Olympic Medals, Economy, Geography and Politics from Sydney to Rio

Authors

  • Martin Grancay Faculty of Chemical and Food Technology, Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava, Bratislava, Slovakia
  • Tomas Dudas Faculty of Economics and Business, Pan-European University, Bratislava, Slovakia
Abstract:

T he paper uses Heckman model to examine the statistical importance of over 140 independent variables on the Olympic performance of all countries participating in the Summer Olympic Games from Sydney 2000 to Rio 2016. We find that countries which export more products have a higher likelihood of winning an Olympic medal than their counterparts exporting fewer products, and explain why this is the case. Statistical importance of gross domestic product per capita, labor force, average temperature and three host effects (previous host, current host, future host) is also confirmed while the role of political variables in Olympic success remains inconclusive.  

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

The Olympic Medals Ranks, lexicographic ordering and numerical infinities

Several ways used to rank countries with respect to medals won during Olympic Games are discussed. In particular, it is shown that the unofficial rank used by the Olympic Committee is the only rank that does not allow one to use a numerical counter for ranking – this rank uses the lexicographic ordering to rank countries: one gold medal is more precious than any number of silver medals and one ...

full text

Olympic medals or long life: what's the bottom line?

On a per capita basis, Australia spent more than seven times as much on its Sydney Olympic team as did Canada, to win four times as many medals. Compared with Australia, Canada spent an additional amount per capita (standardised to the purchasing power parity rate at year 2000) of US dollars 1605 per life-year gained on healthcare in 2000. Neither country is "right" or "wrong" in making these f...

full text

Dying to Win? Olympic Gold Medals and Longevity Russell Ackoff Doctoral Student Fellowship, 2014 Application

Description Large differences in mortality across and within countries are only partially explained by variation in income, education, diet, and other factors (Cutler et al., 2006). One possible determinant of health that remains particularly poorly understood is status, which can loosely be defined as relative economic or social ranking. While the biology and epidemiology literatures have adva...

full text

Health surveillance during the Sydney 2000 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

THE SYDNEY 2000 OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC GAMES By the time the Olympic Games began, over 11,300 athletes and 5,100 officials from 200 countries had arrived in Sydney. Over the Games period, a succession of mass gatherings took place, including the Olympic Opening and Closing Ceremonies. The latter event saw 110,000 spectators and thousands of athletes at Stadium Australia, and an estimated 1,000,...

full text

Information Politics, Pollution Geography, and Changing Riskscapes

This paper reports on initial findings of a research project that examines the effects of information disclosure policies on environmental decisionmaking, specifically, actions related to control of toxic chemical emissions in the United States. The project seeks to determine why some companies do more to reduce toxic chemical pollution than others and why some communities encourage such pollut...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 22  issue 2

pages  409- 441

publication date 2018-06-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023