FIFA and FIFPRO, the World Players’ Union, have reached an agreement to establish the FIFA Fund for Football Players (FIFA FFP), which aims to provide financial support to players who have not been paid and have no chance of duly receiving the wages agreed with their clubs.
FIFA has set aside USD 16m for the fund up to 2022, with this allocation to be divided as follows: USD 3m in 2020, USD 4m in 2021 and USD 4m in 2022, plus a further USD 5m set aside for the retroactive protection of players’ salaries for the period between July 2015 and June 2020.
Several recent reports – including FIFPRO’s own 2016 Global Employment Report: Working Conditions in Professional Football – have attested to the proliferation of cases involving the non-payment of players’ salaries across the world.
In 2019, FIFA revised its Disciplinary Code, wherein it bolstered the framework for dealing with the non-payment of players’ wages, particularly in situations featuring so-called sporting successors of debtor clubs, i.e. new clubs formed with the prime aim of avoiding paying players their overdue salaries.
The agreement envisages the establishment of a monitoring committee composed of FIFA and FIFPRO representatives to process, assess and act on applications for grants from the FIFA FFP. While these grants will not cover the full amount of salaries owed to players, this fund will provide an important safety net.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino welcomed this new initiative, stating: “This agreement and our commitment to helping players in a difficult situation show how we interpret our role as world football’s governing body. We are also here to reach out to those in need, especially within the football community, and that starts with the players, who are the key figures in our game.”
Likewise, FIFPRO President Philippe Piat had the following to say about the fund: “More than 50 clubs in 20 countries have shut in the last five years, plunging hundreds of footballers into uncertainty and hardship. This fund will provide valuable support to those players and families most in need. Many of these clubs have shut to avoid paying outstanding wages, immediately re-forming as so-called new clubs. FIFPRO has long campaigned against this unscrupulous practice and thanks FIFA for combating it in its Disciplinary Code.”
This new mechanism will come into operation on 1 July 2020.
Latest Stories
-
IMANI Africa takes on EC, accuses it of lying and publishing half truths
23 mins -
Manasseh Azure calls for investigation and prosecution of those responsible for GRA/SML contract
33 mins -
Kwesi Atuahene: Ghana’s health capital depends on HealthTech – Africa Center for Digital Transformation
56 mins -
13 signs your wife is planning on leaving you and you have no idea
1 hour -
IMANI Africa: Ghana’s EC’s dangerous and pathological conduct
1 hour -
If I speak there will be fire – Salah on Klopp row
2 hours -
Grieving after divorce is normal, but this particular kind of grief isn’t
2 hours -
10 beautifully unexpected ways husbands proposed to their wives
2 hours -
Reality zone with Vicky Wireko: Painting Ghana purple: Be aware, May is month of mental health awareness
2 hours -
Prof Opoku-Agyemang’s integrity is admirable – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours -
Your reign has been a beacon of wisdom – Alan Kyerematen tells Asantehene
3 hours -
Akufo-Addo’s driver wins La Dadekotopon NPP primary
3 hours -
Education Minister must channel resources to rebrand basic public schools into tackling critical needs – Minority
3 hours -
CAFCC: “Dreams need to score early to unsettle Zamalek” – Former Zamalek striker Felix Aboagye
4 hours -
GHS launches mobile app to counter misinformation about vaccines
4 hours