Olympics: Far from the shiny stuff you see on telly
When I heard Kenya’s Prime Minister
declaring at the Kenya House in Stratford that the country would be bidding for
Olympics 2024 – I wondered what a heavy load of folly. I wondered what deludes
an African state bedevilled with corruption and inept financial management and
oversight mechanisms like Kenya that they would pull off a mega event when big
gunners like Canada, UK, Australia, and South Africa could not even come close
to recovering their investment.
Well, for the past fortnight, the Olympic
mood engulfed Great Britain. London has been awash with emotions, revellers and
Olympians alike. True to the words of Mayor Boris Johnson: London went ‘Zoink’.
But hang on a minute, who really were the folks sucked into this Olympic-frenzy?
Who indeed were the real winners? Could there have been someone somewhere on
the curbs, standing on the side-lines bypassed by the Olympo-mania? There has
been some over-optimism and naivety around the hosting the Olympics and other such
mega events (like the Commonwealth Games and the FIFA world cup) that needs to
be honestly interrogated.
Of late there has been the fancy
reference to ‘legacy’ that every committee bidding or organizing these events
are fixated to that is not only misleading but mythical as well. The
justification in almost every bid today is that: i) economically the events would
generate and redistribute massive financial capital. ii) Catalyse urban
transformation; fast tracking regeneration and renewal of decaying segments of
a city’s morphology and addressing issues of urban poverty, social exclusion
and inequality. iii) Attract inward investment and tourism critical for
promoting growth and creating employment, and iv) expose a city or a country to valuable
international audience strategic for building its image and enhancing its competitiveness.
However, in reality, experience from a
majority of previous hosts tells a story extremely divergent from the idealism
exuded by the organizers of these events. Cities/countries have incurred huge
losses; there is no evidence of inward investment attributable to the image
built by the games; large populations have been displaced through evictions for
construction or gentrification; and there is little documented impact on the
lives of local people. Media accounts of wasteful public spending have
tarnished their reputation as vehicles for urban regeneration and portrayed
them merely as public relations ventures far removed from the realities of
urban problems. Actually the main beneficiaries are seldom the most deserving
and needy candidates. They fail to address the underlying structural issues
that exacerbate poverty, dereliction and decay in urban landscapes.
Let us interrogate these claims honestly
and objectively in order to be in a position to judge the Olympics and other
mega events for what they truly are:
Massive
financial capital OR Massive public investment – value for money
Except for the Los Angeles Olympics of
1984 and Atlanta 1996, not one mega sporting event can claim to have made
profits out of the games. The norm has been that the actual costs far outstrip
the estimated costs during the bidding process. Revenues generated do not come
up at least to the expectations of their organizers. The CWG at Edinburgh in
1986 apparently incurred a £4.3 million deficit; the actual cost of the
Manchester Games surged to £670 million and the plan to raise revenues through
advertising and tickets flopped; the initial bid for the Melbourne CW Games
estimated it would cost $195 million but eventually exploded to over $1.1
billion. By 2010, the Glasgow 2014 budget had increased from £373 million
submitted at the time of the bid to £523 million.
The Montreal Olympics of 1976
earned the name – ‘The Big Owe’ drawing from the huge debt that Quebec
accumulated from hosting the games. In fact the $1.5-billion debt from the 1976 Summer Games was paid off in full by Canadian tax
payers 3 decades on in 2006. Athens 2004 Olympics cost a record £9.4bn way over original budget. This
left Greece with huge debt amounting to about €50,000 for each Greek household
to foot. Maintenance of the sites alone cost as much as £500m. The Sydney
Olympics 2000 cost about $6billion costing the public at least $1.5bn (about
£720m) in deficit. And true to the Olympic fashion, the London Olympics 2012 overrun the initial budget by 101% in real
terms to end up at US$14.8 billion by the time of the opening ceremony on 27th
July 2012.
Clearly, the economic viability of these
events need not be over-debated, truth be told, they have not demonstrated the
capacity to generate surplus revenue for the host cities and nations. They have
instead burdened the tax payer with extra expenses that do not match up
benefits accrued from them. Without robust systems of financial control,
accountability and performance management to ensure value for money and delivery
on agreed outcomes, they are poised to draw money away from public sector
investment that would be better spent on education, healthcare rather than
sports facilities.
Reconstruction of urban form or transfer
of decay
The IOC argues
that as one of the legacy issues, the games facilitate development of new
infrastructure to encourage economic regeneration, revitalise, remediate and
regenerate deprived inner city areas and make them attractive to business and
open up new opportunities for employment.
However, there
is a tension between the construction of the image of prosperity and
attractiveness and the actively concealed landscapes of urban poverty and
deprivation. Neighbourhoods are made-over to create a shiny image for tourism
and investment but the underlying structural causes of their decay not
addressed. Under the logic of event-oriented development, the visibility of
poverty is an eyesore; preparations often involve removing the poor from
high-profile areas surrounding event venues without significant attention to
long-term solutions to slum problems. There were massive displacement of
over 1.5 million Chinese to construct the Birds nest in Beijing for 2008
Olympics; to beautify Seoul for 1988 Olympics, South Korea evicted residents for
clearance and development of around 100 sites. In Cape Town, homeless people were moved
from the downtown area around the stadium into razor wire encircled encampments
outside the city for the 2010 world cup. “They want to make a good impression
for the foreigners coming. We are like flies to them.” There was a row with
Glaswegians in Dalmarnock over evictions and closure of a market of historical
value for constructions for the Glasgow 2014 commonwealth games. The construction of the athletes' village in Stratford (London East-end)
broke up a community that had been on the site legally since 1972. In sum the evictions have disrupted community and neighborhood ties,
curtailed social capital and diminished locality identities for a shiny image
makeover that can only conceal so much from investors and tourist eyes for so
long.
Furthermore, the displacements aside, the
history of mega events is that they have increased housing prices and cost of
living in such neighbourhoods and technically driven out initial householders. "Olympic effect" helped to hike
property prices beyond the means of many in Barcelona. According to homeless
charity Shelter, across East London landlords evicted tenants to cash in on
lucrative Olympics rental demand. Most events have merely transferred unemployment, poverty and
deprivation to urban fringes as they bolster city competitiveness; image and
physical environment. Moreover,
many hosts have ended up with their overall negative aspects unaffected;
despite massive expenditure in the costly facilities that remain underutilised
and cost more to maintain after the games.
Addressing
Social exclusion
Mega events have been touted as drivers
for enhancing social inclusion. The argument has been that they would enhance human
capital development and community participation – provide volunteering
opportunities and apprenticeships, and create new jobs. However, though
volunteering programmes can enhance personal development and confidence of
those who participate, there is a weak link between volunteering and getting
long-term, high quality jobs most needed by such groups. Nature of employment generated has
normally been criticized for its poor quality and lack of longevity. To many local populations, major events
are often viewed as an imposition from outside. Manchester 2002 did not succeed
in establishing an inclusive approach to the decision making process. Community
participation was lacking in Delhi 2010 as well; described as a case of
misplaced priorities and an attempt at nurturing a fragile sense of national
pride. After forced eviction and relocation to unfavourable property – a
resident noted: “I was happy
about London getting the Olympics, but we haven’t been treated right as a
community. They wouldn’t have done it to any other people. No-one’s even
offered us a free ticket.”
Image
Legacy
Mega events are argued to expose
a city/country to international audience with the ability to raise perceptions.
Sports fans may enjoy their visit and return after the games, investors and
venture capitalists may relocate manufacturing facilities, company
headquarters, or start new business in the city based on their experience.
Television viewers might decide to visit, seek work, education or to reside in
the city based on what’s advertised. They could
also inspire and bolster national pride, and unity that inspire confidence
in a city/nation. President Nelson Mandela wearing the jersey of Francois
Pienaar during the 1995 Rugby World Cup final in South Africa was a powerful image message to the world that South Africa had emerged from its years of
racial oppression and served to unify the country. Ray Nagin, Mayor of New
Orleans exclaimed that the return of the NFL in 2000 was an important symbol of
recovery from the hurricane Katrina.
However, in principle, a city's external
image is generally durable. Mega events combined with an advertising campaign
may influence specific aspects of a city's image which in turn may influence
the decision to visit. However, a city’s image is normally compartmentalised in
the psyche of an individual. A
mega sporting event may well leave the overall negative aspects unaffected. Momentary
spotlight doesn’t necessarily translate into sustainable growth. There is
virtually no evidence (save for the case of Seoul) of post event testing of
outcomes that were predicted. The
claim that the events attract investment and tourism critical for promoting
growth and creating employment is itself not tenable. No examples documented of companies moving
operations or setting up businesses based on decisions attributed to the
hosting of a mega event. Neither is there sufficient evidence of populations
shifting to live in host cities after the hosting of such events.
Mega events may
as well taint the image of a city and negate the regeneration efforts
especially when the media coverage is not managed to the advantage of the
city/country. The riots across England in summer 2011 very well threatened the
dividends of image that London 2012 Olympics organizers hoped to achieve. The
ticket-empty seats mishap? Atlanta failed to capitalise on the Olympics
publicity; the Central Park bombing, severe heat and humidity drew negative
publicity and the press nicknamed the city – “Hotlanta”. Bribery scandal
surrounding the 2002 Salt lake winter Olympics, the Terror attacks of Munich
and Atlanta, the 1990 riots in Detroit during the NBA finals all served to taint
the image of the hosts.
If you ask me: improvement of a city’s image and physical environment will not automatically address the fundamental structural causes of poverty. There is certainly no guarantee that a major sporting event will produce positive social and/or economic benefits for the host and it’s debatable as to exactly who, within the host population, benefits.