TRANSFERmarketWEB.com
The FPF is nothing more than a mechanism through which the budgets of individual clubs are checked to verify the principle of the break even point, that is a balance between expenses and the revenues obtained from them. It was introduced by the UEFA executive committee in 2009 and its goal is to pay off the debts of the clubs, to induce them to financially support themselves. All this SHOULD be the same for all clubs, the same regulations to be respected, the obligations to be maintained: risk of exclusion from European competitions.
Even though there are clubs that have not been affected by this novelty in the least. If already for some years Inter and Milan, for example, have been forced to make a transfer market in line with UEFA standards, Manchester City and PSG every season, spend millions and millions of euros to satisfy their desire to buy as many players as possible.
The most significant example is certainly Neymar, who was bought by PSG for 222 million euros in the summer 2017 and who has recently renewed it for 33 m per season. This was the "watershed" of the football market: soon after each transfer would be enlarged. Coutinho and Dembelè at Barcelona, ??Mbappè (bought at the same time as Neymar), just to name a few. To these are added the recent official signign of Jack Grealish by Man City for € 100M, or the offer rejected by Tottenham for Harry Kane (€ 185M from City, according to The Sun), or Romelu Lukaku, who set to sign soon for Chelsea for about 130M€.
Obviously the powers of television rights in the UK are higher than in Italy or Spain, the Premier League is the best league in the world, but shouldn't all these "crazy spending" be stopped under UEFA regulations?
Looking abroad, Barcelona are going through a period of economic difficulty, evidently due to too many expenses.
And now that Lionel Messi is free to join another club, will the craziness continue?
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Source: transfermarketweb.com