Craig, in your review of that data, was there any suggestion as to what sector of the golfer consumer public saw the significant drop in rounds played since 2000? If the drop in rounds played came from the sector that 'was' these courses that are folding, that sounds logical. But, I also wonder if part of the drop in rounds comes from the lower to middle class income scale, where scarce jobs and wage suppression does not seem to be abating. Also, it seems to me that we older folks entering or well into retirement years and pension income living, have been decimated by the case of the disappearing pension assets. Aren't these older folks the hot golf market that provides a significant number of those rounds played and provide a significant underlying of the number of rounds played?
I don't know if all or some of these factors are the driving cause of a collapse in the golf economy. Probably, it is a catastrophic mix of all of the above. I have a very strong opinion, and it is both political and economic as to what caused this collapse. (I know that shocks you
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The question is whether the golf industry and all the entities from archies and constructors, to B&I equipment manufacturers and sellers, to course management of the agronomic sector are going to have the unified wherewithall to get behind an effective socio/ecoomic plan to right the ship, or accept the status quo, pay lip service to what I think are rather superficial feel-good 'initiatives' (IMHO), or become seriously motivated to do something different than repeat the approaches of how we got here. In the world of golf, from members and players to the commercial interests, they have a very ingrained mindset that don't seem to be working, nor a brighter horizon in any foreseeable future if status quo reigns.
So, where is any renewed growth going to come from? Not the vast working public-turned pensioners, who have been decimated, notwithstanding the tiny fraction of corp exec golden parachute recipients who walked off with those worker pension assets. Not lower to middle class wage earners who continue to see wage-benefit suppression into a second-third decade or more. Not any foreseeable re-ignition from those real estate-golf developments recovery of currently defunct or new investments (so most economic experts suggest). And yet the top 5-10% on wealth scale of golfers have no problems and a crap load of enclaves of exclusivity and price is not much of an object for them to play their golf, and they don't seem to be sweating this situation too much.
No, actually I don't have many questions about the golf economy and its prospects to recover on a popular participatory economically growing scale, now that I think about it....