Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron James
by Dan MitchellSupporters of the Cleveland Cavaliers, especially the owner of the team, are upset that basketball superstar LeBron James has decided to sign with the Miami Heat. The anger is especially intense because the Cavaliers offered $4 million more over the next five years. But their anger is misplaced, because more money in Cleveland, Ohio, actually translates into about $1 million less disposable income when the burden of state and local income taxes is added to the equation. Rather than condemn James for making a rational choice, local basketball fans should tar and feather Ohio politicians.

This story from CNBC walks through the calculations.
…if you match up what James’ salary would be for the first five years in Cleveland and the five years in Miami, you find that the Cavaliers are only offering him $4 million more. That advantage gets erased — and actually gives the Heat the monetary edge over — when you consider the income tax difference. …Playing in Cleveland, LeBron would face a state income tax of 5.925 percent, plus a Cleveland city tax of two percent. Over the first five years of a new contract with Cleveland, James would give back $3,953,060 combined to the state and city for the 41 games each season he’d play at home. But James would have to pay none of that for home games in Miami since Florida doesn’t have an income tax. Athletes have to pay income taxes to states that they play in on the road, so the games he’ll play away from home — whether he played for Cleveland or Miami — are essentially a wash. But there are, on average, 11 away games per season where James would have to pay Ohio and Cleveland taxes. Why? Because he has to pay when he plays in the six areas – Florida, Texas, Washington D.C., Illinois, Toronto and Tennessee – that have no jock taxes. That’s another $1,061,128 he’ll have to pay in taxes that he wouldn’t have to pay in Miami.
New York basketball fans also should be angry. With some of the highest taxes in the nation, many of which target highly productive people as part of class-warfare policy, New York is bad news for professional athletes.
The New York Post, commenting on the probability that James would sign with the Miami Heat, identified the real villains.
…blame our dysfunctional lawmakers in Albany, who have saddled top-earning New Yorkers with the highest state and city income taxes in the nation, soon to be 12.85 percent on top of the IRS bite. There is no state income tax in Florida. On a five-year contract worth $96 million — what he’d get from the Knicks or the Heat — LeBron would pay $12.34 million in New York taxes. Quite a penalty for the privilege of working in Midtown.
Now let’s look at the big picture. The calculations that LeBron James made when deciding to sign with the Miami Heat are the same calculations that companies make when deciding whether to build factories and create jobs. So when people wonder why high-tax states such as Ohio, California, and New York are losing jobs to zero-income tax states such as Florida and Texas, part of the answer should be obvious. And if we move to the global level, folks should not be too surprised that companies and investors, all other things equal, are likely to avoid the United States, with its punitive 35 percent corporate tax, and instead create jobs and build wealth in places such as Hong Kong, Ireland, and Switzerland.






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I'm probably the only person in the country who does not know who LeBron James is, or the Cleveland Cavaliers or the Miami Heat. I do now, because the author did a satisfactory job of laying it out so I could understand it. I have listened to CNBC and FOX business today, and do get the gist of it.
I could care less about Lebron James, basketball or these other sports "stars". The only things that interest me, are business, and politics, in that order. In that vein, this LeBron James character made the right business decision.
For those of you who do follow these things, and place a great deal of importance in them, it is just one more shining example of how States are driving business away. Look at this Lebron James story, and then calculate how many millionaires are leaving Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, the Northeast, and the Rust Belt. They are leaving in droves, headed to greener pastures, and sunnier tax havens………
Pro athletes, like highly paid entertainers, largely get a pass when the left uses the class warfare narrative. The biggest criticism pro athletes and pro sport franchises get are lack of loyalty to the fans. Ironically the loyalty factor in politics, i.e. re-electing politicians who gain ever more power by coercive redistribution of taxpayer money, have cost Cleveland fans the services of a homegrown basketball superstar. Ashame that Cav fans couldn't have let Dennis Kucinich go to South Beach instead.
Good job, Mr Mitchell. My favorite teacher of all time used current events as his favorite teaching tool.
Exactly right and also in California. they are fleeing to Florida, Texas, etc. The same thing occurs on the international stage which constrains governments to compete on tax policy and to generally be pro-business. It will kill Obama's agenda, ultimately, and hence the move for a global tax authority under IMF and all the other lovely Soros plans. Its coming – its the only way the US can survive globally with all the burdens these clowns are plling on.
I LOVE IT!!!
LeBron's move is a STATES RIGHTS Issue!!!!
If one state has taxes too high, Or if a state is better run and has lower taxes, people AND BUSINESSES move there!
Cowboy is 100% correct (as usual) LeBron made the correct decision. I would have done the same thing…
The article posts only one portion of the same issue; once the contracts are all known, can we see a similar set of numbers for the other guys headed to Miami as well? Let's see how much they also benefited from this.
Sadly, the politicians wont care; Cleveland will now be desperate and overpay for some other tall guy who can bounce a ball, and the taxes will still roll in …
The decision by James to go to Miami and not to New York….High Taxes (approaching 50%, if you include Federal Tax) versus very low taxes, hell that a no-brainer, ever for an Obama supporter.
No brainer!
Hell, live in Cleveland or Miami?
Duh!
does anybody wonder if obama will sign a executive order, forcing lebron to play in cleveland? why that cheap lebron, trying to save money. i guess if the states who were trying to get lebron would have thought to give him a tax exemption, they might have snagged him. and there would have been no loss of revenue, due to the higher attendance, and greater income from bars and restaurants near the stadium. but gubmint nitwits never see the big picture, they only see the common torture of taxes for all. does anybody have any idea of the loss to the cleveland area businesses? they already stopped selling his jersey, money down the hole.
I'd rather live in Cleveland than "northern Cuba". Duh.
Secondly, Dan Mitchell is full of crap. Money was NEVER the issue with Lebron James. I’m a football fan myself, having been a faithful follower of the Cleveland Browns for 46 years. Basketball is not my favorite sport. It’s the principle. What transpired was craven behavior on the part of a beloved athlete.
It’s not just what James did, it’s how. He conducted a three-ring media circus with himself as the main attraction. He disrespected Cleveland on national T.V. and did not have the courage or conviction to face the fans or the owner, Dan Gilbert. He was not straightforward. He chose instead to broadcast his message from the comfort of an ESPN studio. Then he fled down to Miami where Pat Riley met him at the airport and whisked him away to a hotel. Nice touch, LeBron.
cont:
We all realize that sports is a “business”, but the trouble is, fans and local business owners also have a financial stake in their team, and they get shafted the worst. Vendors, restaurants, pubs, and parking lots, take a big hit when a star player or a team leaves town. The whole industry surrounding a sports team has an investment in the business and the effects are economically devastating.
I watched those playoff games with the Celtics. He played like shit. You could tell his mind, heart, and body simply weren’t in the game. Much of the blame rests on him. Having said that, one player does not a team make. You need a supporting cast to assist and step up when you falter.
As for his new team, the Miami Heat: He took his unfinished business to a team that has only won a single championship, back in the 2005-2006 season. The lure was the signing of Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, who will be his teammates.
A warning to Miami: We Cleveland fans know all about hyperbole and the high hopes attached to newly acquired athletes. Tim Couch comes to mind. We’re also painfully aware of getting this close to a championship, only to watch in total disbelief as the chance slipped away with one fatuous mistake on the part of a coach or player. This is not the first time a well-liked player (or team owner) has abandoned our town. Unfortunately, we’re old hands at this. Even after all that, we still believe that if you give loyalty, appreciation, and support to a team, you’re supposed to receive it in return.
As for the Cavaliers and our other Cleveland sports teams, maybe this will serve as a catalyst for the determination to fill our teams with the athletes who will bring us our long overdue championships.
Lebron James has moved to Miami, taking his ego and self-promotion with him.
Good luck Miami; you’ll need it.
"Pro athletes, like highly paid entertainers, largely get a pass when the left uses the class warfare narrative."
That is an awesome point. I have used it myself in discussions / arguments with people who are to my left (which isn't hard; EVERYONE is to my left, lol). Inevitably, 'corporations' this and 'corporations' that is their fallback position for all the world's troubles.
I ask them to substitute their favorite movie star or musician for the faceless building that a corporation occupies.
'Should Bon Jovi or Wayne Gretzky or be taxed out of existence in order to support your favorite social program?'
On a somewhat related topic, a couple weeks ago, Limbaugh said he got a notice from the IRS that they had made a mistake and they owed him 'seven figures' for an amount they had overcharged him.
It is outrageous that an individual would have at least a million dollars stolen from their bottom line–I don't care how much they earn or what their political views are.
james has asked the owner dan gilbert many times to build a championship team around him. that was the deal at the last contract when he took less than he could have. it did not happen. this kid wants to win more than make money. that is a great lesson for our kids. james did the right thing. cleveland fans need to ask the owner what he did to keep james in cleveland and that was nothing!
Lets not forget that about a year ago, NYC was going to jack up it's income tax on the 'rich' which already contribute to over 60% of the city's budget. The rich threatened to leave. (notably Donald Trump)
Very Atlas Shruggedy.
For what it's worth: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3B_xBWsDpz0
I just found this on Drudge.
Evidently everyone is talking about LeBron James.
Personally, who cares?
First of all, I am a basketball fan and used to help cover the game for SI. And I am a conservative.
LeBron wants a CHAMPIONSHIP ring. He probably wants more than one.
It's not about taxes, Dan.
It's about which franchise has the real shot at getting to the Finals with him as a team leader. If you knew ANYTHING about basketball, you would know this.
Do you really, actually and honestly believe Mr. James made this decision based on the fractional point differential between one state's tax rate versus another? If so, you are dumber than you think I think you are.
For cryin' out loud, Dan Mitchell, you are a f**king moron. Writing like yours is only slightly better than Glenn Beck's blackboards where, AS LONG AS YOU DRAW A LINE THROUGH IT THAT MAKES IT SO.
You are an Idiot. It's like declaring that Americans decide whether or not to buy their wives flowers based on the county sales tax in which they live. It's ridiculous. Considering Andrew only posts 14 to 16 analyses a day here, can you do us all a favor? Take a lifetime vacation from writing. Make room for people who aren't as stupid as freshman leftists who just read Marx for the first time.
"Thinking" like yours, which is so myopic as to believe that whatever flavor of the day story MUST be motivated by YOUR particular favorite issue is why conservatives like myself are being marginalized into the propaganda of FOX and WND.
Indeed.
[...] Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron James [...]
You should check out the map of immigration and emigration from different counties in the United States. They were color coded, red for emigration, black for immigration. Needless to say, high-tax Democrat-dominated states look like they were flamethrowers, with people abandoning them in droves. Low tax, pro business states like Texas looked like they were black holes.
You got to love the United States, where you can tell corrupt state governments to find someone else to tax into oblivion, cause you're leaving.
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
Rome is burning and the Tiber is choked with oil, and this is what people are talking about?
A total none story-other than an illustration of why the libs are going to want to push a national sales tax or VAT. If people are voting against high taxes with their feet, the bankrupt entitlement states are going to beg the Feds to get you wherever you try and run.
What are they going to do when there is no place left to run to? They should be getting ready to stand and fight.
what world do you live in? I know NOTHING about basketball, and I'm fine with that. However, I live near a state with substantially lower sales and cigarette taxes. People routinely travel cross border to do shopping. My state constantly cries about their "lost" revenue. As if its their money in the first place. People make dozens of unconscious decisions daily about costs. When you see two gas stations next to each other, but one is a penny cheaper, where do you stop? do you even think about it, or just automatically do it? Ever go to buy something at the store, only to remember that the holiday sale is just around the corner, so you put it back? I know several county RE investors who won't touch the nearby city because property taxes are just a "few" % higher. People move to FL for many reasons, and low taxes don't hurt the calculation.
CL…it's basketball who cares…lol….the rudest and bunch of non-signers of all sports…in order (my experience of the best)1st hockey, 2nd indoor lacrosse (yea there are professional indoor and outdoor leagues), 3rd baseball, 4th football, and bringing up the rear basketball…heck I had an easier time with musicians…
And what's with the Beck jab? He is right far more than wrong. And he's covering stories a heck of alot more important than the same old lame old MSM bread and circuses stories like poor Lindsey Lohan, where Lebron is going to hang his hat.
Know why Goldman sold off BP, and Soros dumped Anadarko just before the GOM gusher? Cause I don't hear anyone else asking. Who else is talking about the Panthers skating free? Or Van Jones? Or Breitbarts banner story, ACORN. If it weren't for FOX, where would those stories be?
Bread for circus Bob, bread for circus.
The important things this week in the newz were Lebrone James, Lindsay Lohan and Mel Gibson.
Everything else is irrelevant in the Colisieum of Life.
Didn't they just sign Boozer too? (my husband is a Jazz fan) I agree with you on rather living in Cleveland than Miami. Although my reasoning isn't because it is "little Cuba" (I love Cuban food). I even have family that lives there. Miami is just too hot and humid in the summer for me, too flat, and has high crime rates (I don't really know what Clevelands are though).
I can't hold the economic impact that famous players leaving has on a town against pro-athletes (at least not much). Ultimately it isn't their responsibility to worry about everyone in business that their presence or lack of will affect. Would it be nice if Lebron did consider this? Yes. Would I personally consider this and probably stay? Yes. But I am extremely loyal and would fell badly for leaving. Not everyone is like that. He isn't really doing anything wrong, just selfish but that is his perogative.
I would take Lebron over Kobe anytime.
I might agree with you that it was more about a Championship ring than money. I don't really know though. However there is no reason to insult the writer here. He puts forth a possibility that a lot of other people are also considering as the real reason that Lebron left. Just because his reasoning differs from yours doesn't make him a moron.
I don't think you or I (or Dan for that matter) know for sure what Lebron's reasons were for leaving. And he will probably not tell any of us what his real reasoning was, at least not anytime soon.
Lebron might not have thought of the amount taxes changes his income in the three different places considered if left to his own devices, but he probably had a financial advisor letting him know what the effect would be. It probably at least had some impact on his decision.
So now I can tell my husband that Lebron is not a d-bag but he is just a smart businessman! He will be so relieved. Hehe. Not that he is a Cavaliers fan or anything, we both just value loyalty a little more than most athletes do today. I don't blame Lebron though. Seemingly gone are the days of players like John Stockton who played for the same team his whole career even though he never won a championship and was one of the best players in the NBA.
I really hope Jerry Sloan wins a championship before he retires. (I don't actually care that much about professional sports but my husband love the Jazz and I can't help but feel bad for Jerry Sloan despite the fact that I realize he has made more money than I will probably ever see in my lifetime. I have to much compassion to let myself care about pro-teams.)
» Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron ……
I found your entry interesting do I’ve added a Trackback to it on my weblog
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He's just not very patriotic is he?
You're right, athletes like James are too dumb to factor business into the decision at all.
Grow up. If the offers were anywhere near in his head, he at least had an accountant whispering about the taxes.
LOL! After all the serenading, I guess LeBron just gave them the middle finger.
BakkaBawl is such a stupid sport anyways. Raise the basket two more feat and most of the no talent NBA players would be working McDonalds.
in the end, somebody was going to be pissed. if he goes to nyc, miami, and cleveland are po'ed, if he stays in cleveland, nyc, and miami are po'ed. he was going to break someone's ideals over this. they made the rules, he was just trying to better himself, and boo freaking hoo hoo to the loosers. i am from chicago, and i saw mj play, lebron is no mj, kobe is no mj. jordan was a one of a kind, he deserves the statue outside the united center. when you say baseball, ruth comes to mind, basketball, jordan. i know the bird fans, magic fans, also wilt fans. but jordan was the complete player. he won olympic gold twice, he won a college championship, and 6 rings in chicago.
rush completely left, nyc will loose more millionaires, then who will fund thier socialist nightmere?
I love playing basketball. I am almost 7months pregnant and I still play pick up ball with some friends. Now watching it is not anywhere close to as fun for me. And watching pro-ball is not entertaining at all until the 4th quarter. They seem to jog up and down the court casually shooting until they only have 5 minutes left in the game. They might seem to care about the game a little more if they played all out for 4 quarters.
or drop the basket 2 feet, and white guys might stand a chance again
I get it, but not counting the 6th year only Cleveland could offer him doesnt make this a fair comparison. How the NBA works, who they are allowed to pay what, matters.
LeBron left almost 30 million on the table by signing **anywhere** other than Cleveland. Thats a fact.
Besides, its not that LeBron left, its HOW he left. The man just did to Cleveland what my daughter does to her diapers.
This owner of the Cavs gave this kid millions and millions of dollars. Built a 25 million dollar state of the art practice facility 3 blocks from LeBron's house…just because LeBron requested it. He then spent another chunk of money replacing scoreboards in this facility because LeBron didnt like what color they were.
LeBron then went and QUIT on his own team this last year in the series vs the Celtics. I know, I watched every second and the man flat out quit on his team.
Then, knowing since the Olympics he was going to sign with the Heat, would not even speak with the owner of the Cavs himself to tell him the news. He had one of his "possey" call Gilbert and tell him (after informing Chicago, NJ, NY, LAC).
That show was the most blatant display of selfishness I have ever witnessed. I am dumber for having watched 27 minutes of it. 27 minutes for the man with the most potential in NBA history to say "I'm ready to be Dwayne Wades B.I.T.C.H." A night of referring to himself in the 3rd person no less than FIVE times, and he turns Kobe Bryant…WHO RAPED SOMEONE…into a good guy.
I am not even a cavs fan….
And if you knew anything about the NBA you would know if he just wanted "lots of championships" he would have chosen Chicago. Every credible "expert" agreed on this.
Also….he went to the Heat to avoid having to be a team leader. LeBron gave up his alpha dog status when he quit on his team in the playoffs, he then reinforced his self-demotion to 2nd tier by deciding to become Dwayne Wades bitch.
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron James – Big Government [...]
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
This analysis is extremely revealing. However, I have to take fault with one particular idea:
Does it seem to anyone that James' decision had more to do with Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh — and the prospects of winning a championship — than with taxes?
Contemporary American sports are a mindless spectacle filled with beer ads. Soccer will never be popular here because there is only one time out at the half to sell Fords, Viagra and feminine hygeine deodorant spray.
This tattooed high school graduate (barely) is your hero?
Really?
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
Nothin' but a Money Hungry Punk. And if you asked him to balance a checkbook, he couldn't do it because he's a functional illiterate with leeches(lawyers). In my opinion.
I learned two new (useless) facts this week: Who this James guy is and some ditz named Linsey ….
Sad, it really shouldn't have to be like this. People cheering for the latest spectacle, not understanding that one day they'll be the ones thrown into the pit as the coliseum cheers on. If I had the money, and no personal commitments, I'ld run too. maybe a nice island in the pacific.
But since I don't and do, I guess its stay and fight. Really hope it doesn't come to that. keep your nose out of my business and your hand out of my wallet and I'm fine. but no. Everybody wants to rule the world. *** holes.
I've seen exactly ONE basketball game in my entire life and don't feel like I've missed a thing.
James played by the rules of free anency and was free to choose where he wanted to play. Get over it.
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
There are plenty of tall white guys. (and short black guys for that matter) Many of them just didn't want to spend all their time playing basketball when younger so they could make it to the NBA. My husband is 6'6". He had two other friends in high school the same height or a bit taller and they were white guys. He could dunk at one point (although not with one hand seeming to fly into the sky). However his whole life didn't revolve around training for basketball and he didn't have enough natural talent to make up for his lack of effort.
I know you were joking a bit but there are many factors besides height that have more to do with the racial diversity of most basketball teams. (Sorry I just get into this argument all the time with in-laws and I can't help myself).
I know this is nasty but I predict, I hope, this guy falls flat on his face. He's as big a narcissist as Oblamer is and just a little more arrogant. He probably voted for Oblamer too.
And we find out this morning he took 15 million less than the maximum offer, so basically he left 45 million in salary alone on the table to sign with the Heat.
For this argument, let us put LeBron James in the category of "brand" or "corporation." If he wants to get the most mileage out of his brand, he wants to be in the place where not only will he get the exposure and a shot at a championship. Thus his net worth of the LeBron james brand goes up.
BUT he is also a businessman and while Cleveland may have put up some impressive numbers, I am sure his accountants were showing him all the figures and in the end how much he would be taking home for LeBron Inc. did make a huge difference. How many people are in his employ? How much will his agent get? How much in taxes would he need to fork over? Will the team build around him? How much in the spotlight does he really want to be? Championship or not, the name LeBron james will have a meaning like Kobe, Shaq, Bird, Magic and any other player/brand you can think of in any sport.
If I were in his shoes, with many other factors we don't know about, I would've taken Miami, even if Chicago was an almost sure thing for getting a ring.
I just think LeBron, as a brand has a lot more going for him as a brand than a lot of athletes. he made the right decision.
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
Local Search and Find…
Local Search and Find…
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
Anybody see a bullseye painted on LeBron James' back with a caption reading "Go ahead — overtax me?" I didn't. Scrooooooo the bloodsxcking government.
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron James – Big Government [...]
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
Gentle Readers,
Dear Mr. Mitchell,
Is your point that these idiots and their greedy team-owners are grossly overpaid for a kids game?
How about we let the kids play the games and put the adults to work doing something useful? Mr. James should get a job.
Sincerely,
John Lepant Brighton CO
[...] decision was predictable; Dan Mitchell of Andrew Breitbart‘s Big Government (Right) also says blame the taxes, not LeBron; The Young Turks (Left) offer a YouTube video entitled “LeBron James In Miami Over Taxes? [...]
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
"Conservative," I don't doubt; conservative of what, is an interesting question. Ever hear the saying, "She's not a lady if you have to keep calling her one?"
I think your post speaks for itself, and I will refrain from voting you down since you are already -25 as of this writing, there's no need to pile on. The championship potential of Miami is debatable. I have much respect for Pat Riley so I will grant it is a possibility
+1 Tears for Fears reference
[...] See the original post: » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron … [...]
NY Taxes Will Cost Knicks Lebron James – Rush Limbaugh! http://www.dittos-rush.com/2010/07/ny-taxes-will-...
Thank you for your intelligent insight. I wish with all my heart that all, or at least 50% of journalist had the professional integrity to write on a heated subject the way you have in this article. Unfortunately, we live in a TMZ and STAR era.
Thanks again, great informational article.
Yes, and gone are the days where CEOs and Team owners cared about anything but their own financial forecast. Lets not be naive! Corporations don't have any loyalty to their people and neither do Team owners. It was a smart business decision. Gilbert and Cleveland made lots of money off of LeBron. They were incredibly lucky!!! to have him for 7 years. He could have gone to many more desirable places and made more money right out of High School. Cleveland came up off of LeBron and his brand not the other way around. They should all be grateful.
[...] » Jilted Basketball Fans Should Blame the Income Tax, not LeBron James – Big Government [...]
<DIV>you know i think we agree. jordan gave this same statement to chicago mngmt as i recall. they responded with pippen, cartwright, grant and others. james is well aware that to be considered with mj he will have to win championships. cleveland for whatever reason was not doing anything in the way of bringing help. an overaged shaq and jamerson is not help! james is a great player who like jordan, johnson and bird wants to win. if he judged that not going to happen in cleveland, he should leave and he did.
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Journalists: what can you do?…
I found your entry interesting thus I’ve added a Trackback to it on my weblog
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