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Who won the Beijing Olympic Medal Race?

 
There is such an obsession with rankings.  And being at the top in medal standings seems so important to so many.   So much so that larger issues got overlooked during the Olympics

And in spite of such obsession, nobody seems to get the medal ranking race straight.  Who really won?  Hard to tell, for unsuspecting reasons.  Lets see.

For starters, the media in the US tends to show us tables which rank countries according to the total medal count.  That puts the US at the top, having accumulated 110 gold, silver and bronze medals, against 100 medals for China.

 Officially, the IOC tries not to officially rank countries, but their tables list countries ranked by their number of gold medals (see Sydney and Athens’ results).  Following this criterion, as it is common in the much of the rest of the world, China comes out clearly on top, with a total of 51 gold medals, against only 36 for the US.

So far so good, and not much new.  Enter my economist bias.  First instinctive reaction is to reject either criteria, asking why do we have to choose between two absurd extremes in terms of implicit medal weights?: one extreme giving as much weight to a bronze medal as to a gold one, while the other extreme simply saying that only gold glitters and thus silver and bronze are worthless – zero weight.

As economists, we would argue that silver should have some weight, but less than gold, and so should bronze, but less than silver.  A simple scheme would value a gold medal as the equivalent of 3 bronze medals, and silver as the equivalent of 2 bronze medals, arriving at the 3, 2, 1 weights respectively for gold, silver and bronze.  Who would win the Olympic medal race under such weighted scheme? 

China and the US virtually tie for first, with China officially accumulating 223 ‘bronze equivalent’ medals, and the US taking 220 medal equivalents.  So China would stay slightly atop presuming that no one gymnast gold medalist is officially declared to be underage and disqualified, in which case such slight advantage would evaporate.

So who actually won the medal count race, China or the US?  Perhaps neither.  Enter my economist bias again, where I would question an excessive obsession with mere cumulative totals, disregarding huge differences in country size.  This matters, since population size provides the potential pool of gifted athletes.  Remember that there is reason why as economists we are enthralled with ‘per capita’ measures.  And in fact population size is one of the best explanators of total medal haul at Olympics, even if many other factors matter as well (including being the host country, governance, etc.).

So, who won most medals per million inhabitants?.  You guessed it: Jamaica did, and Australia gets a very special mention indeed. 

If we only look at how many gold medals per capita the country athletes got, Jamaica would have been the runaway winner by 'Bolt light years', with well over 2 gold medals per million people, compared with only about 0.04 gold medals per million people for China, and 0.12 per million for the US.

But as an economist we pretend to be consistent, so let us look instead at the cumulative weighted medals (bronze equivalent) per capita. The table below shows the results for the ‘top 30’ countries according to this medal per capita criterion.  Again, Jamaica atop: it got about 10 (bronze) medal equivalents per million people.

And among notable others following this per capita medal ranking, witness Norway (4.5 medals equivalent per million), Australia, Slovenia, Mongolia, New Zealand, Cuba (3.5), Georgia (2.7) and Latvia, all among the top ranked 15.  And the UK (1.6 medal equivalent per million) places a rather respectable 22nd place.  This bodes well for their 2012 London Olympics, because there is always an additional host country boost on medals.   You cannot find the US in this table, because it would rank only 44th out of the 197 country participants.  China would be 66th.

 

Click  on the image to see fuller list

Foul!, some will cry, no doubt. I may soon hear that all what counts is absolute total power, who cares about per capita anything...or about softer power.  Those more subtle may remind me that even if the size of country delegations vary a lot, the number of athletes per sport is capped at the Olympics, and, further, for most team sports only one team per country can compete. 

But the point is that even if the number of participants per country is not proportional to its population, larger countries not only have larger Olympic contingents, but can rely at home on a much larger qualifying pool of athletes, vetting the very top talent required to then go to the Olympics to win a medal.  Further, studies suggest that there is also a ‘large market superstar’ effect: more talented people finding more financial returns by being in a larger market, which provides an additional advantage to very large countries.

Still, let me be considerate to larger countries, and analyze the rankings only among those with over 20 million people, as shown below in Table 2.  39 out of 52 such large countries obtained medals, and a number of those large countries performed well even on a per capita basis. Australia is the runaway standout, with 4.4 (bronze) medal equivalents per million inhabitants, followed by the solid performances of the UK (1.6) and South Korea (1.4), then by France, Canada, Germany, Ukraine and Russia (1.0-1.2), then by Italy, Spain, Kenya and Romania (0.8-0.9). 

 

Click on the image to see fuller list

Still, some will continue to cry foul.  Even economists will criticize me; some may say that instead of the per capita measure I should be calculating medal ranks relative to the country’s GDP, so to try and get an ‘efficiency’ ranking of sorts.  But this does not make sense, because of governance: it would be easy for Zimbabwe and North Korea to be ranked at the top of the medal totem pole (per unit of GDP), simply by misgoverning the country to such an extent that they run it to the ground.  Then the denominator (GDP) in the calculation virtually disappears, propelling them to the top of such ill-advised relative medal count ranking…

So we could stick with Jamaica atop, with Australia getting an honorable mention, in the per capita rankings.  And in giving top honors to Jamaica, we are erring on the safe side: if we would have allowed flexible weights given to gold, silver and bronze according to the actual difference in performance between the first, second and third best athletes, then Jamaica would win by a landslide -- thanks to the stunning gap between Bolt (and some of his Jamaican teammates) and all others!

Ok, in ending, some may still tell me: who cares about counting medals!  Indeed, this is an exercise in minor relativism, first, in order to move away from the medal rank obsession among huge powers.  And second, I am trying to insinuate that it may be futile to have a foolproof method of figuring out which country wins the medal count, even if we thought it was important to do so.  While the original context was not exactly the same, it is relevant to revisit the (Nobel Prize-winning) Arrow’s ‘Impossibility Theorem’ of well over 50 years ago, proving that there is no one superior way of rank ordering.  Arrow won then, Bolt won now.  The rest is relative.

Comments

PER CAPITA BEING USED AS A POLITICAL TOOL

Mr kaufmann,

The Maldivian president uses per capita income of the country to boast that he brought development to country but he forgets or deliberately not mention that it was only few rich people who is earning that income.

Now in the election (Maldives presidential election 2008) campaign he compares facilities of Maldives with the neighboring countries, especially south Asian countries ( India, Sri lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan)where the population is more than 1000% higher than in Maldives.

The Maldives which has a population less than 300,000, if won a single bronze in Olympics it would have mattered. It could have beaten US, China or Australia who had won gold according to your fool proof method of accessing.

Weight gold-silver-bronze

Weight gold-silver-bronze 3-2-1 is to deeply undervalue gold medal. Ask any Olympic athlete if he or she would rather have 3 bronzes or 1 gold. I can assure you they'll say 1 gold. American sports fans have said that to end a competition in a tie is like kissing your sister. Well, a 2nd place finish is not even a tie, and a 3rd place finish is even less.
Furthermore, per capita measure is also flawed for Olympics, because the number of athletes sent by each country is not proportional to the population. Per capita would be valid if two points are met: 1) the size of each delegation is proportional to the country's population, and 2) the athletes are selected randomly within the population.

Best weighting scheme?: Impossible to tell

No measure is perfect, and cannot be, see at the end.

But don't throw out the per capita measure with the bathwater. There may be a potential distortion for very small countries, but only 2 countries with less than half a million inhabitants (Iceland and Bahamas), out of 34 such very small countries, got any medals, and none got gold.

And the fact that the number of athletes per country is not exactly proportional to their population is not fatal to also using a per capita measure, because:
i) there is still a high correlation between population and athletic contingent at the Olympics (about 0.5)--for instance the US had well over 650 participants, while Jamaica and Kenya had less than 60,
and,
ii) for a larger country, the athlete that qualified for the Olympics comes from a larger potential national pool, and thus more likely to get a medal. And then, once at the Olympics, for instance in track, about 80-100 competitors start to compete in the heats, to eventually end with only the very top 3 getting medals. So the quality dimension matters enormously, which relates to the original national pool.

What is the optimal weight that should be given to gold, silver and bronze?

I simply pointed out that neither giving zero weight to silver and bronze (why are these medals still awarded, then?), nor equal weight to them with gold (as in the US media), makes a lot of sense.

Whether the scheme should be 3,2,1 or 6,2,1, or other, can be debated. Ad nauseum, in fact, because nobody will have 'the' superior answer. That corollary can be derived from the brilliant Impossibility Theorem by Arrow over fifty years ago.

Incidentally, check out this comment by James, at http://thekaufmannpost.net/who-actually-won-the-beijing-olympic-medal-ra..., who points us to this site presenting some of the data in nice graphics, including per capita (though giving equal weights to each one of the three medals):
http://www.youcalc.com/apps/1219403616554

Olympics and social conservatism?

Another reason why countries do not have equal chances to win Olympic medals (ceteris paribus) is the extent of female participation in sports. This is especially relevant for socially conservative Muslim countries that elect not to draw athletes from more than 50% of their population, thereby choosing to ignore a pool of talent that will lessen their chances to win medals. They de facto opt out of 50% of the disciplines. Those who do field female athletes tend to recruit them among non-conservative strata of society, which are a minority, thus contributing to narrow the pool of talented female athletes. This factor is in part responsible for the poor performance of Muslim countries in the Olympics.

Indeed, the first predominantly Muslim country in the medal ranking is Kazakhstan (29th), followed by secular Turkey (37), then Azerbaijan (39) and Uzbekistan (40). If you consider that the last two countries and Kazakhstan are heirs to the great Soviet-era tradition of excellence in sports, and that they are still influenced by secular trends inherited from communism, then the record of Muslim countries is even more dismal: Indonesia (ranked 42nd, despite being one of the most populous nations on earth) and Iran (ranked 51st, with two medals) would then top the list of medal-winning Muslim countries.

Oly medal count

I would like to know how many athletes got medals. This would emphasize team sports and I'll bet the distance between different countries medal counts would be spread out further. For example, the American men got a silver in water polo. With a squad of 13, that would accumulate to a much higher per capita score.

In your article you

In your article you claimed:
"And in fact population size is one of the best explanators of total medal haul at Olympics, even if many other factors matter as well (including being the host country, governance, etc.)."

I would say population size does not explain total medal haul at Olympics well at all, just look at the top 20 most populeous countries, only China, U.S. Russian, Japan, Germany, and France are within the top 20 on the medal tally (6/20).
On the other hand, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Indonesia, Mexico, Philippines, Vietnam, Egypt, Iran, and Thailand have won less than 5 total medals (10/20).

Clearly, population is not the most important factor that affect Olympic medal returns.

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hello...i think that the ranking is pretty good but unfaire...:) thats rught i said it UNFAIR.

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