Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ Market

Despite the globalisation of European soccer, each professional league exhibits specificities. French Ligue 1 sometimes contends with the trading-off of financial performance against sporting performance of its teams in European soccer competitions, and its inner auditing body, the Direction Nationa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wladimir Andreff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-11-01
Series:International Journal of Financial Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/6/4/91
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spelling doaj-d31d6c5b7c2f4fa9a71a3533ea0fb5722020-11-24T20:57:00ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Financial Studies2227-70722018-11-01649110.3390/ijfs6040091ijfs6040091Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ MarketWladimir Andreff0Scientific Council at the Observatory of the Sports Economy, French Ministry for Sports, 75013 Paris, FranceDespite the globalisation of European soccer, each professional league exhibits specificities. French Ligue 1 sometimes contends with the trading-off of financial performance against sporting performance of its teams in European soccer competitions, and its inner auditing body, the Direction Nationale du Contrôle de Gestion (DNCG), is in charge of controlling clubs’ financial accounts. Moreover, Ligue 1 operates with one of the best competitive balances in the Big Five, which is detrimental to its clubs’ success at the European level. However, the league and a number of clubs have not been able to curb payroll inflation and have not avoided being recurrently run in a deficit and accumulating debts, in particular payment arrears and player transfer overdue. Lax management occurs, since very few clubs have been sanctioned by a payment failure, even fewer by liquidation, and there has been no bankruptcy. The concept of a soft budget constraint theoretically encapsulates such empirical evidence. The novelty of the paper is to establish a link between the soft budget constraint and the players’ labour market where it crucially triggers market disequilibria: an excess of demand for superstars’ talents and an excess of supply for journeymen players are modelled. Data paucity about player individual wages hinders econometric testing of the aforementioned link and the model. However, a look at transfer fees that concentrates on a few of the top European soccer clubs provides a first insight into the arms race for talent that fuels an excess of demand for superstars and dips a number of clubs’ finance into the red.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/6/4/91sports financesoft budget constraintpayment failuredisequilibrium modellingsegmented labour marketFrench soccer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wladimir Andreff
spellingShingle Wladimir Andreff
Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ Market
International Journal of Financial Studies
sports finance
soft budget constraint
payment failure
disequilibrium modelling
segmented labour market
French soccer
author_facet Wladimir Andreff
author_sort Wladimir Andreff
title Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ Market
title_short Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ Market
title_full Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ Market
title_fullStr Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ Market
title_full_unstemmed Financial and Sporting Performance in French Football Ligue 1: Influence on the Players’ Market
title_sort financial and sporting performance in french football ligue 1: influence on the players’ market
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Financial Studies
issn 2227-7072
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Despite the globalisation of European soccer, each professional league exhibits specificities. French Ligue 1 sometimes contends with the trading-off of financial performance against sporting performance of its teams in European soccer competitions, and its inner auditing body, the Direction Nationale du Contrôle de Gestion (DNCG), is in charge of controlling clubs’ financial accounts. Moreover, Ligue 1 operates with one of the best competitive balances in the Big Five, which is detrimental to its clubs’ success at the European level. However, the league and a number of clubs have not been able to curb payroll inflation and have not avoided being recurrently run in a deficit and accumulating debts, in particular payment arrears and player transfer overdue. Lax management occurs, since very few clubs have been sanctioned by a payment failure, even fewer by liquidation, and there has been no bankruptcy. The concept of a soft budget constraint theoretically encapsulates such empirical evidence. The novelty of the paper is to establish a link between the soft budget constraint and the players’ labour market where it crucially triggers market disequilibria: an excess of demand for superstars’ talents and an excess of supply for journeymen players are modelled. Data paucity about player individual wages hinders econometric testing of the aforementioned link and the model. However, a look at transfer fees that concentrates on a few of the top European soccer clubs provides a first insight into the arms race for talent that fuels an excess of demand for superstars and dips a number of clubs’ finance into the red.
topic sports finance
soft budget constraint
payment failure
disequilibrium modelling
segmented labour market
French soccer
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/6/4/91
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