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Football

Barca, Real Swim In €3.5bn Debt

BREAKING LOOSE…Barcelona’s Argentinian forward, Lionel Messi (c) breaks away after dribbling Getafe defender, Diego Castro (l) and Getafe’s defender, Ivan Marcano Sierra during their Spanish league match at the Camp Nou Stadium, Barcelona on Tuesday, 12 April, 2012. AFP PHOTO.

Reigning Spanish La Liga and UEFA Champions League champions, Barcelona, nine-time UEFA Champions League winners Real Madrid and a host of other clubs in Spain are currently swimming in 3.5bn euro debt, a financial survey carried out in Spain has uncovered.

BREAKING LOOSE…Barcelona’s Argentinian forward, Lionel Messi (c) breaks away after dribbling Getafe defender, Diego Castro (l) and Getafe’s defender, Ivan Marcano Sierra during their Spanish league match at the Camp Nou Stadium, Barcelona on Tuesday, 12 April, 2012. AFP PHOTO.

As Real and Barca are through to the elite Champions League semi-finals, and three Spanish clubs are into the Europa League last four, a survey of the accounts of the country’s top clubs reveals a tale of crippling debts and tax arrears.

Real Madrid lead Barcelona by four points at the top of La Liga, but the two global superstars also rival each other in the depth of their debts; Real have accumulated 589 million euros ($772 million) to Barcelona’s 578 million euros.

The archrivals’ debts eclipse their revenues, which for 2010-2011 amounted to 479 million euros for Real Madrid and 450 million euros for Barcelona.

Europa League semi-finals Valencia and Atletico Madrid are also both awash with red ink, to the tune of 382 and 514 million euros respectively.

But the latest figure to hit the headlines in Spain is the 752 million euros that Spain’s elite clubs owe to the tax man at a time when more than five million are unemployed and the government is asking citizens for more sacrifices.

The sports ministry announced a plan to ensure that football pays for its own debts. But for the moment it is unclear how they will do so.

Six of the 20 Liga clubs; Rayo Vallecano, Racing Santander, Real Betis, Zaragoza, Granada and Mallorca, are currently in bankruptcy proceedings, as are another six second-division teams.

“That figure alone shows that Spanish football is not well managed financially,” said Barcelona University Professor of Economics Jose Maria Gay de Liebana, who specialises in football.

The analyst compared Spanish football’s debts, which he estimated at 3.5 billion euros in total, to the frenzy of the country’s property market bubble, which imploded in 2008.

“Football is a mirror of the general economy in Spain. For years we have been spending beyond our means, getting deeper and deeper into debt,” he explained.

“For football it’s the same: for years clubs have made colossal and inefficient investments. And as they did not have their own funds to finance these expenses, they went massively into debt.”

A good example of the race to invest, no matter the cost, is Valencia’s “New Mestalla” stadium.

In 2007, in the midst of the property boom, Valencia decided to buy itself a new 70,000-seat stadium — even though it has only 39,000 members.

The 300-million-euro construction cost was supposed to be financed by the sale of the land from its old stadium for some 400 million euros.

Two years later, engulfed by the property market crisis, construction stopped when the club realized it could not find buyers for the old stadium property.

One other factor may have contributed to the accumulation of debts — a lack of financial control by Spanish institutions.

Some blame a lax attitude by the Spanish football league, others the league’s inability to impose tough sporting sanctions.

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