A comprehensive analysis led by the University of Oxford has described the 2026 FIFA World Cup as the ‘craziest economic proposition’ in the tournament’s history. The study, published today in the Journal of Sports Economics, scrutinises the financial framework behind the 48-team event set to be hosted across the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
Dr. Alistair Finch, the report’s lead author and a specialist in economic geography, did not mince words. ‘We are looking at an event that, by any rational metric, appears to be financially unsustainable. The combination of expanded teams, continental sprawl, and massive infrastructure investment creates a perfect storm of resource misallocation,’ he stated.
The 2026 tournament will feature 80 matches, up from 64 in 2022, played across 16 cities. The study estimates total costs, including stadium upgrades and transport links, will exceed $40 billion three times the cost of the 2022 Qatar World Cup when adjusted for inflation. Yet, projected revenues from broadcasting and sponsorship, while record-breaking at $11 billion, fall far short of covering these outlays.
FIFA’s argument that the economic benefits will trickle down to local economies is met with scepticism. ‘The multiplier effects for host cities are often overstated,’ Dr. Finch noted. ‘Tourism spikes are temporary, and infrastructure booms leave lasting debt burdens.’ The study cites historical precedents: South Africa’s 2010 World Cup cost $4.3 billion but generated only $1.2 billion in direct economic activity; Brazil’s 2014 edition left several stadiums as ‘white elephants’.
Environmental implications are equally concerning. The carbon footprint of fans flying across three nations is estimated at 3.6 million metric tonnes of CO2 equivalent more than the annual emissions of some small countries. ‘This is not just an economic folly; it’s a planetary one,’ said Dr. Helena Vance, Science and Climate Correspondent, who reviewed the report. ‘In an era of climate urgency, pumping billions into fossil-fuel-intensive mega-events beggars belief.’
FIFA has defended the format as a celebration of global unity. ‘The World Cup brings people together and inspires investment,’ a spokesperson said. But the Oxford study suggests that much of this investment is misdirected. For example, Canada’s planned $2 billion in stadium upgrades includes facilities in cities with professional soccer teams that draw fewer than 20,000 fans per match. ‘You are effectively building for a month of games what will require decades of maintenance,’ Dr. Finch added.
The report also highlights inequality: the 2026 event will enrich FIFA and its partners while host cities and taxpayers shoulder risks. ‘This is a textbook case of cost overruns and revenue concentration,’ wrote Dr. Vance in an accompanying editorial. ‘We have seen this script before. It ends with empty stadiums, debt, and resentment.’
As climate change accelerates and economic disparities widen, the 2026 World Cup stands as a monument to misplaced priorities. The study does not call for cancellation but urges a re-evaluation of how mega-events are financed and executed. ‘We need to ask ourselves why we cling to this model,’ Dr. Finch concluded. ‘The planet and the public wallet can no longer afford the answer.’








