Lynn,
At no time did I state that I feel the current economy of golf is OK. My 'theories' were aimed at disproving the ideas that golf is too hard, too expensive and too time consuming.
You asked: "Do you believe the current economy of golf is okay? Or do you believe it is going through a shaking out period due to so many new courses and it will grow again in the future?
I think the golf economy is suffering more from overbuilding than lack of players. Remove the courses built in the wrong places over the past 10 years and we wouldn't be having this discussion.
The local course in Simi Hills is a good example, if RC siphoned off 20k of their rounds at ca. $30 per, then SH lost 600k. Bam, healthy golf course bites the dust.
Look at the Myrtle Beach economy. 100 courses hosting 4mil. rounds per year. 10 more courses get built and everybody goes down 10% causing 25 properties to go on the block.
As for rounds played, they are either down, flat, or up in different parts of the country as I believe you probably know. We were lucky, we held to last years numbers but other courses in our area were down 25/35 %, due mainly to a poor spring, lousy summer and miserable fall. April through MemDay was atrocious, then forty-five rain days between Memorial Day and Labor Day leading to one of the coldest and rainiest falls we've ever had. People lose the desire to golf when the season starts so crappy and stays that way.
Who's up in your area, anyone? and if so, why? Is California down in general?
I don't disagree with you that society may be changing and that golf is losing players, I just think golf will keep attracting more people to it because of what it offers. Lots of women have left the game but they weren't catered to as well in the past as they will be in the future. Junior programs abound, programs aimed at city kids, minorities, seniors, etc. are increasing all the time. Operators are looking at every possible idea to maintain their revenues. No one who wants to survive can sit on his haunches and watch the herd go by, feeling that enough of them will stop at his spot. People are talking to each other and offering up ways that they have used to increase rounds or increase sales or up margins. Many of these initiatives come from operators and managers and pros who either learn some new strokes or sink slowly out of site.