, and the athlete winds up with a degree he or she probably didn't set out to earn.

Who is hurt the most? The players, who possibly are sitting on a lottery ticket with a fast-approaching expiration date: their athletic careers.

A Bigger Scandal than Recruiting Scandals: Athlete Injury Risk

None of that excuses the scandals that plague the two glamour sports. It does, however, go a very long way towards explaining them.

Scandals from USC to Oregon to Auburn to Ohio State to Miami can be traced back to a simple problem: there is a huge risk of injury when playing sports. That injury risk, especially in football, prevents many athletes from ever making the money they could have made.

For every Reggie Bush, who makes a deal to cash in on potentially fleeting talent during a college career, there is someone like Jason White. Jason White's sports story is especially tragic: he won a Heisman (and nearly two!) but knee injuries meant he never contributed in the NFL.

The world will remember Reggie Bush as the first ever ex-Heisman winner. Someone will remember Jason White's incredible college career during a trivia game in a sports bar

From Cam Newton to Charles Barkley, there is a generation of players – those we know about and those we don't – that thought through these risks. Sure, basketball's looser age restrictions may have prevented scandals as devastating as football's, but there are certainly many in basketball to choose from.

Special Talents and Forced Amateurism

Athletes are Underpaid: The Economics of Player Salaries (3)

History abounds with examples of 'special talents' painted with the claim they'd only succeed in college. That might lead to some athletes pocketing booster money, but even athletes who believe they'll "go pro" aren't immune. The injury risks are too great and taking some money might seem reasonable insurance against a career ending injury.

That's the effect of forced amateurism. Even 'destined' athletes "pay their dues" in college before they can enter the draft.

The NFL average career of 6.86 years may seem great at first glance. However, once you factor in the injury risk of playing in college and high school things look quite a bit different.

Players who try to take the legal way out of forced amateurism – Maurice Clarett, Mike Williams, Terrelle Pryorwere forced to skip draft dates. They also undoubtedly signed smaller contracts than if they 'made it' to the draft uninjured.

Athletes are Underpaid: Summing it all Up

The next time you hear that athletes are overpaid, think back to this article.

Some of the contracts in the sports world will always grate on the public's nerves. Keep in mind though: salaries are high but rational - in aggregate, athletes are underpaid.

Consider the difficulty of this sequence:

  • Develop the skills necessary to be a professional
  • Stay injury-free until you can demonstrate those skills at the Pro level
  • Maintain those skills for a reasonable number of years

The next time you hear someone complaining about sports contracts remember the special talents that never made it. For every huge contract, many near anonymous journeyman players make the league minimum. Further, many college stars never even cashed in on their elite skills .

In the immortal paraphrased words of Bastiat, remember the unseen underpaid players.

Athletes are Underpaid: The Economics of Player Salaries (4)

PK

PK started DQYDJ in 2009 to research and discuss finance and investing and help answer financial questions. He's expanded DQYDJ to build visualizations, calculators, and interactive tools.

PK is in his mid-30s and lives in New Hampshire with his wife, kids, and dog.

Athletes are Underpaid: The Economics of Player Salaries (2024)

FAQs

Athletes are Underpaid: The Economics of Player Salaries? ›

Athletes are Underpaid and Minimum Salaries are Relatively Low. We pulled minimum salaries for the four major leagues for the 2018-2019 seasons. The NHL comes in with a minimum salary of $700,000. Basketball players pull in an entry (2017-2018) $815,615 annually.

Why are professional athletes paid so much economics? ›

Professional athlete wages are determined the same as other workers, their wage matches the marginal revenue product of their labor. The price of the top leagues in the US and Europe is very high due to ticket prices, but also due to television contracts. The product that the top athletes are selling is very high.

Why are athletes not overpaid? ›

You might think they earn more than what they are worth for playing half a year, but athletes have many things which contribute to their salary. Some of these things include their earnings from endorsem*nts, ticket sales, performance, merchandise, their social contributions, and TV ratings.

Are professional athletes overpaid yes or no? ›

Professional athletes are not overpaid. To some this may come as a shock, but just because an athlete like Lebron James, Manny Ramirez, Kobe Bryant, CC Sabathia, Alex Rodriguez, etc... sign huge contracts for over $20 million per season doesn't necessarily mean that professional athletes are overpaid.

Why do professional athletes deserve their salaries? ›

Thus, professional athletes' salaries are a fair compensation for the countless time and energy they put into training and the huge health risks they take, especially considering that their careers typically end around the age of 35. Professional sports is a money-earning business.

Who is the highest paid athletes inflation? ›

Michael Jordan

Why are actors overpaid? ›

Actors get paid so much because they are part of films, TV shows, and productions that generate a ton of money. Audiences grow to love and want to see more and more specific actors in films and TV shows.

Why are athletes paid more than doctors? ›

One of the reasons why athletes make more money than doctors is because of the industry that they work in. This industry includes both the image of a celebrity and the career of an athlete hence the pay gap between athletes and doctors.

Why are professional athletes paid more than nonprofessional ones? ›

So why are professional athletes making more money than most of us could ever dream of? Well, there are many factors that go into it, such as the amount of time athletes put into perfecting their skills, the wear and tear on their bodies, and their short career spans.

Why are NFL players paid so little? ›

An NFL team also has 53 players on its active roster, compared to 35 for baseball and just 14 for an NBA team; in order to fit everything under a hard salary cap, the average salary has to be lower.

Who is the richest athlete ever? ›

Michael Jordan Is Richest Athlete of All Time.

What athlete has made the most money in their lifetime? ›

Michael Jordan is the undisputed leader when it comes to the highest paid athletes in history.
...
Highest paid athletes of all time worldwide as of 2022 (in billion U.S. dollars)
CharacteristicIncome in billion U.S. dollars
Michael Jordan3.3
Tiger Woods2.5
Arnold Palmer1.7
Jack Nicklaus1.63
9 more rows
Apr 25, 2023

Who is the richest athlete in the world? ›

1 Cristiano Ronaldo ($136M): He tops the list for the first time since 2017 thanks to his $75 million annual contract with Saudi club Al-Nassr. ⚽️ No. 2 Lionel Messi ($130M): Half his earnings came on the field playing for Qatari-owned PSG.

What is the most overpaid profession? ›

Psychiatrists are on the notoriously overpaid list because they are essentially paid just to talk to people, a service most healthcare plans cover. They also qualify as overpaid on a simply technical basis, as they generally charge hourly rates but only provide sessions for 50 minutes at a time.

Do actors get residuals forever? ›

So, do all actors get paid for reruns? According to the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, some do, and some don't. For principal performers, royalties can lead to long-term payoffs that trump the original salary.

Why do nurses get paid less than professional sports players? ›

It's because top sports players are very scarce compared to the huge demand for their services from fans, promoters and sponsors. The bottom line is that a great many more people have the ability to be nurses than to be a Floyd Mayweather or a James Harden.

Why do American athletes get paid so much? ›

Why are professional athletes paid so much money? It is the law of supply and demand. They have skills that are in demand and there is a short supply. As long as there is a demand team owners will pay the price.

Do pro athletes pay medical bills? ›

All medical bills are to be paid by the club. The CBA also gives a player the right to examine his medical or trainers' records twice a year--once during the pre-season and again after the regular season.

Why do some professional athletes go broke? ›

Lack of Financial Knowledge

Young athletes who are drafted onto a pro team are suddenly wealthy at a very young age. It's a rare 20-something who's prepared for that. They often lack the financial knowledge to manage the large sums of money they're earning, Sports Illustrated noted.

What sport has the lowest salaries of professional athletes? ›

Here are some of the lowest wages in professional sports:
  • Hockey. ...
  • Lacrosse. ...
  • Major League Soccer. ...
  • Minor League Baseball. ...
  • Mixed Martial Arts. ...
  • The NBA's D-League. ...
  • Rugby. ...
  • Tennis. According to Nicola Arzani of the ATP World Tour, professional tennis players earn prize money by round at each event they play.
Nov 25, 2014

Why are male and female athletes paid differently? ›

Assuming a male and female athlete receives equal prize money, generally speaking, the top male athletes earn more due to better sponsorship and endorsem*nt deals. Research conducted by a United Kingdom organization shows that sponsors are more attracted by male athletes as male athletes tend to be more marketable.

Why is the NFL so well off financially? ›

NFL teams generate local and international revenues through TV contracts. The teams receive large payments from television providers thanks to multibillion-dollar contracts, and there are even more television viewers and broadcasts of games than other programs on set.

Who is the cheapest paid NFL player? ›

While Tyrone Swoopes won the title of the lowest-paid NFL player in 2021, looking at the low end of league earners isn't as simple. NFL players face different minimum values that depend on their contract and designation as active or inactive players.

What percentage of NFL profits go to players? ›

This increases to four players per team for the 2022–2030 league years. Violations of the NFL's substance abuse policy no longer can result in a player suspension. Players receive 48% of the NFL revenue by the 2021 season, and at least 48.8% of the revenue in any 17-game NFL season.

What is the economic impact of professional sports? ›

Sports Tourism Benefits Local Economies

It adds billions to local economies, creates jobs, and boosts tax revenue. This spending breaks down into three main categories: Direct (hotels, restaurants, retailers, transportation) Indirect (goods and services)

Why is economics important in sports? ›

Key Components of Sports Economics

Understanding the ownership structure and motives of front office personnel through their financial, read economic, decisions will reveal whether a team is looking to only generate profit, attempt to win a championship, or something entirely different.

Why are professional athletes paid more than doctors? ›

One of the reasons why athletes make more money than doctors is because of the industry that they work in. This industry includes both the image of a celebrity and the career of an athlete hence the pay gap between athletes and doctors.

Why do men's sports make more money? ›

The first factor is the fewer chances for female athletes to negotiate endorsem*nt deals. Assuming a male and female athlete receives equal prize money, generally speaking, the top male athletes earn more due to better sponsorship and endorsem*nt deals.

Why economists don t think sports matter for the economy? ›

“There are aspects of quality of life that are not monetary,” said Leeds. “The big cost of losing sports is at the cultural level.” Sports bring people together and are a source of local identity. He just thinks it's important to admit that this is why sports are important, not because they generate economic growth.

What is the biggest sport economy? ›

The Premier League is financially the most successful sports league worldwide, with many foreign sponsors and fans tuning in from across the world. However, it was Real Madrid and FC Barcelona from Spain who had the highest brand value out of European soccer clubs as of 2021.

What is the economic burden of sports injuries? ›

$20 billion dollars — that's the economic impact of sports-related injuries (calculated from medical costs and lost time) in just US high school and collegiate levels alone. [1] At the professional level, roughly one-third of player salaries are lost due to injury.

What is the economic impact of sports in America? ›

Research shows local economic growth has been generated from the presence of a professional sports team in multiple ways: the creation of new jobs, increased consumer spending, increased sales in certain market segments, and increased tax revenue.

How can economics be used in sports? ›

Sports have taken this economic perspective and used it to make competitions into numerical events. For example, looking at a baseball game, a coach will plug in values representing the other team's possible strategies and examine what will unfold through a quantitative model.

How much of the economy is sports? ›

The sports industry accounts for roughly $14.3 billion in direct earnings each year, with an average salary of $39,000 per job (of around 456,000 jobs).

Why do doctors make so much more than nurses? ›

It's all about the salary

Doctors have a higher salary than the nurses, mainly because of their education, title, and license. While this may be indulging disparity, that is how the world have went on in the past, and will always be in the future.

Who gets paid more in professional sports? ›

Highest Paying Sports in the World

Basketball is the highest paid sport in the world, with the average annual salary in the NBA in 2023 being nearly $10.5 million. This is more than double the average salary in the NFL, which sits in second place at $4.5 million.

Why are female athletes so masculine? ›

Physically all forms of athletic sports and most physical exercises tend to make women's figures more masculine, inasmuch as they tend to broaden the shoulders, deepen the chest, narrow the hips, and develop the muscles of the arms, back and legs, which are masculine characteristics.

When did the gender pay gap in sports start? ›

The first major event that got publicity about the gender pay gap in sports was with Billie Jean King at the Italian Open in 1970. The passing of Title IX in 1972 generated a wave of female participation in athletics, as well as increased funding for female sports.

Why should male and female athletes be paid equally? ›

Establishing equal pay in sport, well – it's a powerful statement in one of the most unfair fields that women are, quite literally, as valuable as men, their effort as valuable as men's effort. Equal pay for female athletes also helps fix a self-perpetuating cycle of inequality within the industry.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Barbera Armstrong

Last Updated:

Views: 6417

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Barbera Armstrong

Birthday: 1992-09-12

Address: Suite 993 99852 Daugherty Causeway, Ritchiehaven, VT 49630

Phone: +5026838435397

Job: National Engineer

Hobby: Listening to music, Board games, Photography, Ice skating, LARPing, Kite flying, Rugby

Introduction: My name is Barbera Armstrong, I am a lovely, delightful, cooperative, funny, enchanting, vivacious, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.