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| Title: | The economic and social value of sport and recreation to New Zealand |
| Author: | Dalziel, Paul |
| Date: | Sep-2011 |
| Publisher: | Lincoln University. Agricultural Economics Research Unit. |
| Series/Report no.: | Research report (Lincoln University (Canterbury, N. Z.). Agricultural Economics Research Unit) ; no. 322 |
| Item Type: | Monograph |
| Abstract: | There are a vast range of sport and recreation
events that attract New Zealanders every week as participants, administrators, supporters
and spectators. Over 15,000 sports and recreation clubs exist at a local level in
New Zealand, supported by approximately 776,000 volunteers. It is clear that sport and
recreation are highly valued in New Zealand, indicated by the time and financial resources
that individuals and communities devote to activities related to sport and recreation.
The size of New Zealand’s investment in providing sport and recreation opportunities, both
organised and non-organised, is significant. Thirty per cent of New Zealand’s land area, for
example, is managed by the Department of Conservation ‘for conservation, scientific and
recreational purposes’. Local governments invest billions of dollars in providing indoor and
outdoor sporting facilities that aim to cater for everyone, from youngsters first learning to
chase after a ball to professional athletes competing in front of a television audience of
millions. Community clubs and private businesses complement these public facilities by
providing their own goods and services to New Zealanders engaged in sport and recreation. There are a number of public programmes that aim to support participation in sport and
recreation. In August 2009, for example, the Government launched its Kiwisport initiative to
increase its support for children playing sport in primary and secondary schools. This
programme is implemented through a partnership between the Ministry of Education and
SPARC (Sport and Recreation New Zealand). SPARC is a Crown agency set up to “promote,
encourage and support physical recreation and sport in New Zealand”. It has 14 statutory
functions which it performs by working in partnership with a large number of national,
regional and local sport and recreation organisations.
Given this high level of public and private investment, it is important that stakeholders have
some shared understanding of the benefits, and the value of those benefits, that are
produced by people’s participation in sport and recreation. Consequently, the purpose of
this report is to work towards achieving a shared understanding by:
presenting a comprehensive framework for measuring the net benefits produced
from sport and recreation in New Zealand; and
offering estimates of the value of these benefits where relevant data are available. |
| Persistent URL (URI): | http://hdl.handle.net/10182/4315 |
| ISBN: | 978-1-877519-17-8 |
| ISSN: | 1170-7682 2230-3197 |
| Appears in Collections: | AERU Research Report series
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