England's Fabio Capello tops the list with an annual salary of US$ 10 million while Nigeria's Shaibu Amodu, figures at the other extreme with US$ 180.000, according to the Argentina's sports publication Olé.
Capello is followed by Marcelo Lippi from Italy, US$ 3 million and Joachim Low, Germany, US$ 2.3 million.
Uruguay's Washington Tabarez also ranks low in the list with US$ 300.000; Paraguay's Gerardo Martino US$ 360.000 USD; Argentina's Diego Maradona, US$ 1.2 million and Brazil's Dunga, US$ 1.25 million.
South Africa, which is hosting the competition has invested US$ 1.8 million tax free in Brazilian coach Carlos Parreira. This caused an uproar in the country since Parreira makes in a month what the South African president is paid for twelve months. But pride and opportunity for South Africa are above all considerations.
Chile which qualified early for the World Cup and has one of South America's best teams is investing US$ 850.000 annually in Marcelo Bielsa, a former coach of the Argentine national team.
Not necessarily surprising even the austere North Koreans have opened their hand and according to Olé are paying Kim Jong Hun US$ 250,000.
The Olé list follows:
– Fabio Capello (England): 9.900.000
– Marcelo Lippi (Italy): 3.000.000
– Joachim Lí¶w (Germany): 2.300.000
– Javier Aguirre (Mexico): 1.800.000
– Carlos Parreira (South Africa): 1.800.000
– Berter van Marwijk (Holland): 2.700.000
– Ottmar Hitzfeld (Switzerland): 2.600.000
– Vicente del Bosque (Spain): 2.200.000
– Carlos Queiroz (Portugal): 2.000.000
– Pim Verbeek (Australia): 1.820.000
– Dunga (Brazil): 1.250.000
– Diego Maradona (Argentina): 1.200.000
– Takeshi Okada (Japan): 1.200.000
– Ricki Herbert (New Zealand): 1.200.000
– Otto Rehhagel (Greece): 1.150.000
– Paul Le Guen (Cameroon): 960.000
– Marcelo Bielsa (Chile): 850.000
– Vahdi Halilhodzic (Ivory Coast): 740.000
– R. Domenech (France): 720.000
– Hun Jung Moo (South Korea): 600.000
– Morten Olsen (Denmark): 570.000
– Milovan Rajevac (Ghana): 540.000
– Bob Bradley (USA): 400.000
– Radomir Antic (Serbia): 447.000
– Matjaz Kek (Slovenia): 360.000
– Gerardo Martino (Paraguay): 360.000
– Rabah Saadane (Algeria): 360.000
– Reinaldo Rueda (Honduras): 350.000
– Vladimir Weiss (Slovakia): 312.000
– Oscar Washington Tabárez (Uruguay): 300.000
– Kim Jong Hun (North Korea): 250.000
– Shaibu Amodu (Nigeria): 180.000