MONEY, THAT'S WHAT I WANT
Forbes, The
Times, MTV etc enjoy making a fetish out of the lives of rich people, and their
popularity suggests they are not alone. There are plenty of others who find the
excesses of the rich sickening, indeed the lives of the super rich can be so
gross that they are not to be aspired to. Footballers in the top European
leagues fall into this category, yet it comes as no surprise to find some of
their colleagues are not so luxuriously rewarded.
Inequality is not
unique to football, though this is a fitting example. Many staff are on agency
contracts, which apparently absolves the clubs involved from any
responsibility, and are generally not paid the living wage, yet the players
will earn in excess of a £100,000 a week for playing football (or sitting on
the bench, and regardless of whether they play well or not.) Is this the
market? Football is a very strange market, yet the value of the wages the
players command is drawn from the lack of suitable replacements, yet the wage
demands bring clubs to the bankruptcy or the brink of it. The cleaners etc are
replaceable, there is an international reserve of labour waiting to take their
jobs and the logic of the market is such that their pay and conditions are forced
down through various means.
Not many other
businesses will operate on these terms, with perhaps the exception of our
forever loveable heroes in the financial sector, though they did used to have
high revenues and will probably be handed them again after leaning on the state
for a few years. Not much of the money these days comes from the fans directly
– television, advertising, sales in ‘emerging markets’ etc form an increasing
share of the big clubs earnings, yet instead of the owners benefiting from this
boom it seems that a select few of the workers have cashed in. Again, we can
see an analogy with the gods of finance, shareholders have lost out in the long
term whilst the senior bankers and executives continue to be very wealthy.
The reason I
bring this up is because it is all so unnecessary, so petty and so blatantly
unfair that within one business someone should be earning so much money it puts
the whole operation in financial jeopardy whilst others have to take extra jobs
to subsist. Sky keep pumping more and more money in, is it actually at a point
where a football club can’t shift a grand off a top p-layers weekly wage to
ensure 3 or 4 employees who contribute to the running of the club can afford
heating? Are the payers that greedy?
As with a
football club, it is with the world. There are a lot of money and resources
floating about, yet they seem to gravitate towards a small cadre of people,
regardless of desert or effort from everyone else. So, why am I even surprised?
Because football isn’t the financial sector, it isn’t food production, it isn’t
the world economy. It is an association of clubs which belong to the communities and groups which formed them. There is no
need for a profit incentive as the club exists for the sake of playing a game,
and it should have the basic democratic structure where those that contribute
to the club should have a say in its running, like a mutual or co-operative.
There should never be poverty wages in premier league clubs where their
earnings are so grand, and in smaller clubs people volunteer in order to be
part of the club. Low wages are a much wider issue than the scope of this blog,
my concern is more that if such blatant injustices have crept so unchallenged
into football clubs, what chance do we have changing these problems in wider
society.
For a football
team, the market creates a basement price for its low wage workers. They, like
all low wage employers put their arms in the air and submit to the gods.
Regarding their superstars, they operate against the interests of their fans in
paying outrageous wages in a market so distorted by the money from free market television
companies like Sky and associated advertising, whilst courting the big money
corporate sponsors and hospitality sales to further boost their income to cover
the costs. Ticket prices go up, the game is more sanitised and dare is say it…
boring!!... at the top level than it has ever been, yet those who clean the
boardroom are like the rest of us in that their wages don’t go up for 30 years.
It is a wonder how much extra effort can be made to accommodate the whims of £180,000
per week Yaya Toure, yet none of this extra finance can be used to reduce
ticket prices or pay the living wage to those who work in the ticket office,
even though the owner is a non-domicile multi-billionaire. Football has all of
society in a few hundred yards, though societies change and so can football.