Post#566 » by Mirotic12 » Thu Jul 11, 2024 8:13 pm
There are federal, state, local, FICA taxes, agent fees, union dues and fees, player retirement fund fees deducted from NBA contracts. I'm not even including the potential escrow fund deductions. And the players all have to pay state taxes, even if they play in states without taxes. There is a tax exception that is figured for that, and also they pay the tax of where they are playing when on the road.
The EuroLeague salaries are reported in net income, after all taxes, fees and deductions.
Sports agencies actually have it all figured out, when comparing the two, and have a formula. A gross NBA contract will lose on average 63.05% when it is calculated at the net income.
The average EuroLeague contract will lose 0%, because they are already calculated by the EuroLeague teams at the net income amount.
So, Shane Larkin's (he was brought up as an example) contract with Efes.
= $4 million US dollars net income
$11 million US dollars gross (NBA salary) - 63.5% in taxes, fees, and deductions = ($6.985 million) = about $4 million US dollars net (EuroLeague salary)
The agency converting formula can be roughly estimated as taking a EuroLeague salary that is listed in euros net, and multiplying it by 3 times to get how much it would be worth in the NBA, in US dollars and in gross terms. This is not exact, but it gives a basic idea of roughly how much the EuroLeague contracts would equal in NBA money.
So, if you see a player with a listed EuroLeague income of €2 million euros, multiply it by 3, and then convert it to US dollars, and you get a $6 million NBA salary. So a €2 million listed salary in Europe, is roughly the equivalent of a $6 million listed salary in the NBA. That's again, not exact, but it's an easy way to figure it quickly in your head. And this is common knowledge in Europe.
In addition to this...something that is not even counted in the European listed player's salaries, is that the EuroLeague teams also pay for the player's cars, their homes, and their living expenses. The Greek teams for example, provide their players with large beach villas on the Mediterranean Sea.
EuroLeague teams can also often pay for the players to have personal chefs, personal trainers, personal drivers, maids, personal translators (if they need one), for their kids to go to private school, and some teams provide boats for their players, etc., etc., all paid for by the clubs, and none of it is counted in the reported salaries. The EuroLeague teams in addition to paying the player's agents, will also pay the accounting fees for the players and the agents, and that is not counted in the listed salaries either.