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 Home  > List of Issues  > Table of Contents  > Abstract

An Economic Evaluation of the Moneyball Hypothesis


Author(s): Jahn K Hakes | Raymond D Sauer
 
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  Journal of Economic Perspectives
 
Print ISSN: 0895-3309
Volume: 20 | Issue: 3
Cover date: Summer 2006
Page(s): 173-185
 
 
  Abstract text

Michael Lewis's book, Moneyball, describes how an innovative manager working for the Oakland Athletics successfully exploited an inefficiency in baseball's labor market over a prolonged period of time. We evaluate Lewis's claims by applying standard econometric procedures to data on player productivity and compensation from 1999 to 2004. These methods support Lewis's argument that certain baseball skills were valued inefficiently in the early part of this period, and that this inefficiency was profitably exploited by managers with the ability to generate and interpret statistical knowledge. Consistent with Lewis's story and economic reasoning, as knowledge of the inefficiency became increasingly dispersed across baseball teams the market corrected the original mispricing.

 
  Author(s) affiliations
 
1Assistant Professor of Economics and Management, Albion College, Albion, Michigan.
jhakes@albion.edu
2Professor of Economics, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina.
sauerr@clemson.edu
 

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