The Australian women’s Football team, the Matildas, have released a video statement calling for equity in the prize pool at Fifa events for the men and women’s game. Women players get a quarter as much prize money as men.
The video was released by the Matildas’ union, Professional Footballers Australia, which has negotiated a collective agreement with the players. The current collective agreement ensures that the Matildas and their male equivalent – the Socceroos – get the same minimum percentage of shared prize money.
Pay equity in sport is a difficult issue; many professional women athletes across different sports also have day jobs. In Aotearoa, women earn on average 15% less than men as professional sports players.
Prize money in global tournaments like Fifa is contentious, determined in part by the amount of money awarded through TV rights. The relative price of women’s football rights compared to men’s has contributed to the disparity.
Football Ferns legend Barbara Cox, who has captained the team and written a PhD about women’s football in New Zealand, told The Spinoff in an email that she supported the Matildas’ call for equal distribution of prize money, but the question of televisions rights was a thorny issue. “Why is there such a reluctance from television companies to support women’s football and indeed women’s sport in general?” she asked, suggesting that male players on high salaries from well-funded teams don’t need bonuses from prize money, and that that cash could be shared with the women’s sport instead.
New Zealand has a professional football association; in 2018, they contributed to a deal for work equity for the All Whites and Football Ferns. There have been pushes for equality in other sports, too, including club football, cricket and rugby.