How to win the first Olympic medal? And the second?

Author:

Csurilla Gergely12ORCID,Fertő Imre134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Economics HUN‐REN Centre for Economic and Regional Studies Budapest Hungary

2. Sport Economics and Decision Making Research Centre Hungarian University of Sports Science Budapest Hungary

3. Institute of Sustainable Development, Department of Agricultural Economics Corvinus University of Budapest Budapest Hungary

4. Department of Economics Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Czech Republic

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesWe investigate the determinants of Olympic success. We distinguish between the probability of winning a medal and the overall Olympic success. Furthermore, we examine the impact of the three superpowers (China, Russia, and the United States). Beyond Olympic success as measured by medals, we also investigate the impact of other dependent variables considering additional rankings.MethodsWe use sport‐level data for seven Summer Olympic Games (1996–2021), applying weighted market share as a performance indicator to differentiate types of medals and rankings. We employ zero‐inflated beta regressions to estimate separately the probability of having zero market share at the Olympics and the determinants of Olympic success.ResultsOur estimations suggest that population positively influences Olympic success. Estimations highlight the role of superpower countries and sports‐level effects in explaining Olympic success. Better economic status is associated with winning a medal at the Olympic Games, but not with the number of medals that have been won. When using different outcome variables for Olympic success, considering not only medal rankings, the determinants of success change significantly.ConclusionCountries without previous Olympic success should collect economic and human resources to obtain their first medal at the Games.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference50 articles.

1. Andreff M. andW.Andreff.2010.Economic prediction of sport performances: From Beijing Olympics to 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa(Working Paper 1008; Working Paper Series).International Association of Sports Economists.https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spe:wpaper:1008

2. Bernard A. B.2008.Going for the Gold: Who Will Win the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.http://mba.tuck.dartmouth.edu/pages/faculty/andrew.bernard/beijing2008.pdf.

3. Who Wins the Olympic Games: Economic Resources and Medal Totals

4. Buis M. L.2010.ZOIB: Stata Module To Fit a Zero‐One Inflated Beta Distribution by Maximum Likelihood.https://ideas.repec.org/c/boc/bocode/s457156.html

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