This is in response to a comment in another thread, and from Wenger's repeated warnings about the so called dangers of debt. For example,
http://www.arsenal.com/usa/sh/news/n...r-stadium-debt
I think this is another example of Wenger being overtly dogmatic and rigid in his thinking. Of course, Man City levels of debt is probably not sustainable and is dangerous, but no one is asking for the club to adopt that model. Surely making another Ł30M available for transfers wouldn't result in financial meltdown? And it may well be self financing if that spending results in increased success for the club. Sure, there's a risk, but there's always uncertainty in any "business", and if you want to reach the top (which is what the move to the Emirates stadium supposedly was about) then we can't focus solely on "prudence" and need to take a risk with more debt IMO.Quote:
“I accept one basic principle for every company; that you can spend the money you make,” he said.
“It always looks like a massive surprise that I have to convince you of that. I think it is just natural common sense and logic.
“It is mathematical logic that what goes out has to equal what comes in. If that does not work then the company loses money.”
I'd like to see someone give a detailed answer of why reasonable levels of debt is so bad. Wenger is actually wrong when he says "it's mathematical logic that what goes out has to equal what comes in". No it doesn't, we're taking about finance and economics, not the law of conservation of energy. There is no "natural" law that says we must balance the books. Debt financing has been going on for centuries, and while clearly the financial crisis has shown what happens when you go into excess levels of debt, I doubt the amount of money needed to make us competitive again is so much that we'd no longer be on a sure footing financially.