How Sports Betting in the US and European Football Can Save Each Other — But Is It Worth It?

US Sports Betting and European Football - How can they save each other?

Introduction Two industries stand at a crossroads. In the United States, sports betting has exploded into a multibillion‑dollar market since legalization spread state by state. In Europe, football clubs outside the elite are struggling to balance books, sustain grassroots programs, and compete in an increasingly commercialized environment. The temptation is clear: betting operators crave global … Read more

No World Cup, no windfall: The financial fallout across North and Central America and the Caribbean

No World Cup, no windfall: The financial fallout across North and Central America and the Caribbean By FootballCapitalist Editorial Desk

The World Cup is a once-in-a-cycle economic accelerant. FIFA’s joint analysis with the WTO projects the 2025 Club World Cup and the 2026 World Cup will add a combined $62 billion to global GDP, with 290,000 jobs created in the U.S. alone—numbers that underline how costly it is to be on the outside looking in. For Costa Rica, Honduras, and Trinidad & Tobago, missing the tournament is not just a sporting setback; it’s a shock to advertising markets, tourism receipts, sponsorship, and the game’s informal economy. In a region where football is a commercial engine and a cultural export, the hit is measurable—and painful.