Tokyo, IOC dismiss study showing Olympic costs rising

Tokyo Olympics , organizing committee CEO Toshiro Muto. Photo: Issei Kato/Pool Photo via AP

Tokyo Olympics , organizing committee CEO Toshiro Muto. Photo: Issei Kato/Pool Photo via AP

Published Sep 15, 2020

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TOKYO — The CEO of the Tokyo Olympics and the IOC member in charge of Japan's Olympic Games have dismissed a new study from the University of Oxford that finds Tokyo is the most expensive Summer Games since 1960.

The Tokyo Games, postponed to 2021 because of the coronavirus pandemic, is only a small part of economist Bent Flyvbjerg's study which was published on Tuesday and titled, “Regression to the Tail: Why the Olympics Blow Up.”

The analysis in the journal “Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space” — the third in a series following editions 2012 and 2016 — looks at Olympic costs and finds they keep increasing despite claims by the International Olympic Committee that costs are being cut.

Cost overruns for the Olympics have averaged 170%, and Flyvbjerg says Tokyo is over 200%.

“Well, I am aware of the report in the media. But there was no official statement given to the Tokyo organizing committee," Tokyo CEO Toshiro Muto said on Tuesday in an online news conference. “So I am not in a position to make any comment on that. I am just simply confused.”

IOC Vice President John Coates, who oversees planning for Tokyo, also brushed aside the Oxford study.

“I’ve taken the view that I’ve got more productive things to do with my time than to analyze that report and respond to it,” Coates told the Australian Financial Review newspaper on Tuesday.

Tokyo 2020 coordination commission chairman John Coates. Photo: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

Flyvbjerg said on Tuesday the IOC had not replied. On Monday, the IOC told the Associated Press it would have no further comment.

According to the Oxford numbers, Tokyo’s spending is at $15.84 billion, already surpassing the 2012 London Olympics, which were the most expensive Summer Games to date at $14.95 billion. Flyvbjerg says the meter is still running and expects several billion more to be added to the cost.

"The Olympics offer the highest level of risk a city can take on,” Flyvbjerg told the AP in an interview this month. “The trend cannot continue. No city will want to do this because it’s just too expensive, putting themselves into a debt that most cities cannot afford.”

Flyvbjerg says the basic problem is the IOC does not pay for most of the Olympics, or the cost overruns. He suggested the IOC should pay at least 10% or cost overruns, and probably much more.

In the open letter, Flyvbjerg also asked the IOC if it funded a recent study that found more positive results about holding the Olympics.

In his open letter, Flyvbjerg also says he enjoys the Olympics.

“We are great fans of the Games and hope the IOC will be able to again make them attractive to host cities, not least by helping to effectively drive down costs and cost overruns," he wrote.

"This should have happened years ago, in our view, but better late than never.”

Associated Press (AP)

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