There appears to be a lot of money in top flight cricket these days. The England players last time I looked were on £700,000 each to be on a central contract and £300,000 to be in the one day squad. BT paid cricket Australia £80 million for a five year tv deal.
Some money is actually finding its way down to village clubs too. My old club now has a lovely new pavilion provided by lottery money.
The thing is though at the bottom of the ladder the game is in poor health. In the seventies, eighties and nineties the local club Crofton had two teams. A couple of years ago the club shut, they couldn't raise one team. It's recently been revived by a team of asian taxi drivers from Wakefield, so at least the ground is still in use. Other teams are struggling. Streethouse always used to be a good, Yorkshire Council level team. They can only raise one team now. Old Sharlston still have two teams but mainly that's due to picking up some players when Crofton folded.
There aren't as many teams now. The teams from the pits and the power stations have gone as those places have closed. The Vickers factory in Leeds has also gone I believe.
Other clubs have had their grounds sold and are now housing estates.
I don't know why this all is but at grass roots level the game is in ill health and it is a great shame.