My Lords, I support Amendment 263 in the name of my noble friend Lord Markham, which seeks to exclude parachute payments—the financial lifeline provided to relegated clubs—from the definition of “relevant revenue” under the backstop. This amendment is essential to addressing the profound risk created by the current drafting of the Bill.
Parachute payments are not just a feature of football finance, they are a key part of the scaffolding that delivers the competitiveness, the investability and the financial sustainability of the English football ecosystem. Without them, relegation would become a financial free-for-all—a cliff edge that would devastate many clubs and their communities. Parachute payments are designed to manage the significant financial shock of relegation, where clubs can lose enormous amounts of revenue almost overnight, yet their overheads stay the same.
I speak from some personal experience here. At West Ham United, we have known the daunting realities of relegation. Without parachute payments, the response in 2011 would have been wholesale disinvestment, a disorderly fire sale of players, job cuts, and a complete halt to critical investments in infrastructure. That is exactly how clubs start to spiral. Parachute payments do not come close to eliminating the pain of relegation but they provide some breathing space to make difficult but measured adjustments.
Yet this Bill places the very existence of parachute payments on the table, making them a part of the binary backstop process that pits two competing visions of football finance against one another. This is an intolerable risk. The EFL has been explicit that its proposal in this process would be for massive reductions in parachute payments, based on the argument that the financial gap between the Premier League and the Championship should be closed. But this argument fundamentally misunderstands the problem. The central issue here is not the gap itself, which reflects the commercial realities of two very different leagues, but whether clubs can transition effectively between those levels, between those two leagues.
Here the evidence is clear. Parachute payments work. If they did not exist, you would simply have to invent them. Crucially, parachute payments do not lock up promotion opportunities. Look no further than the examples of Luton Town and Ipswich Town from each of the last two years. Well-run, innovative clubs have every chance of success in the Championship, which is a highly competitive and appealing league.
Parachutes are not a significant distortion but a significant stabiliser, providing clubs with the tools to manage transition responsibly and sustainably. The EFL’s proposal is essentially to level down the Premier League to meet the Championship; to stretch out the bottom half of the Premier League. But that would destroy the top-to-bottom competitiveness that makes the Premier League the most watched and admired league in the world. Enabling such a proposal, as this Bill now does, expressly privileges the Championship over the Premier League. That is an astonishing position to take. It risks reducing the quality of the game at the top of the pyramid and undermining the ability of clubs to compete both domestically and internationally.
Let us also consider the impact on investment. Investors are rational. They are drawn to football because of its structures, parachute payments central among them, that provide clear pathways for responsible investment and sustainable growth. Without parachute payments, the Championship clubs become less investable. Why would anyone seriously invest in a club that cannot make the financial journey to the Premier League without risking complete collapse on relegation? The logic of the previous Bill was that, if there are challenges with parachute payments—challenges that the Government’s state of the game review may or may not identify—these can be addressed through increased solidarity payments. The exclusion of parachute payments in the previous Bill meant that the very existence of parachute payments was not placed at risk. It recognised the critical value of parachute payments to protect their role in managing these vital transitions. But now parachute payments are suddenly on the table. It is a hugely significant change of policy.
I know that the Minister would prefer that I should refrain from pointing this out, but the process by which this expanded backstop mechanism has been introduced has been alarmingly inadequate. As we know, the Secretary of State held just one 30-minute meeting with seven hand-picked Premier League clubs between July and October. The backstop was one of the many things that were discussed at the meeting, but at no time during the meeting were we given any warning that this decision was even being considered, let alone added to the Bill. Those seven clubs wrote to the Secretary of State following the meeting, which was five or six months ago, and we still have not had a reply. We also know that UEFA explicitly advised Ministers to reconsider the previous mechanism before parachute payments were even included. But, instead of narrowing the scope, the Government have significantly broadened it. I ask again: why? Parachute payments do not create financial irresponsibility. They are its enemy. They do not distort competitiveness; they enable it.
If you are Championship club newly promoted into the Premier League, you need to know that you can invest in your team to give you any chance to be competitive and to stay there. Clubs invest when they are promoted only because they know that they can rely on the parachute payment to cover some of the investments they have made in order to be competitive in the Premier league. Those investments are almost always in transfer fees and players’ wages. Clubs need that parachute to cover those things if they are relegated. If you do not have a parachute payment to soften the blow, you know that you cannot make the necessary investment in your team and in transfer fees when you get into the Premier League to try to stay there. You know your team will not be competitive enough, because you know that, if you are relegated without a parachute payment, you will face the real risk of administration.
Parachute payments help soften the blow. Without them, you cannot cut your overheads in any way, because there is no cause to terminate players’ contracts—that is part of the PFA agreement. So this means that, if you get promoted into the Premier League knowing you cannot contribute to the competitiveness of the Premier League—the idea that on any day any club can beat any other—you are going to affect the competitiveness and the global appeal of the Premier League, as my noble friend Lord Markham said, but, most of all, you are going to damage your own club.
Parachute payments do not reward failure. They allow clubs to recover, rebuild and stay financially sustainable. Frankly, I think that is the whole purpose of Bill. So I urge the Government to reconsider and to protect the stability of the football ecosystem, protect the ability of clubs to manage the transition between leagues responsibly, and protect the investment in both the Premier League and the Championship, which make English football the global success story that it is today.