Just How Big is the Culture Economy?

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The Vegas Sphere. Image: Nigel Hoult on Wikimedia

This week we picked a story from the Wall Street Journal about the Vegas Sphere, which by all accounts delivers a spectacular experience. The project was built for $2.3 billion, about a billion dollars over budget, and completed in 2023. The Sphere has been a remarkable success, now the highest-grossing arena in the world —”$379 million on 1.7 million tickets sold last year, according to Pollstar.” And a smaller version is now planned for Washington DC.

That got me to thinking: just what are the various culture industries worth and how do they compare? Every year we hear about debates to cut or raise the budgets of the NEA NEH ($207 million each this year). So how does this funding compare not just in the non-profit arts world, but in the larger creative economy? So I decided to do some digging.

Most arts policy debates happen at one scale. Most cultural activity happens at another. It turns out the gap between those two scales — between the world that the arts, funding fights, and nonprofit board meetings live in, and the world where most people actually encounter culture — is so large that it’s worth pausing to measure.

What follows is a set of tables. The premise is simple: if you put the budgets of the largest US nonprofit arts institutions next to the revenues of the companies that produce most of the culture Americans consume, you start to see why debates inside arts circles often feel disconnected from the broader gravitational field of culture. They are.

Three things worth surfacing before the numbers and then I’ll get out of the way.

The largest US nonprofit arts institution is the Smithsonian, with about a $1.1 billion total budget — roughly 70 percent of which is federal appropriation. That figure is only about 3 percent of what the Disney Parks division earned in revenue last year. Disney Parks alone — not Disney’s whole company, just the parks — pulls in more revenue than the entire global recorded music industry.

The European model is genuinely different in scale and structure. State subsidy is not a top-up to ticket sales there; it’s the foundation. The Vienna State Opera covers about 55 percent of its budget from public money. London’s Tate Museum’s most recent annual report shows public grants falling, deficit budgets, and “self-generated income not increasing post-pandemic at the same pace as the cost base.” The story is the same across the continent, with the dial turned to different points on the public/private spectrum.

So something to consider: A lot of what we call “culture policy” in the US is policy for less than 0.5 percent of the cultural economy by revenue. Americans for the Arts puts the nonprofit arts and culture sector at $151.7 billion in total economic activity and 2.6 million jobs. Disney alone employs 233,000 people. The NFL did $23 billion in revenue last year, by itself larger than the operational spending of every US nonprofit arts organization combined. None of this means the nonprofit arts don’t matter. It means that when we argue about $207 million in NEA appropriations, we are arguing about a rounding error in the broader cultural economy. Perhaps the conversation should grow up to the size of the field it’s trying to describe.

This isn’t a complaint, it’s an attempt at a map, and my arbitrary version at that. I think you make different decisions about where to put energy when you can see where things actually are.


1. The 10 largest US nonprofit arts/cultural institutions

Most recent fiscal year available (FY2023 or FY2024). Operating expenses unless noted.

Rank Institution Annual Operating Expenses FY
1 Smithsonian Institution $1.09B (total federal appropriation + trust) / $892.8M S&E 2024
2 Metropolitan Museum of Art $477.9M 2024
3 J. Paul Getty Trust $409M 2024
4 Metropolitan Opera Association ~$300–320M (estimate; FY24 reported $46.9M deficit) 2024
5 Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) ~$269M 2024
6 American Museum of Natural History $258.2M 2024
7 Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts ~$235M 2024
8 Boston Symphony Orchestra $124M total / $99M programs 2024
9 Carnegie Hall $100.6M 2024
10 San Francisco Opera $91M 2023–24

Notes on this table. The Smithsonian is technically a federal trust instrumentality, not a 501(c)(3); about 70% of its budget is federal appropriation. The Getty Trust runs almost entirely off endowment draw — it’s a different financial creature than peers funded primarily by tickets, philanthropy, and government. Lincoln Center, the campus organization, is separate from the Met Opera, NY Philharmonic, NY City Ballet, and Lincoln Center Theater, which are independent constituent tenants with their own budgets. The Met Opera’s FY24 audited statements were not fully released at the time of writing; so the figure here is an estimate based on prior years and reported deficit. Also: I omitted the Kennedy Center, which in prior years most certainly would have made the list. But who knows really what the numbers are now.

Combined top-10 operating spend: roughly $3.5–3.8 billion. That is approximately 11% of Disney Parks’ annual revenue.

Sources: Smithsonian FY2024; Met Museum 990 (ProPublica); Getty Financials; Met Opera Annual Reports; MoMA FY24; AMNH Financial Statements; Lincoln Center 990 (ProPublica); BSO Annual Reports; Carnegie Hall Financials; SF Opera Finances.


2. The largest European arts institutions

European data is harder to assemble cleanly than US data. Different countries report on different fiscal calendars, in different currencies, and many institutions are units of larger municipal or state cultural enterprises rather than freestanding entities. This is a partial list — institutions where current-year figures are publicly reported. The point is the order of magnitude and the funding mix, not a strict ranking.

Institution Country Annual Budget % Public Funding FY
Louvre France ~€280M (~$300M) ~80–90% 2022–23
British Museum UK ~£180M (~$225M) ~70% 2023–24
Tate (combined galleries) UK £153.8M expenditure (~$195M) ~37% grant aid 2023–24
Royal Ballet & Opera (ROH) UK ~£135M (~$170M) ~25% Arts Council 2023–24
Opéra National de Paris France ~€220M (~$235M) ~45% (€99.8M state subsidy) 2023
Wiener Staatsoper (Vienna) Austria €145M (~$155M) ~55% (€79M subsidy) 2023–24
National Gallery (London) UK ~£95M (~$120M) majority public 2023–24
Victoria & Albert Museum UK ~£110M (~$140M) majority public 2023–24
Bayerische Staatsoper (Munich) Germany not separately reported (unit of Bavarian state cultural budget) very high
Rijksmuseum Netherlands ~€60M (~$65M) majority public 2023

Notes. Currency conversion uses approximate 2024 averages. German state opera houses (Munich, Berlin, Hamburg, Dresden) typically don’t publish freestanding budgets — their funding is woven into state cultural appropriations, which can be substantial but aren’t directly comparable. La Scala, the Prado, and the Reina Sofia were not included due to data quality issues for 2024. Russian institutions excluded.

The headline pattern: the largest European institutions are smaller in absolute terms than their US peers, but they receive significantly higher direct public support. The Louvre’s budget is roughly 60 percent of the Met Museum’s; the difference is that the Met has to raise nearly all of its operating revenue from ticket revenue, philanthropy, endowment, and city support, while the Louvre’s salaries, security, and maintenance are paid by the French state.

Sources: Tate ARA 2023–24; British Museum ARA 2023–24; Royal Ballet & Opera Annual Report; Vienna State Opera reporting; Opéra National de Paris; Louvre.


3. The size of culture industries (global revenue, 2024)

Industry Global Revenue US Revenue Source
Video games $182.7B ~$47.6B Newzoo Global Games Market Report 2024
Book publishing (all) ~$90–100B ~$28B AAP
Streaming video / SVOD ~$70–75B ~$25–30B Industry estimates
TV (US, ad + sub bundles) ~$120–130B Nielsen / industry data
Film – global box office $30B ~$8.7B (US/Canada) Gower Street Analytics
Recorded music $29.6B ~$10B IFPI Global Music Report 2025
Live music / concerts ~$30–35B ~$15B Live Nation / Pollstar
US newspapers / magazines ~$25–30B NAM/MPA
Podcasting ~$2–3B ~$1.5–2B IAB
US Broadway gross (incl. touring) ~$1.9B (2023–24 season) Broadway League
US nonprofit arts & culture (organizational spending) $73.3B AEP6
US arts & cultural production (ACPSA, all sectors) $1.17 trillion (4.2% of GDP) BEA ACPSA 2023

What the list reveals. Video games alone are larger than recorded music, global theatrical film, and live music combined. Book publishing — which we routinely talk about as a sector “in trouble” — is roughly three times the size of recorded music. The entire US nonprofit arts and culture sector’s organizational spending ($73.3B) is in the same range as global recorded music revenue, and smaller than US theme park spending. The Arts and Cultural Production Satellite Account‘s $1.17 trillion figure includes everything cultural — commercial film studios, streaming platforms, publishers, museums, performers — which is why it dwarfs every line item above it.


4. The 10 largest commercial culture companies (most recent FY)

Rank Company Annual Revenue FY Notes
1 Walt Disney Company $91.7B 2024 Includes parks ($34.1B), entertainment, sports
2 Comcast / NBCUniversal $123.7B total / $36.5B NBCU media 2024 Mostly cable broadband; NBCU segment is the culture piece
3 Sony (entertainment segments) ~$27.5B (Pictures + Music + Games) FY24 (Mar 2025) Full conglomerate ~$95B
4 Tencent (entertainment) ~$22B (games + music + video) 2024 Conglomerate ~$93B
5 Warner Bros. Discovery $39.3B 2024 Pure-play media
6 Netflix $39.0B 2024 Pure-play streaming
7 Live Nation Entertainment $23.2B 2024 Tickets + concerts + management
8 Paramount Global $28.2B 2024 TV, film, streaming
9 Spotify $14.1B 2024 Pure-play audio streaming
10 Universal Music Group $11.8B 2024 Largest pure-play music co.

Notes. Pure-play comparison is hard because most of these companies are conglomerates with mixed segments. Comcast is mostly broadband, not media. Sony is mostly electronics and finance. Tencent is mostly games and a Chinese super-app. Where possible, we’ve separated out the culture-relevant segment revenue with the conglomerate total flagged.

Disney alone — at $91.7B — produces more annual revenue than every US nonprofit arts and culture organization combined ($73.3B in organizational spending per AEP6). And that’s one company.

Sources: company 10-Ks, 20-Fs, and annual reports; Disney FY2024 Earnings.


5. The 10 highest-revenue sports teams (most recent reported)

This list mixes North American leagues and European football because they operate on different revenue models — the NFL’s revenue-sharing produces a tight cluster of teams in the $600M–$1.2B range, while European football’s commercial-first model creates a wider spread.

Rank Team League Annual Revenue Year
1 Dallas Cowboys NFL $1.22B 2024
2 Real Madrid La Liga €1.07B (~$1.16B) 2023–24
3 Manchester City Premier League €838M (~$905M) 2023–24
4 Paris Saint-Germain Ligue 1 €806M (~$870M) 2023–24
5 Manchester United Premier League €771M (~$832M) 2023–24
6 Bayern Munich Bundesliga €765M (~$826M) 2023–24
7 FC Barcelona La Liga €760M (~$820M) 2023–24
8 Liverpool Premier League €714M (~$770M) 2023–24
9 Los Angeles Rams NFL ~$700M (estimate) 2024
10 New York Giants / various NFL NFL ~$650–700M 2024

Note. The Cowboys had an estimated $629M operating profit on $1.22B revenue last year — meaning the Cowboys’ profit alone was larger than the operating budget of every US nonprofit arts institution.

League-wide totals:

  • NFL: $23B (2024)
  • MLB: $12.1B (2024)
  • NBA: $11.3B (2024)
  • NHL: ~$6.6B (2023–24)
  • Premier League: ~£6.3B / ~$8B (2023–24)

Sources: Forbes / Sportico NFL valuations 2025; Deloitte Football Money League 2025; Sportico: How NFL teams make money; MLB 2024 revenue.


6. The 10 most-attended theme parks (2024)

Rank Park Operator / Location 2024 Attendance
1 Magic Kingdom Disney / Florida 17.8M
2 Disneyland Park Disney / California 17.3M
3 Universal Studios Japan Universal / Osaka 16.0M
4 Tokyo Disneyland OLC / Tokyo ~15.8M
5 Shanghai Disneyland Disney / Shanghai 14.7M
6 Tokyo DisneySea OLC / Tokyo 12.6M
7 Chimelong Ocean Kingdom Chimelong / China ~11.5M
8 EPCOT Disney / Florida ~11.0M
9 Disney’s Hollywood Studios Disney / Florida ~10.9M
10 Disneyland Paris Disney / France ~9.8M

Top 25 parks combined attendance: ~246 million (2024).

Disney’s 12 parks drew 140 million visitors globally in 2024 — about 34% of the top-25 total. For comparison: 140 million is about 50% more than the total annual attendance for every nonprofit performing arts and museum visit in the United States combined per AEP6 audience data.

Disney Parks division revenue (FY2024): $34.1 billion. That’s more than ten times the combined operating budgets of the ten largest US nonprofit arts institutions on the table above.

Sources: TEA Global Experience Index 2024; AECOM Theme Index; Disney FY2024 Earnings.


7. Jobs: nonprofit arts vs. commercial culture

Sector Jobs Source / Year
All US arts and cultural production (commercial + nonprofit) 5.4 million BEA ACPSA 2023
US nonprofit arts & culture sector (AEP6) 2.6 million Americans for the Arts AEP6
Publishing industries (NAICS 511) 891,000 BLS
Motion picture & sound recording (NAICS 512) 475,000 BLS
Broadcasting (NAICS 515) ~360,000 BLS
Performing arts companies (NAICS 7111) ~131,000 BLS
Museums, historical sites (NAICS 7121) ~127,000 BLS
Disney (total employees) 233,000 Company filings, 2024
Disney Parks (cast members, global) ~156,000 Company disclosures
Walt Disney World (Florida site only) ~80,000 Florida’s largest single-site employer
Comcast / NBCUniversal (combined) 186,000 Company filings
Live Nation Entertainment 32,200 Company filings
NFL league office (excl. teams) ~6,700 League data

The asymmetry. Disney’s parks workforce (156,000) is larger than the combined headcount of every US nonprofit performing arts company and museum (~258,000) — and Disney is one company. A single Disney park (Walt Disney World, ~80,000) has a workforce roughly 60% the size of every US nonprofit performing arts company combined.

One more comparison point. The combined federal NEA appropriation ($207M, FY2025) plus all 56 state and jurisdictional arts agency appropriations (~$755M, FY2024) totals about $965M. That is roughly 2.8% of Disney Parks’ 2024 revenue, and about 4.2% of NFL annual revenue. Federal cultural support to all of US nonprofit arts is a smaller annual expenditure than what one NFL team (the Dallas Cowboys) earned in profit last year.


So what?

A few things become hard to argue with once you see the numbers.

The nonprofit arts sector is small relative to the cultural economy it sits inside. That doesn’t make it unimportant. It makes it specific. It’s a bounded sector with particular roles — preservation, transmission, training, experimentation, civic gathering — that the commercial sector doesn’t necessarily perform on its own. But the mistake is talking about non-profit culture as if it were the cultural economy.

The commercial culture economy is dominated by a handful of mega-players, and it’s increasingly built around scaled experiences (parks, sports, gaming, streaming) rather than around singular cultural artifacts. The growth is in the systems that consume time, not in the things people own.

Europe still treats cultural infrastructure as a public utility. The US treats it as a philanthropic enterprise. Neither model is producing comfortable institutions right now — both Tate and the Met Museum are running deficits — but the logic of why is different.

The instrumentalization argument that nonprofit arts must justify themselves economically is structurally rigged against the nonprofits. Of course they look small. They are small. The “we contribute X to the economy” argument is one nonprofits cannot win at scale. The argument has to be about what the nonprofit sector does that the commercial sector can’t or won’t do — and that argument requires comfort with the size differential, not denial of it.

Where the money is shapes who shapes culture. The largest cultural employers in this country are theme parks and streaming services. The largest cultural exporters are gaming companies and Hollywood studios. The cultural conversation in the non-profit sphere — opera, museums, theater, dance, classical music, etc. — is happening in the small percentage of the cultural economy where nonprofits operate. That’s still significant. But it’s also worth knowing how big the rest of the room is.

So often I see conversations about the health of non-profit arts and policy discussions about the arts as if the universe is non-profit. So how might the perspective change when you consider non-profit arts next to the larger culture economy?


I compiled this data as of April 2026. All figures sourced from primary documents (audited financials, annual reports, government accounts, industry trade body releases) where available, with substitution to credible secondary reporting where primary documents were not publicly accessible. Currency conversions use approximate 2024 averages. Where ranges or estimates are given, the underlying figure was either not published, contested across sources, or required interpolation across fiscal years.


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