Germany's World Cup Report Hails Economic, Social Success
Germany was laughing all the way to the bank after the World Cup
Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Germany was laughing all the way to the bank after the World Cup
Germany may have not been crowned world champions in July, but the country as a whole came out of the 2006 World Cup as a winner, according to the German government's report on this summer's soccer tournament.
The World Cup had a very positive effect on the country's economy and helped improve its image internationally, according to Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble, who attended the unveiling of the report in Berlin on Wednesday.
The four-week tournament earned Germany's tourism industry an extra 300 million euros ($399 million) in revenue, added 2 billion euros to retail sales and yielded 50,000 new jobs, according to the final report on sports' biggest event.
Ticket sales funneled a further 40 million euros into the treasury, while the World Cup Organizing Committee earned a net profit of 56.5 million euros, which will go to the German Soccer Federation (DFB) and German Soccer League (DFL).
The DFB announced that the organizing committee had total earnings of 140 million euros from the tournament -- it turned over 40 million euros directly to soccer world governing body FIFA and paid 44 million euros in taxes.
And while the cost of holding the World Cup in terms of infrastructure racked up a bill of 3.7 billion euros, Germany welcomed 15 million more visitors -- and their euros -- to the tournament than original estimates suggested.
Schäuble hails "landmark" security operation
Schäuble called the 2006 World Cup a fairytaleBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Schäuble called the 2006 World Cup a fairytale
Over 20 million fans flocked to Germany to watch the games in the public viewing areas, with a minimum of disorder -- justifying claims that the cooperation between German state police forces, foreign officers on the ground in Germany and in neighboring countries and the government was a great success.
"The World Cup was not only a sporting success but also an economic, political and security success," Schäuble said at a press conference in the German capital. He added that the success of the security operation was "a quality landmark in international police work."
The minister said the World Cup also had a positive effect on German society. "The World Cup this summer was a fairytale, one that changed everyday life."
However, while a certain amount of the positive feeling remained, Schäuble admitted it couldn't last forever.
"You can't have the World Cup all the year round," he said. "It would be like a year of Christmas. It would be too much."