Handbook on the economics of professional football
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Author
Publication
2014 - Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, England
Language
English
Word Count
115,000 words, Guess
Page Count
460 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-101781003165
- ISBN-139781781003169
- Library of Congress Control Number2014943895
- OCLC Control Number897015956
- Better World Books9781781003169
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL30389380M
Classifications
- DDC338.4/3796334
- LCCGV943.3 .H37 2014
- LCCGV943.3
Description
In this comprehensive Handbook, John Goddard and Peter Sloane present a collection of analytical contributions by internationally regarded scholars in the field, which extensively examine the many economic challenges facing the world's most popular team sport. The Handbook is naturally divided into four parts: the product market, the labour market, country studies of individual leagues and policy issues. The authors explore why so many football clubs face financial difficulties despite the fact that attendances have risen in many countries, and television and commercial income has increased dramatically. They explain that the labour market is central to understanding these issues, due to trends such as increased bargaining power for the leading players, the acceleration of migration, and the internationalisation of the market for footballing talent at the top level. There is, however, diversity across countries as shown in the six cases of England, France, Italy, The Netherlands, the USA and Japan. Finally, the authors consider the policy issues, including the betting market, refereeing and corruption. This Handbook will appeal to sports economists, as well as those working in football governing bodies and individual clubs, sports journalists, and students of business.
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