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The Impact of Corporate Governance on Football Clubs' Firm Performance - YouTube
Channel: Tifo Football
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A study has looked at the impact of how corporate
governance impacts a football clubs firm performance.
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The study was undertaken due to the fact that since 2000 there has been 44 football clubs enter into administration.
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Football clubs are the hubs of communities
and their wider context
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has not gone unnoticed, when Ian Holloway
was at Blackpool he stated that:
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If people don't understand, we're right on
the end of the M55 and you have to go through
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everywhere else to get to us.
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The only reason you're going to come there
is to have a holiday and I
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want everyone to come there from the Premier
League and have a holiday, for all the businesses
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up and down the front and for everybody in the town.
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Football clubs can bring vitality to a local
area however, when a football club goes into
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administration, local businesses are impacted
especially if a local business supplies a
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service to the football club.
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An example of this is if a football club cannot
pay for the newspapers it receives each
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day from a local business.
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When the club goes into administration the
biggest creditors get paid first
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and the smallest creditors get paid last.
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Even though the non payment of a bill could
have a significant impact on the local business.
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The study looked at whether the level of corporate
governance within a club affected whether
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the club performed financially well or bad.
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The belief is that good corporate governance would mean
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better financial performance in a club and
therefore, there would be less likelihood
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for a company to
go into administration.
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The top, middle and bottom teams from the
English and Scottish leagues at the time of
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the study were picked for analysis.
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Questions were prepared to which the answers
could be marked on a
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binary scale of good or bad corporate governance.
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A good example of corporate governance would
be awarded a 1 a bad of example of corporate
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governance would be awarded 0.
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The following questions were obtained from three years worth of financial accounts of the football clubs
and were
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the questions to be used to determine good corporate governance:
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Is the football club a public limited company
Full set of accounts delivered
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25% of the board women
Top 10 audit firm auditing their accounts
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Top 50 audit firm auditing their accounts
Director is not the company secretary
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Dividends paid more than 2 to shareholders
over four years
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Majority shareholder is not a director
The company has not been in administration
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in the last four years
From asking these questions it became apparent
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that the public limited companies had prominent
corporate governance with Manchester United
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scoring 6 out of nine and Celtic and Berwick
Rangers scoring five out of nine.
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All three clubs are public limited companies
and therefore, have to comply
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with more stringent rules due to the markets
that they operate in.
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An interesting result from the study was that
Luton town had the worst corporate governance,
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along with Ross County and Stenhousemuir, scoring zero out of nine.
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This is significant as Luton Town went
into administration in 2007-08 and this would
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highlight that poor corporate governance could
potentially lead to administration.
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Profit is essential to any business and football
clubs should not be an exception.
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Profit will decrease
as it goes down the leagues due to lower attendances
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and less opportunity for tv rights.
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However, it is possible to see that within the leagues
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the clubs which have better corporate governance generally usually do better with profit.
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For example, Ross County.
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Who had a very poor governance score, have
had huge fluctuations in their profit year on year.
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Where as a Public Listed Company like Berwick
Rangers have maintained the same level of
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profit and therefore have stability within
the club.
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Manchester United are not listed on the below
chart due to the huge sums of money which
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was made by the club during the time.
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In an ideal world football clubs would have
corporate governance at the standard of Public
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Limited Companies.
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This would mean there would be more information
to publish into the football clubs
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accounts and would highlight if there are
was any danger of the football club going
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into administration.
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