How the Raiders will actually help the Las Vegas economy

The NFL’s 32 team owners met in Phoenix on Monday, where 31 of them voted yes to allow the Oakland Raiders to relocate to Las Vegas.

This is certainly a controversial move for a league that has appeared to be against any association with “Sin City” for many years. There is in fact still a rule in place that forbids any owner of a gambling company from becoming an NFL team owner.

Beyond the complicated philosophical questions, there are simpler business doubts about whether an NFL team can be successful in Las Vegas, a city of tourists. Many skeptics have said the move doesn’t make sense for the team or for the Las Vegas Strip.

But having an NFL team in Las Vegas makes clear financial sense for the local economy.

It’s why elected officials in Clark County, Nev., where the $2 billion mega-stadium will go up, voted to approve $750 million in public funding for the stadium—the largest public subsidy ever given to an NFL stadium. (The money will come from a small hike in hotel room taxes.) And it’s why Raiders owner Mark Davis pushed so hard for this move.

The Raiders can sell tickets in Las Vegas just fine, and the team and the stadium can be an economic boon for Las Vegas. Here’s why.

“Two loyalties” for local NFL fans

To those that say there won’t be a strong fanbase for the Raiders in Vegas, Las Vegas Sands CEO Sheldon Adelson had an answer for that.

Adelson was originally signed on to contribute $650 million to the stadium effort, but has since dropped from the project. In an interview with Yahoo Finance last summer, Adelson explained why he felt an NFL team could thrive in Las Vegas.

Residents of Las Vegas are mostly transplants from somewhere else, but Adelson argued that even if those transplants have allegiance to their original hometown team, there’s no reason they can’t have a second team.

“I’ve said in the past that the citizenry was too transient and they come here with loyalty to another team,” he said, “but hey, they could have two loyalties… They may not be as enthusiastic or want to spend the same money they would on the team they’ve supported for decades, but they certainly would go to the stadium when their former hometown team comes in.”

Obviously, local football fans who only go to Raiders games when their original hometown team is visiting wouldn’t be enough to sell out games. But the team will be attractive to corporate groups, who will buy suites. (The Chargers, in their move to Los Angeles, have a similar plan.) And to bolster the numbers, local hotels and travel companies will surely offer travel packages.