Summary
We add to the literature on Olympic performance by explicitly studying the determinants of women’s performance at the Games.We estimate separate models of medal production for men and women over the last four Summer Olympic Games. The production of medals is a function of capital, labor, and total factor productivity (TFP). We use real GDP per capita and population - two variables that appear in almost all Olympic studies - as proxies for capital and labor. Our measure of TFP is a vector of variables that captures a nation’s willingness and ability to marshal its resources to promote Olympic performance and variables that determine its willingness to support its women. Because the dependent variable is a count measure, we estimate the production function using a negative binomial framework. We find that the determinants of success by a nation’s women closely resemble the determinants for its men. We also show that some determinants of gold medal counts differ from the determinants of silver and bronze medals. Our findings suggest that nations can improve the medal performance of men and women by following policies that increase the political and economic participation of women.
© 2012 by Lucius & Lucius, Stuttgart
Articles in the same Issue
- Inhalt / Contents
- Guest Editorial
- Abhandlungen / Original Papers
- One for Sure or Maybe Three
- Beating thy Neighbor: Derby Effects in German Professional Soccer
- Empirical Evidence on the “Never Change a Winning Team” Heuristic
- A Market’s Reward Scheme, Media Attention, and the Transitory Success of Managerial Change
- Gold, Silver, and Bronze: Determining National Success in Men’s and Women’s Summer Olympic Events
- Inner-Outer Lane Advantage in Olympic 1000 Meter Speed Skating
- Employment Effects of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah
- The Effects of Institutional Change in European Soccer
- A Contest Model of a Professional Sports League with Two-Sided Markets
- Infant Mortality of Professional Sports Clubs: An Organizational Ecology Perspective
- Buchbesprechung / Book Review
Articles in the same Issue
- Inhalt / Contents
- Guest Editorial
- Abhandlungen / Original Papers
- One for Sure or Maybe Three
- Beating thy Neighbor: Derby Effects in German Professional Soccer
- Empirical Evidence on the “Never Change a Winning Team” Heuristic
- A Market’s Reward Scheme, Media Attention, and the Transitory Success of Managerial Change
- Gold, Silver, and Bronze: Determining National Success in Men’s and Women’s Summer Olympic Events
- Inner-Outer Lane Advantage in Olympic 1000 Meter Speed Skating
- Employment Effects of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah
- The Effects of Institutional Change in European Soccer
- A Contest Model of a Professional Sports League with Two-Sided Markets
- Infant Mortality of Professional Sports Clubs: An Organizational Ecology Perspective
- Buchbesprechung / Book Review