The Star Malaysia

China to levy 100% tax on overseas football transfers

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BEIJING: China will effectivel­y double the cost for its clubs to buy foreign football players in a move aimed at slowing the influx of pricey overseas stars and encouragin­g homegrown talent.

Chinese Football Associatio­n (CFA) announced that any club that pays more than US$6.63mil (RM28mil) for a player transfer must pay the same amount to a CFA youth developmen­t fund.

The tax will be in place until the end of the Chinese League’s summer transfer window on July 14.

Transfers for Chinese players valued at over US$3mil (RM13mil) will also be taxed at 100%.

Flush with cash from corporate backers, Chinese Super League clubs have shaken up internatio­nal football in recent years by offering astronomic­al transfer fees and wages for players from European teams.

The new policy could potentiall­y derail mooted deals from Chinese clubs to acquire English Premier League stars such as Wayne Rooney and Diego Costa.

Cristiano Ronaldo’s agent said in December that the Portuguese forward turned down an overture from a Chinese club for a transfer worth hundreds of millions of euros.

Over the past year, transfers like Shanghai SIPG’s deals for the Brazilian duo Oscar and Hulk

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– who cost 60mil (RM287mil) each – have brought a wave of attention to the Chinese League but sports officials say the flashy purchases have done little to benefit Chinese football over the long term.

The transfer tax kitty would be spent on youth training, constructi­on of public sporting facilities and “scientific progress in football developmen­t”, according to an online statement posted by the CFA, which is non-government­al in name but effectivel­y directed by China’s state sports authority.

In recent weeks the CFA have also proposed a new rule that would require teams to play an Under-23 Chinese player for every foreign player on the field.

After decades of dismal national team results, President Xi Jinping has pinpointed improving Chinese football as a top priority to boost national self-confidence and prestige.

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