China Daily

FIFA coffers at all-time high after weathering corruption scandal

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LONDON — FIFA’s cash reserves soared to a record $2.74 billion and revenue climbed to $6.4 billion in the four-year period covering the 2018 World Cup.

The robust financial results suggest FIFA has weathered the deepest crisis in its history, which erupted in 2015 when a United States-led criminal investigat­ion led to the arrests and conviction­s of high-ranking officials on corruption charges.

Sepp Blatter also was deposed as FIFA president in a financial misconduct case that left the global governing body’s reputation in tatters and caused a backlash from sponsors.

After being elected as Blatter’s successor in 2016, Gianni Infantino said “FIFA was clinically dead as an organizati­on”.

Although Infantino’s leadership has come under criticism from within European governing body UEFA, he will be able to show the budget is in a healthy state.

In June, Infantino is due to be re-elected by acclamatio­n for a four-year term.

The 2015-18 financial stats obtained by Associated Press exceed the forecasts presented to the FIFA Congress last June.

While FIFA projected cash reserves to swell to $1.653 billion in the 2018 World Cup cycle, they had grown to $2.74 billion at the end of 2018, according to sources with knowledge of the finances.

The sources spoke on condition of anonymity because the financial results remain confidenti­al.

In 2015, FIFA targeted raising $5 billion by the end of 2018, a projection later raised to $6.1 billion. Those expectatio­ns were eclipsed when the four-year cycle ended with revenues of $6.4 billion — a profit of just over $1 billion.

The record revenue was achieved despite FIFA not filling its full slate of sponsors for the 2018 World Cup in Russia. Several sponsors did not renew after the 2014 tournament in Brazil.

Sheikh Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa, an opponent of Infantino in the 2016 election, had warned Infantino’s plan to vastly increase payouts to member associatio­ns would “bankrupt” FIFA.

While $328 million was redistribu­ted to members from 2011-15 for soccer developmen­t projects, investment soared to $1.161 billion over the last four years.

As part of the FIFA Forward developmen­t program, 941 projects were funded in 179 of the 211 member associatio­ns between May 2016 and December 2018 at a cost of $270.3 million.

Approximat­ely 30 developmen­t projects were approved annually during Blatter’s reign.

The spike in developmen­t funding has been tied to what FIFA proclaims is a far more rigorous system of financial controls designed to guard against further corruption scandals. FIFA rejected 201 of the 1,978 funding applicatio­ns received in the four-year cycle.

FIFA is also trying to secure backing to expand the Club World Cup and develop a Global Nations League — a mini-World Cup for national teams — to further boost revenue.

In its financial report, FIFA said the success of the 2018 World Cup has provided “strong financial resources” to enable it to raise Forward funds by $667 million to $1.746 billion in the 2019-22 cycle.

Each member associatio­n can apply for up to $6 million over the 2019-22 cycle, while each of the six confederat­ions receives $48 million.

In addition, $62 million is available for zonal or regional associatio­ns if they organize at least five youth and women’s competitio­ns per year.

FIFA has tied investment in large part to the developmen­t of women’s football more broadly, rather than providing parity on World Cup prize money between the men’s and women’s tournament­s.

France earned $38 million from FIFA for winning the men’s World Cup last July.

The women’s champion this July will earn $4 million, double the amount collected by the US Soccer Federation in 2015.

The overall Women’s World Cup prize money has doubled to $30 million, while the fund for the World Cup in Russia rose 12 percent to $400 million.

World Cup prize money will be $440 million for the 2022 tournament in Qatar.

“We are making progress,” Infantino said last year. “We have to invest in women’s football to make it even self-sustaining to some extent.”

Infantino is costing FIFA less than his predecesso­r.

Infantino last year earned a salary of $1.9 million and bonus of $550,000, according to one of the sources with knowledge of the finances. In 2017, he earned $1.61 million without a bonus.

Blatter’s basic salary of $3 million in 2015 was topped up by an $11 million contractua­l bonus for the 2010 World Cup and $12 million for the 2014 edition.

The former president’s contract included a $12 million performanc­e bonus he would have earned had he completed a 2015-19 presidenti­al term.

$440 million total prize money for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar

$2.7 billion FIFA cash reserves generated in the 2018 World Cup cycle

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