Daily Afrika News
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • South Africa
    • World
    • Africa
    • Entertainment
    • Green
    • Health
  • Elections 2019
  • Voices
    • Columnists
    • Books
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
    • Economy
    • Opinion
    • Small Business
    • FinWeek
  • Sport
    • News
    • Rugby
    • Cricket
    • Soccer
    • Golf
    • Tennis
    • Formula1
    • Other Sport
    • Super Sport
  • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Women
    • Motoring
    • Food
    • Entertainment
    • Parent
    • TrueLove
    • Travel
  • Video
    • All Video
    • South Africa
    • Entertainment
  • Focus
    • Underworld Unmasked
    • Mandela100
    • Cyril100
    • Zimbabwe
    • Aids Focus
    • Good News
    • Competitions
  • Jobs
  • Property
No Result
View All Result
Dailyafrika.com
  • Home
  • News
    • South Africa
    • World
    • Africa
    • Entertainment
    • Green
    • Health
  • Elections 2019
  • Voices
    • Columnists
    • Books
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
    • Economy
    • Opinion
    • Small Business
    • FinWeek
  • Sport
    • News
    • Rugby
    • Cricket
    • Soccer
    • Golf
    • Tennis
    • Formula1
    • Other Sport
    • Super Sport
  • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Women
    • Motoring
    • Food
    • Entertainment
    • Parent
    • TrueLove
    • Travel
  • Video
    • All Video
    • South Africa
    • Entertainment
  • Focus
    • Underworld Unmasked
    • Mandela100
    • Cyril100
    • Zimbabwe
    • Aids Focus
    • Good News
    • Competitions
  • Jobs
  • Property
No Result
View All Result
Dailyafrika.com
No Result
View All Result
 
Home Voices Columnists

How African footballers who play in Europe spend their money

On average, some African players in the elite leagues can earn between €15,000 and €100,000 or more as salaries.

Didier Drogba
by Daily Afrika Opinion, contributors August 29, 2019
Related Articles
OPINION: Why Highlands Park can lift the MTN8 trophy against SuperSpor
Mugabe is dead, but old men still run southern Africa
Robert Mugabe: as divisive in death as he was in life
Ethiopia government can no-longer protect its citizens

African footballers – like other players from developing countries – invariably earn sums of money far greater than their contemporaries back home, Ernest Yeboah Acheampong writes.

On average, some African players in the elite leagues can earn between €15,000 and €100,000 or more as salaries. Those in leagues one, two and three can also earn around €10,000–50,000, €5000–20,000 and €2000–10,000. A few high-profile players earn more than €150,000 per month in prestigious European clubs.

As a result, there’s a great deal of pressure on players to show that they are spending some of what they earn back home. Some authors have asserted that these professional footballers spend their earnings on conspicuous consumption, such as high-end imported goods.

To get to grips with this perception I examined the effects of African migrant players’ “giving back” behaviour. I did this by analysing the various socioeconomic projects that they invest in in the communities they come from.

As part of my study, I interviewed former and current professional footballers in Europe to understand the rationale behind how they used their earnings and what investments they made in society.

I found that some players invested in valuable projects like hospitals, schools, education, oil and gas businesses as well as football academies. This reflected what they termed as “giving back to society”.

Ghana player Asamoah Gyan celebrates a goal against Portugal during a 2014 FIFA World Cup match in Brazil. EPA/Jose Sena Goulao
Ghana player Asamoah Gyan celebrates a goal against Portugal during a 2014 FIFA World Cup match in Brazil. EPA/Jose Sena Goulao

My findings suggest that players who make investment contributions are demonstrating their social and cultural ties with families, relatives, friends, teammates and the communities where they might have started their football careers.

The research

I developed a database of 1084 African professional players who are playing or had played in 30 different European leagues and other parts of the world.

Most were from West Africa (58.3%), followed by North Africa (17.9%), Central Africa (17.34%), Southern Africa (4.7%) and East Africa (1.8%).

The overseas leagues covered 44 African players for the 2012/2013 season.

Five countries each from Southern and East Africa did not have professional players. This means that at the time of the research, they did not have any players plying their trade outside of their territories. These countries were Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Swaziland, Seychelles, Sudan, Eritrea, Tanzania, Djibouti and South Sudan.

The interviews I conducted included speaking to former and current African professional players who have played in Europe and other parts of the world. Among them were Abedi Pele Ayew (Ghana), Emmanuel Eboue (Ivory Coast), Marcel Desailly (Ghana), Mike Alozie (Nigeria) Bouna Coundoul (Senegal), Samuel Eto’o (Cameroon), Reuben Ayarna (Ghana), Victor Wanyama (Kenya), Stephen Appiah and Asamoah Gyan (Ghana), and Chivuta Noah (Zambia). I interviewed 30 former and current African professional players that covered a period over five years – 2013 to 2018.

The questions I asked were aimed at understanding how players used their resources from football, including money, and the rationale behind their decisions.

Where players came from

Most of the players I spoke to set out to pursue opportunities abroad because they had limited opportunities at home to support their professional aspirations and expectations. Nearly all came from financially deprived areas. This meant that they had to mobilise resources to support their careers at a formative stage.

This involved strategising to overcome the challenges with the contributions from significant others in the communities to become successful professionally abroad.

The study showed that players were able to mobilise resources from their families, friends, relatives, teammates and club officials. They had also been able to mobilise other kinds of support such as documentation, money, sport kits and gear. In addition, they had built social relations and networks via societal support and contributions to help them achieve their professional status abroad.

Eventually, when players became professional abroad and were being rewarded financially, some remitted in various ways to the country they came from. All of them remitted money which, according to the players, can be termed as African culture.

Time to payback

Players’ investment behaviour was classified according to the type of projects they got involved in within the communities. This led to an appreciation of how and why they choose to do certain projects based on the support and resources they might have received from their communities.

Players took very different investment initiatives. Some were purely economic; others had a more social dimension. Contributions from the players could be categorised into private investments, social enterprise investments and economic investments.

Contributions and assistance that constituted a form of “giving back” did not necessarily connote gifts and counter-gifts. Instead, they served as a potential complement to support the efforts of local and regional growth.

When deciding how to give back, the players considered those who had significantly contributed to their professional football careers. These included their families and extended families. Other factors that played a role were inter-generational obligations and non-familial actors.

These investments into valuable social and economic initiatives in communities fulfilled two important functions. First, they enhanced local and regional developmental activities. Second, they helped safeguard the athletes’ post-playing career.

Mr Acheampong is a Lecturer, Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Sport (HPERS), at the University of Education

African playersDesailyEuropePolice
Previous Post

UK petition against suspending parliament passes 1 million signatures

Next Post

Innovation in IoT: Helping freshwater fish farms in Kenya

Daily Afrika Opinion, contributors

Daily Afrika Opinion, contributors

Related Posts

The ancient Romans were Africans- An undisclosed chapter in history

The Etruscan civilization founded Rome
Did you miss
by Suvajit Banerjee
14 October, 2019

The fact that the first human ancestors emerged for the plains of Africa is well established. But according to some...

OPINION: Why Highlands Park can lift the MTN8 trophy against SuperSpor

OPINION: Why Highlands Park can lift the MTN8 trophy against SuperSport United
by Phumzile Ngcatshe
05 October, 2019

SOWETO – With this year’s eagerly anticipated MTN8 final set to be decided and new champions waiting to be crowned...

The darkness of poverty in Equatorial Guinea behind the flashy superca

Supercars seized from Equiatorial Guinea's Vice President
Africa
by Suvajit Banerjee
01 October, 2019

A recent auction of the 25 supercars seized from the son of Equatorial Guinea's President, has fetched an astounding sum...

Mugabe is dead, but old men still run southern Africa

Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa at the funeral of his predecessor, Robert Mugabe. EPA-EFE/Aaron Ufumeli
Columnists
by Daily Afrika Opinion, contributors
19 September, 2019

The death of Robert Gabriel Mugabe (95) saw another of the first-generation leaders of newly independent southern African states leave...

‘Our future is not guaranteed’ – 15 year old Ugandan

Leah Namugerwa
Africa
by Hinamundi Collins
19 September, 2019

When Ugandan Leah Namugerwa turned 15 last month, she decided to plant 200 trees rather than have a birthday party,...

Robert Mugabe: as divisive in death as he was in life

Zimbabwe’s Mugabe still in Singapore hospital since April – Mnangagwa
Columnists
by Daily Afrika Opinion, contributors
16 September, 2019

Robert Mugabe, the former president of Zimbabwe, has died. Mugabe was 95, and had been struggling with ill health for some...

Next Post
Kenya fish farms - Daily Africa

Innovation in IoT: Helping freshwater fish farms in Kenya

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Quick news

UMEH Group Limited Completes Merger with DafriGroup PLC ...

UMEH Group Limited Completes Merger with DafriGroup PLC 

DafriBank Saves The Day on Twitter...

DafriBank Saves The Day on Twitter

The Word’s First Coronavirus Vaccine Is Here...

The Word’s First Coronavirus Vaccine Is Here

DafriGroup Plc Announced Its Digital Banking Ambition; DafriBank, A su...

DafriGroup Plc Announced Its Digital Banking Ambition; DafriBank, A sustainable platform for all digital problems.

Most Popular

UMEH Group Limited Completes Merger with DafriGroup PLC ...

UMEH Group Limited Completes Merger with DafriGroup PLC 

DafriBank Saves The Day on Twitter...

DafriBank Saves The Day on Twitter

The Word’s First Coronavirus Vaccine Is Here...

The Word’s First Coronavirus Vaccine Is Here

DafriGroup Plc Announced Its Digital Banking Ambition; DafriBank, A su...

DafriGroup Plc Announced Its Digital Banking Ambition; DafriBank, A sustainable platform for all digital problems.
https://www.valr.com/invite/VAG38ZL3
  • About
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • About Us
  • Useful Links
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
    • Economy
    • Opinion
    • Small Business
    • Fin Week
  • Sister Brands
    • FX Magazine
    • MLM Magazine
    • Crypto Magazine
    • PlusSize Africa
    • Women With Class
    • DJ Mag Africa
  • Affluent Series
    • Affluent
    • Affluent Africa
    • Affluent TV
    • Affluent Radio
    • Affluent Sport

Published by UMEH Media All right reserved.

News, analysis, opinions, sports, question and discussion – as a people and as a continent – with the rest of the world, especially the Western world, in ways cultural, economic, political, social, psychological or historical. Daily Afrika is managed by an African crew, with a network of mostly African writers across the continent and in the diaspora. Developed By: DeDevelopers
  • Home
  • News
    • South Africa
    • World
    • Africa
    • Entertainment
    • Green
    • Health
  • Elections 2019
  • Voices
    • Columnists
    • Books
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
    • Economy
    • Opinion
    • Small Business
    • FinWeek
  • Sport
    • News
    • Rugby
    • Cricket
    • Soccer
    • Golf
    • Tennis
    • Formula1
    • Other Sport
    • Super Sport
  • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Women
    • Motoring
    • Food
    • Entertainment
    • Parent
    • TrueLove
    • Travel
  • Video
    • All Video
    • South Africa
    • Entertainment
  • Focus
    • Underworld Unmasked
    • Mandela100
    • Cyril100
    • Zimbabwe
    • Aids Focus
    • Good News
    • Competitions
  • Jobs
  • Property