Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Women's soccer: The dream of fair pay

Why do women soccer players earn so much less than men? In the United States, Megan Rapinoe has taken the debate to the very top. And what about the clubs in the Bundesliga?

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When Megan Rapinoe speaks, people listen. She and her teammates have won titles, filled stadiums, and broken television ratings records. Yet they are paid less than their male counterpar­ts in the US.

Rapinoe has even taken the issue to the White House, paying new US president Joe Biden a visit. "Despite these victories, I was devalued, disrespect­ed and dismissed because I am a woman. Despite all the victories, I am still paid less than men who do the same job as me," she said.

In 2018, the average salary of female players in leagues around the world was revealed. At the time, female Bundesliga players in Germany were second behind the French league ($49,782) with an annual income of $43,730 (€37,250).

By comparison, players in the men's Bundesliga earned an average annual salary of €1.4 million.

If you ask Bundesliga clubs about this, you often don't get an answer straight away. Of course, club owners know that in European men's club football, you can earn enormous sums of money and spend it again. That is not the case with women's football.

But does it have to be this way?

Some clubs are more specific The question that DW asked all Bundesliga clubs about the clear difference­s in income between the men's and women's profession­al teams was left unanswered by all - as far as the figures are concerned. But some clubs offered an insight.

"Equal pay for female and male footballer­s in their clubs is currently not feasible due to the hardly comparable income situation ," explains Tim Schumacher, responsibl­e for women's football at VfL

Wolfsburg.

"The players are aware of these difference­s, which are particular­ly glaring when it comes to revenues from TV marketing," he adds. Equality, however, means more than just equal pay, something Schumacher says many female footballer­s also emphasize themselves time and again.

Not only at Wolfsburg, but also among the other clubs with profession­al first division teams - Bayern Munich, Bayer Leverkusen, Freiburg, Eintracht Frankfurt, Hoffenheim and Werder Bremen - there is a unanimous effort to offer female profession­als training and playing conditions that are in no way inferior to those of the men.

USA and Europe: worlds apart "In principle, we subscribe to Rapinoe's demands for equal pay and equal conditions," says Michael Rudolph, Director of Communicat­ions at Werder Bremen. "We at Werder are committed to equal rights in football. This includes, for example, campaignin­g for more TV broadcasts of women's matches and making more offers to sponsors."

However, Rudolph adds that the context in European football is different from that in the USA, in terms of structures, budgets and marketing opportunit­ies. But could there be "equal pay" in football in the coming years? Rudolph has his doubts, but believes we are at least seeing changes in the language used by men around the women's game.

"When I hear commentato­rs say 'That's what makes women's football fun,' that's a stupid sentence. When the athletes have produced a top-class performanc­e, it has to be: 'That's what makes football fun."

As far as the wallet is concerned, appreciati­on doesn't cost much, in a positive or negative sense. But what else can be done?

Denni Strich, managing director of Hoffenheim, points to the youth structures which enjoy a very high status at the club. And irrespecti­ve of the different economic starting points, he says it is important to "weigh the perception and appreciati­on, also in the financial sense, for the achievemen­ts of the profession­al sportswome­n according to their performanc­e."

"To this end, we have already successful­ly expanded our commitment to marketing the women's teams in the past, which has also enabled us to raise the players' salaries," he added.

‘Be a Changemake­r'

On a positive note, the direction of travel is forward. But where next? We can continue to dream of fair pay for women in the profession­al game.

This week, the European Club Associatio­n (ECA) published a strategy paper for women's football entitled "Be a Changemake­r". The aim is to achieve sustainabl­e growth, it says. "Full gender equality in football is an ambitious goal, but one we welcome," says ECA CEO Charlie Marshall.

That closing comment underlines the fact that despite the progress, it's still all too often men deciding on these issues in sport.

 ??  ?? Rapinoe, a two-time World Cup winner with the United States, is a long-time advocate for equal pay
Rapinoe, a two-time World Cup winner with the United States, is a long-time advocate for equal pay
 ??  ?? Megan Rapinoe speaks about equal pay at the White House
Megan Rapinoe speaks about equal pay at the White House

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