As the NCAA continues to fail at changing its own bylaws even in the aftermath of the U.S. Supreme Court decision against it in National Collegiate Athletic Association v. Alston, one can reasonably ask if the association has become too large to operate rationally—even for a cartel.
they plan to address this matter using “temporary NIL measures.” This seems to be due to an internal lack of consensus.
As the NCAA continues to fail at changing its own bylaws even in the aftermath of the U.S. Supreme Court decision against it in, one can reasonably ask not only whether the NCAA is an antitrust violator but also if the NCAA has become too large to operate rationally—even for a cartel. As a matter of basic cartel theory, the NCAA may very much be on the way to legal and practical obsolescence. This is because, relative to other cartels, the NCAA does not seem to have the structural ability to quickly change its rules to ensure future compliance such as by simply and efficiently. This is because the organization’s membership is just too darn large.
Currently, the NCAA has over 1,200 voting members—or at least 1,187 more than OPEC, a cartel that arguably engages in a similar degree of antitrust violations but is able to change its business practices, should it ever need to do so, much more easily. Thus, while the NCAA may be incredibly efficient for its members in terms of passing rules to curtail athlete rights, it thus far is proving incredibly inefficient at unwinding some of them.
پاکستان تازہ ترین خبریں, پاکستان عنوانات
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