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An analysis of consumer response to corruption: Italy's Calciopoli scandal

Research output: Working paper

Published
Publication date2014
Place of PublicationLancaster
PublisherLancaster University, Department of Economics
Number of pages27
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Publication series

NameEconomics Working Paper Series
No.6
Volume2014

Abstract

The literature on economics of corruption is lacking in evidence on consumer responses to identifiable scandals. The Calciopoli episode affecting Italian football in the 2005/06 season serves as an opportunity for an empirical investigation into consumer (fan) behaviour following punishments imposed by the Italian league on clubs whose officials were found guilty of corrupt practices. Using a difference-in-difference estimation method, where the convicted teams are the treatment group, we find that home attendances for treated teams fell by around 16%, relative to control group teams defined as those clubs not subject to league-imposed punishment. We show further that the fall in attendances identified with Calciopoli punishment resulted in non-trivial gate revenue reductions. Our results suggest that a sizeable number of fans of the punished clubs were subsequently deterred from supporting their teams inside the stadium. We explore alternative explanations of this adverse fan response.