Each formation will receive “approximately $10,000 for each day that its players are under the discipline of their national team during the FIFA World Cup (November 20-December 18),” specifies the agency.
“All the clubs in which the player played in the two years prior to the FIFA World Cup will receive this compensation,” adds the organization.
FIFA had launched this system in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, following an agreement with the powerful European Club Association (ECA), whose adherents supply a significant part of the participants in international competitions.
At the 2018 World Cup, 416 clubs from 63 national associations shared the same amount.