HomeNewsOpinionRegulating The Premier League: UK meddles with a $10 billion export earner

Regulating The Premier League: UK meddles with a $10 billion export earner

An independent regulator, who won't be 'overtly interventionist', has powers to redistribute revenue between the Premier League and lower tiers. The influx of money from broadcasting rights and commercial sponsorship has led to better stadiums, attracted the world’s best players, and driven up ticket prices. Keeping both investors and fans happy, and the Premier League bandwagon rolling, will test the new regulator

March 20, 2024 / 15:46 IST
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English Premier League
Protests by German football fans helped killed a media-right deal. (Source: Bloomberg/Getty Images Europe)

Football teams with a commanding lead don’t usually change their formation in the middle of the game, let alone replace the manager. The English Premier League is an unmatched global success, attracting more viewers than any other domestic competition in the world and generating almost twice the revenue of Europe’s next biggest league. Yet its overseers are about to impose an epochal change in governance. The aims are laudable; the risks of disrupting a major cultural export that adds more than $10 billion to UK economic output aren’t negligible.

The government introduced legislation Tuesday to set up an independent regulator that will have powers to redistribute revenue between the Premier League and lower tiers of the English game. The bill, which follows a fan-led review published in 2021, promises supporters a stronger voice in the running of clubs. It also aims to bolster the financial sustainability of teams, block closed-shop competitions such as the aborted European Super League and impose more stringent suitability tests on owners and directors.

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Whether the sport’s existing governance structure is fit for purpose is a question of perspective. Clearly, it has been a financial success. The global dominance of English football wasn’t preordained. The Premier League is itself a breakaway competition, formed in the early 1990s by leading clubs keen to hog the rewards of expanded live-TV broadcasting. (The European Super League, derailed by mass outrage in 2021, was in effect more of the same: only this time reducing England’s participating elite to a mere six teams.) Greed, as Gordon Gekko would say, has been good for football — at least in terms of growing the market.