|
|
Prices and Funding Strategies for the Arts: Lessons from Research
Atlanta
How do pricing and funding strategies for the arts affect fundraising?
Free
2 hours
In this seminar, Dr. Bruce Seaman, a professor at Georgia State University's Department of Economics/Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, will describe and elaborate upon key research results regarding pricing and funding strategies of importance to managers of arts organizations.
Specific topics will include:
- how to interpret the various elasticity of demand findings from empirical demand studies and participation rates data from the NEA and other sources
- the complementary vs. substitute relationships between “earned” ticket revenues and private contributions
- what is known about “crowding-out” or “crowding-in” among the various private vs. public funding sources
- potential strategies for cooperation among arts organizations
- the prospects for various earmarked and other creative dedicated funding sources for the arts
- what has been learned about arts audiences from the diverse research done by economists, sociologists, marketing experts, and arts policy scholars.
The presentation will be followed by at least 30 minutes of questions and audience observations.
Dr. Seaman, a former president of the Association for Cultural Economics, International and a senior research associate with the Nonprofit Studies program at the Andrew Young School, has spoken frequently to arts audiences regarding economic impact methodologies and other topics linked to his own and others’ economic research. His own arts related research includes empirical studies of the relationship among various sources of arts funding, price discrimination and other pricing strategies within the arts and the nonprofit sector more generally, the role of competition vs. cooperation within the performing arts, arts vs. sports labor market comparisons, empirical studies of demand for the performing arts, the role of the arts in local economic development, international trade issues relevant to the cultural sector, the risks of “overbuilding” in the local cultural industry, and tax issues related to the arts.
He regularly teaches a course at Georgia State University on the economics of the arts, entertainment and culture, and is currently co-editing a book with his GSU colleague Dennis Young, Nonprofit Management and Economics (Edward Elgar, 2009). He has done research funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Center for Arts and Culture, and the University of Chicago’s Cultural Policy Center.
- When:
- Thursday, October 23, 2008
2:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
- Where
- Foundation Center
50 Hurt Plaza, SE Atlanta, GA 30303
Get directions.
This program is offered free of charge. Space is limited. Please arrive on time or your seat may be given away to others who are waiting to attend.
To register online please select one of the following sessions:
For additional information, call The Foundation Center-Atlanta at 404-880-0095.
|