Bangla Press Desk: At a glance, women's sport seems to be accelerating towards equal pay at a quicker rate than ever before. A 2021 report by the BBC found that 90% of sports now offer equal prize money at their major championships, and packed out stadiums for women's matches in major sports like football, tennis and cricket have become commonplace. But it's not as simple as that.
"Sport does rank rather badly against all sorts of other sectors when it comes to equal pay and conditions," Lombe Mwamba, the interim CEO of the Global Observatory for Gender Equality and Sport, told DW.
Though little sport-specific data exists, the consensus is that elite female footballers earn 15-25% of their male equivalents. While there are exceptions like tennis, which is moving towards equal prize money for men and women at all tournaments, the gaps are significant across the top end of most sports.
There are almost as many reasons for that as there are sports: the historical banning of women's sports in many countries, a lack of willingness to invest in them, a lack of professional pathways and maternity provisions and, perhaps most enduringly, the perception that sport is for men and there is only a commercial appetite for men's sports.
Why does sport struggle with equal pay?
Banglapress
Published: 23 September 2025, 10:26 AM
Bangla Press Desk: At a glance, women's sport seems to be accelerating towards equal pay at a quicker rate than ever before. A 2021 report by the BBC found that 90% of sports now offer equal prize money at their major championships, and packed out stadiums for women's matches in major sports like football, tennis and cricket have become commonplace. But it's not as simple as that.
"Sport does rank rather badly against all sorts of other sectors when it comes to equal pay and conditions," Lombe Mwamba, the interim CEO of the Global Observatory for Gender Equality and Sport, told DW.
Though little sport-specific data exists, the consensus is that elite female footballers earn 15-25% of their male equivalents. While there are exceptions like tennis, which is moving towards equal prize money for men and women at all tournaments, the gaps are significant across the top end of most sports.
There are almost as many reasons for that as there are sports: the historical banning of women's sports in many countries, a lack of willingness to invest in them, a lack of professional pathways and maternity provisions and, perhaps most enduringly, the perception that sport is for men and there is only a commercial appetite for men's sports.
[Bangla Press is a global platform for free thought. It provides impartial news, analysis, and commentary for independent-minded individuals. Our goal is to bring about positive change, which is more important today than ever before.]
BP/SP
[Bangla Press is a global platform for free thought. It provides impartial news, analysis, and commentary for independent-minded individuals. Our goal is to bring about positive change, which is more important today than ever before.]
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