Economia
Custos e lucros da COPA
FIFA made an insane amount of money off of Brazil's $15 billion World Cup
FIFA made $2.4 billion in TV rights fees, $1.6 billion in sponsorships, and $527 million in ticket sales.
Much of FIFA's World Cup spending went to participating teams and confederations ($476 million) and TV production costs ($370 million). FIFA contributed $453 million to the local organizing committee between 2011 and 2014, and gave Brazil a $100 million "legacy" payment after the tournament.
However, FIFA didn't contribute to the real costs of staging the tournament — stadiums and transportation infrastructure.
The tournament cost an estimated $15 billion, a significant portion of which was public money. Brazil spent $3.6 billion building and renovating 12 stadiums for the tournament. Less than a year later, some of those are turning into white elephants. The $300 million Arena Amazonia in Manaus, for example, held just 11 events in the five months after the tournament.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/fifa-brazil-world-cup-revenue-2015-3#ixzz3UwHkrXSY
loading...
-
O Legado Da Copa
Brazil's World Cup Legacy Includes $550M Stadium-Turned-Parking Lot
It has been almost a year since the World Cup in Brazil. The party is long over, but the country is still dealing with the hangover — in the form of "white elephant" stadiums...
-
Ressaca Pós Copa
Get Ready for a Massive World Cup Hangover, Brazil
Andrew Zimbalist
June 27, 2014
Brazil is throwing a party that, in the end, will cost it somewhere between $15 billion and $20 billion, according to a report in Sports Business Journal....
-
Custos Da Copa
Five sad and shocking facts about World Cup corruption in Brazil
BY MARISSA PAYNE
May 12 at 10:15 am
More
Comments
Brasilia’s World Cup stadium is the second-most expensive in the world. (Eraldo Peres/AP)
This...
-
A Copa - Um Projeto Errado
The World Cup matters, but Brazil is the last place in the world that should host it.
Brazilians can blame it on FIFA all they want, but it’s really Brazil’s own fault.
Marcos Carvalho in ESPN FC World Cup Stories
Governments bid for hosting the...
-
Csn
Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Cia. Siderurgica Nacional, Brazil's third-biggest steelmaker, may post its first loss in six years after bets on its own stock soured last quarter.
CSN, as the steelmaker is known, may say this week it had a third-quarter...
Economia