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Fan Bingbing tax troubles influence new Chinese Super League rules to crack down on club spending

  • Clubs must dramatically reduce spending and losses or face transfer bans
  • Tax evading yin-yang contracts banned and salary caps introduced for domestic players

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Shanghai SIPG players celebrate winning the Chinese Super League. Photo: AFP

The Chinese Football Association have announced their new rules ahead of the 2019 season at the league meeting in Shanghai on Thursday.

As expected, they have introduced measures to curb spending among domestic clubs, notably those in the Chinese Super League (CSL).

The spending cap for top flight teams is 1.2 billion yuan (US$174 million) for 2019, reducing to 1.1 billion yuan in 2020 and 900 million yuan (US$130 million) in 2021.

There are also limits on the ratio of salary-to-spending for CSL clubs – that is 65 per cent for 2019, 60 per cent for 2020 and 55 per cent for 2021.

Clubs are expected to meet this in part thanks to the player salary cap that has been introduced.

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