​Financial Fair Play Regulations: Rules created to serve the rich

By The Doc / Roar Guru

​As a big believer in equalisation I will admit that I welcomed the introduction of UEFA Financial Fair Play (FFP) regulations with open arms.

Sick of watching Real Madrid and Manchester United spend without restraint, it seemed as though a new footballing world was on the horizon.

I could not have been more wrong in my assessment or understanding of the FFP regulations. Quite simply it seeks to maintain the status quo – keeping the rich at the top and preventing anyone else from ever joining them.

Neymar’s record transfer from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain has placed FFP back in the spotlight as poor Barcelona cry foul having had their darling Brazilian snatched from right under their noses.

If we look back a few years to 2003, the big clubs like Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Manchester United et al were all sitting pretty being perennial dominators of domestic and European competitions. All was well with the world until Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich entered the fray.

He took primary control over Chelsea and went on a spending spree never before seen in world soccer. Appointing Jose Mourinho, he paid ‘squillions’ of dollars in transfer fees compiling a squad that went to win two Premier League titles in a row.

Next to follow were Sheikh Mansour (City Footballing group) and the Qatar Sports Investment group who subsequently did the same with Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain respectively.

Manchester City were not so long ago sitting in the third tier of English football, never spoken about in the same breath as their more illustrious neighbours – a successful season was either promotion or a mid tier EPL finish.

PSG had perhaps more pedigree but had failed to win the Ligue 1 title for 18 years (before winning in 2012-13). Both clubs went on unprecedented spending sprees that as a result have now catapulted them into the top tier of European football. Both have won numerous domestic titles and cups and European trophies seem around the corner.

With wealthy (understatement of the year) owners all three clubs but particularly the City and Paris Saint-Germainwere able to elevate themselves from mid tier mediocrity to perennial domestic champions and European contenders.

To understand how this occurred, we need to look beyond the exhorbitant amounts of money being spent in transfer fees and wages. The only way second tier clubs can attract the best players is to pay over the market transfer fees and wages.

Without this the best players would remain at the traditionally wealthy clubs who can promise both success and big pay packets. You then need to pay sufficient funds to keep enough players of this ilk for a period of years to achieve sustained success.

After a period of success, the brand of the club will change from a small mid tier club to a global giant and this is when the money starts coming in. Build an academy and you can then purchase the best young players who are relatively cheap – these players will join because of the quality of a global brand and academy.

The young players can be developed, loaned out or sold for a profit and the money continues to flow in. But the key to all of this is enormous up front investment and huge losses to enable this growth.

(AFP PHOTO / IAN MACNICOL)

In England, the City’s achievements turned the ‘big four’ into a ‘big five’. The best players on the transfer market were out of reach to most clubs (bar Real Madrid and Barcelona) until Man City and PSG had had their way. PSG and Man City shattered the mould and the next club was ripe for the picking by the next billionaire.

But just as quickly as it started, UEFA unveiled the FFP regulations that meant teams had to balance their books or keep a cap on losses over a specified time-period (previously a single season and now covering a three year period). It seemed music to our ears – no longer could the likes of Bayern, Real et al bully the transfer market.

This was the era of equalisation or so it seemed. FFP has put to rest the chance of another club copying the Chelsea/City/PSG model. If you are not allowed to incur the huge up front debt due to FFP then you cannot replicate this model.

Who does this serve? The richest clubs of course. FFP has done little to stymie the spending of clubs like Real Madrid, Barcelona or Manchester United. According to Deloitte, over the last 16 years, ten clubs have repeatedly featured at the top of rich list (total revenue made from football operations).

They are of course familiar faces. They are global brands with enormous revenue and so their books will always be balanced which affords them the luxury of spending (both on transfer fees and wages) without suffering the consequences of FFP.

What are the positives of the FFP regulations? Sure, you will prevent a repeat of clubs like Portsmouth going into administration by promoting fiscal spending in the lower divisions. The regulations are an incredibly lengthy document but it does serve to increase transparency of all European clubs. But these positives in no way offsets the fact that you prevent any club from ever again climbing and entrenching itself into the upper echelon of European football.

Many would argue that I have no sense for football economics and you would probably be right. But I do feel that every team should have the opportunity to achieve sustained success and by that I mean compete year on year for domestic and European success. In European footballs skewed financial topography, FFP removes the very notion of this.

The FFP regulations are the ultimate comeuppance from the European footballing aristocracy.

The Crowd Says:

2017-08-09T06:29:20+00:00

tom7

Guest


You can complain as much as you like, but you cannot deny the fact that the QUALITY of the Football is the absolute best in the world. 100 times better than the A-League. So the system DOES produce great quality. Competition creates quality. Artificially suppressing competition (Australia) spoils A-League clubs and players and keeps unworthy clubs and players in the first tier.

2017-08-09T05:24:50+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


I have seen Roma go through suffering punishment for years now in regards to FFP. Roma sold Salah this year to cover FFP sanctions and I believe Rudiger as well to cover next year and finally be out of the FFP spotlight. Roma were not run well for a while but I don't think any one would call them outrageous spenders in the transfer market. You are right, it is teams like Roma that suffer whilst teams like PSG and City canrry on with the crazy spending.

2017-08-09T02:15:26+00:00

The Auteur

Guest


"Who does this serve? The richest clubs of course. FFP has done little to stymie the spending of clubs like Real Madrid, Barcelona or Manchester United. According to Deloitte, over the last 16 years, ten clubs have repeatedly featured at the top of rich list (total revenue made from football operations)." That's more to do with unequal TV revenue distribution. Can't blame the people wanting to see the best clubs even if one of the club you mentioned finished sixth last season.

2017-08-08T23:34:18+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Sorry, I don't understand this type of article. Have you read the full 105 pages of the UEFA FFP regulations? If you have, then are you arguing: a) The Regulations aren't strong enough? b) The Regulations are strong, but they're not being enforced? I've seen a significant change since FFP was introduced. In particular, I notice middle tier clubs are closing the gap on the top tier in terms of the quality of foreign players they now have in their squads. This is particularly noticeable amongst the less fashionable clubs in the EPL - they have the money to attract players that higher profile football brands on the Continent may not have. If you expected social equality after 5 years, you need to reassess your expectations about how quickly macro-economic policy changes trickle down to the underlying economy.

2017-08-08T20:44:35+00:00

League table speaks

Guest


Absolutely its a negative... been saying it forever lol...maybe we dislike it for different reasons though. ;) Bundesliga is much the same and pioneered a lot of it. Clubs that might want to challenge Bayern really cant as while they may be willing to shoulder some losses they cant bring their revenue up. Also there u have more restrictionson ownership. There is a lot to love about Bundesliga but a lot wrong with it also. Imagine if Manchester City had still been in a lower tier when FFP came in. Would they now be in a similar predicament to QPR? They are unable to spend their way out of where they are. While Man city have always been a big club its likely FFP would have at least slowed their path back. So FFP has some supposedly laudable intent but its really just cementing the established order where it is. So a fail on "equalisation" which isnt even good under a pyramid system imo ....and spending at the top is as high as ever so a fail there too. Regulation in most industries and economies will usually favour an established player as they have the means to dodge the system with some creative work arounds. The sort of "innovation" that distracts resources from the innovation that counts, on the pitch.

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