Now your assumptions about countries, my thinking is you deliberately wan't to hold on to impossible examples without understanding basics as it suits your agenda, your whole per capita income argument for comparing india and england and australia is as logical as your assumption that since football is popular in England and rugby in Australia and both can pay big money so cricket must be popular and it can pay big too.
Cricket is the biggest and most followed sport in India, TV viewership is still growing for cricket, with T-20 worldcup bringing record viewership, Home season was very well followed and IPL ratings until now have been better than last edition.
In England on contrary football rules the roost, cricket is well below and ECB's great plan of maximising its revenues via paid tv are hurting english cricket, you can google last ashes ratings, the situation in australia is similar with channel 9 losing money and being told to drop cricket, in both cases T-20 leagues are the only saving graces but are treated as step childs by the boards who see Tests and international cricket as their first child, something which is not a case with india.
Yes indians earn less than english and australians but indians are your cricket consumers in away that english and aussies are not, the interest in both these countries is well below it is in india, so again your assumptions are faulty, this is becoming a case with most of your theories.
Cricket is the biggest and most followed sport in India, TV viewership is still growing for cricket, with T-20 worldcup bringing record viewership, Home season was very well followed and IPL ratings until now have been better than last edition.
In England on contrary football rules the roost, cricket is well below and ECB's great plan of maximising its revenues via paid tv are hurting english cricket, you can google last ashes ratings, the situation in australia is similar with channel 9 losing money and being told to drop cricket, in both cases T-20 leagues are the only saving graces but are treated as step childs by the boards who see Tests and international cricket as their first child, something which is not a case with india.
Yes indians earn less than english and australians but indians are your cricket consumers in away that english and aussies are not, the interest in both these countries is well below it is in india, so again your assumptions are faulty, this is becoming a case with most of your theories.