The Costs and Benefits of Hosting the Olympics -
Q&A with Dr. Matthew Burbank, professor of political science
Matthew Burbank, professor in the Department of Political Science, shares his expertise in the dynamics
of hosting the Olympics as Salt Lake City gears up to welcome the winter games for
the second time. His research focuses on why cities pursue hosting the Olympics despite
the high costs and uncertain economic returns, as well as the evolving nature of opposition
to these bids. Burbank's extensive work offers valuable insights into how Salt Lake
has preserved its Olympic legacy, making it a prime candidate for the 2034 games and
how these elements fit into the broader Olympics trends of successful bids.
Professor Burbank, could you give us an overview of your research on the Olympics and the main themes you explore?
My research on the Olympics has focused primarily on two questions. First, why do
American cities seek to host an Olympic games given that it is a costly undertaking
with uncertain economic benefits? The answer that my co-authors and I developed to
this question was that cities pursue the Olympics as way to rebuild and redefine the
city's image as part of what we termed a "mega-event strategy" (using the games as
a way to attract attention and visitors as part of a consumption-oriented development
of some American cities). The second question is: who opposes the Olympics in American
cities and why? Our answer to this question was that opposition in most Olympic cities
was not part of a broader anti-growth effort but aimed primarily at preventing very
specific harms such as an unwanted sports facility in a neighborhood or taxpayer money
being used to build venues. Our more recent research has focused on the ways in which
opposition to the Olympics in American cities has become more sophisticated and more
transnational (e.g., sharing resources with other Olympic opponents in cities in other
states or countries).
Historically what are some of the social and political issues that have fueled opposition to the Olympics in the past?
In our early research on the nature of opposition, we found that nearly all opposition
was based on avoiding or mitigating specific harms that residents expected due to
proposed Olympic-related development. For example, prior to the 2002 Olympics in
SLC, environmental activists were strongly opposed to the Olympics being used to further
development in Big or Little Cottonwood Canyons. Once Olympic promoters agreed to
add "no-development in the Cottonwood Canyons" language to the ballot proposal, environmentalists
largely muted their opposition. In more recent research on the nature of opposition
to the Olympics in American cities (Chicago, Boston, and Los Angeles), we found that
opposition groups had become more sophisticated in their organizational efforts, use
of social media, and work with other groups including opponents in other cities. Some
of this opposition has been framed as opposition to the Olympics more generally.
Can you explain the bidding process for the Olympics and how it has changed over time? Is local public enthusiasm or opposition a factor?
Cities bid for the Olympics through a process that is run by the International Olympic
Committee and the process has changed a great deal over time. In the early years,
the selection of cities to host the games was usually done behind the scenes as a
deal between members of the IOC and city officials. Later (roughly the late 1980
to 2010), the process became more competitive internationally between cities and IOC
created a highly structured process of bid proposals and selection by a vote of IOC
members. When it became more difficult to have a large number of cities compete against
each other, the IOC changed the process again and it has evolved into what the IOC
uses today. The current process involves two stages: the first is a process the IOC
calls "continuing dialogue" and the second, more serious, stage is "targeted dialogue."
These “dialogues” are essentially a series of backroom interactions. This process
is thus no longer a multi-city competition for IOC votes, but is now a series of ongoing
discussions between members of the IOC, the NOC (National Olympic Committee, in the
US, this committee is the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee), the possible
candidate city. While there is still a vote by IOC members, that vote is now pro forma
as all the detailed work of arranging the bid have been done behind the scenes. Public
support for the bid in the city, state, or region is important to the IOC. One of
the IOC’s unstated reasons for moving most of the bidding process out of the public
eye is to make it more difficult for opponents to organize public opposition to a
city hosting the games.
How do you see the selection of Salt Lake City for the 2034 Winter Olympics fitting into the broader trends you've observed in Olympic bids and opposition?
The selection of Salt Lake City to host the 2034 winter games may be part of a new
pattern to host city selection by the IOC. Given the increase in opposition to hosting
the Olympics in a number of cities around the world, the IOC appears to be adapting
by negotiating with low-risk cities to serve as future hosts. Salt Lake City fits
this pattern because the city has held the games before, did so successfully, and
has remained engaged with the USOPC, IOC, and various national and international sports
organizations over the years. Because Salt Lake City had hosted the games and maintained
a number of Olympic venues (ski jumping, speedskating, etc.) and had an active Olympic
bid committee lead and staffed by people with Olympic experience, it was an easy choice
for the IOC to return in 2034.
What potential benefits and challenges do you foresee for Salt Lake City as it prepares to host the 2034 Winter Olympics?
The benefits/risks to hosting an Olympics are usually considered in two categories:
1. economic gains/losses, and 2. intangible benefits/risks. For Salt Lake City, there
are potential economic benefits to be generated by hosting another Olympics. Money
will be spent on venues and transportation, visitors will come to Utah, and people
will be hired to work in hotels, restaurants, etc. Of course, along with this spending
are opportunity costs, which is to say that taxpayer money that is used to help hold
the games could have been used for other public purposes that might have produced
more valuable outcomes (e.g., helping to reduce homelessness or providing childcare
for low-income workers). The Gardner Policy Institute has issued a report on the economic benefits of hosting the 2034 games claiming a net economic output
of $6.6 from $2.6 billion in direct spending. As any objective economist would note,
this estimate is an exaggeration of the overall economic impact based on an extremely
favorable set of assumptions. The reality is that any estimate of economic benefit
at this point is extremely speculative because conditions, economic and political,
may change. Consider for example the Tokyo 2020 summer games. Tokyo was another city
that had hosted the Olympics before – it should have been an easy, low-risk event.
Except, of course, for the global pandemic which meant that the games were delayed
for a year and then held under circumstances where visitors were not allowed into
the country and spectators were not at the games. Whatever economic benefit the city
of Tokyo anticipated was certainly not realized. The intangible benefits are usually
associated with image. In 2002, the Salt Lake games were regarded as a way to put
Utah or Salt Lake City “on the map.” While the games did go well, there is no evidence
that hosting the games changed the views of people in Europe or Asia about Utah or
Salt Lake City. Hosting the event for a second time may mean that any intangible
benefits are harder to achieve. In sum, it is hard to know whether being a city that
has hosted a winter Olympics twice carries any real tangible or intangible benefits.
The most likely benefit is that by hosting the games in 2034, Salt Lake may be positioned
to be one of several rotating locations if the IOC moves to a model of having only
a few host cities and using them on a rotating basis.
How has the legacy of the 2002 Winter Olympics influenced Salt Lake City's bid and preparation for the 2034 Games?
Yes. As I mentioned, having hosted the 2002 games provided not only venues from the
previous games but also lasting relationships between people in Utah, the USOPC, and
IOC. Those connections along with the physical infrastructure were key to the IOC
seeing Salt Lake as a viable future host.
Can you elaborate on the role of public enthusiasm and facility preservation in Salt Lake City's successful bid for the 2034 Winter Olympics?
The IOC expects host cities or regions to be supportive of hosting the games. The IOC usually requires the city to provide some survey data to show support for the games, but they IOC does not worry very much about how the survey was conducted or how the questions were asked. One of the strengths of Utah efforts to get the 2034 games was that surveys conducted in the state showed strong support for bringing the games back. The IOC was also pleased that Utah had continued to maintain and use its Olympic venues such as the speedskating oval and ski jump. The re-use of existing facilities is something that the IOC claims to promote under its “sustainability” criteria. Despite the recent emphasis by the IOC on sustainability (whatever that might mean), there is almost no evidence to indicate that this criterion has become important to the IOC’s choice of where to hold future games.
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