No
matter how much this is denied, most people probably link Olympic success with
some sort of national, moral superiority. Medals equal national pride. Well,
this is precisely the idea which I will
NOT touch with a ten-foot poll in the present article. What I DO want to do is
offer some OTHER explanations, or at least correlates, of Olympic success and
failure. This is pop sociology, speculation meant to draw your interest.
This
year, once again, the usual countries dominated the medal count. Since the
collapse of the Soviet Union, the US has usually been dominant, with China
rising as somewhat of a competitor in recent years. During the Cold War, the
Soviets and their vassals (particularly East Germany) were in the forefront of
the medal count, thanks to massive cheating.
At
first, a country’s most obvious advantage seems to be a large population: The
top eight countries in the overall medal count - the US, the UK, China, Russia,
Germany, France, Japan and Italy - are all among the world’s twenty most
populous nations. However, such rankings are unfair, as they do not take
population size into account. Is China, with nearly a billion and a half
people, not entitled to more medals than Grenada, with a population of 100,000? (There are fourteen thousand times as many Chinese as Grenadians!).
A
fairer measure is a PER CAPITA
ranking. So I added up every
country’s total score by giving 3 points for every gold medal, 2 for every
silver and 1 for every bronze. I then ranked the countries' per capita scores.
And
lo and behold, the ranking almost totally reverses itself. Look at the table:
Countries Ranked by
number of Medals in Proportion to Population
|
||
Rank
|
Country
|
Number of people it takes to
earn at least one bronze medal
|
1
|
Grenada
|
53,000
|
2
|
Bahamas
|
94,250
|
3
|
Jamaica
|
104,423
|
4
|
New Zealand
|
135,114
|
5
|
Croatia
|
183,043
|
6
|
Denmark
|
226,760
|
7
|
Slovenia
|
257,875
|
8
|
Bahrein
|
266,400
|
9
|
Hungary
|
289,853
|
10
|
Fiji
|
297,333
|
11
|
Armenia
|
330,000
|
14
|
Netherlands
|
402,976
|
15
|
Australia
|
428,018
|
17
|
Great Britain
|
449,417
|
21
|
Switzerland
|
553,267
|
27
|
France
|
804,938
|
29
|
Germany
|
938,244
|
30
|
Belgium
|
941,583
|
32
|
Italy
|
1.068 million
|
33
|
Qatar
|
1.085 million
|
34
|
Canada
|
1.089 million
|
38
|
Russia
|
1.281 million
|
39
|
USA
|
1.287 million
|
45
|
Kenya
|
1.485 million
|
46
|
Japan
|
1.734 million
|
61
|
Israel
|
4.032 million
|
66
|
Brazil
|
5.390 million
|
73
|
Ethiopia
|
8.283 million
|
77
|
China
|
9.829 million
|
80
|
Mexico
|
15.288 million
|
82
|
Egypt
|
30.503 million
|
84
|
Indonesia
|
36.795 million
|
85
|
Philippines
|
50.350 million
|
86
|
Nigeria
|
173.600 million
|
87
|
India
|
417.333 million
|
88-207
|
119 countries
|
zero medals
|
If
you count medals on a per capita basis, small countries earn far more of them
than large countries: The top ten are Grenada, the Bahamas, Jamaica, New
Zealand, Croatia, Denmark, Slovenia, Bahrain, Hungary and Fiji. This demolishes
the common-sense assumption that countries with large populations are more
successful at the Olympics.
When
we take population into account, we see
that the most successful at the Olympics are the small island nations, the two
countries “Down Under” and the small Eastern European countries.
The
relationship between Olympic success and population size is actually INVERSE.
On a per capita basis, the United States ranks 39th, just behind
Russia at 38th. “Powerhouse” China is 77th! India, with
one sixth of the world’s population, is dead last at 87th. So, Ceteris paribus (other things being
equal), a country’s population size is NOT an advantage.
So,
why do many large countries nevertheless collect sizable numbers of medals?
As
I said earlier, many people are tempted to equate a country’s Olympic prowess
with moral superiority. Of course, this is absurd. The former German Democratic
Republic was a perennial Olympic powerhouse and also one of the world’s most
horrendous societies. India’s Olympic performance is pathetic, yet its culture
and its many achievements are second to none.
Money:
Obviously, RESOURCES are essential. Rich countries that can afford well-funded
national sports organizations can be expected to excel. The US and Western
Europe are cases in point. Then, too, many countries’ governments subsidize
their sports and their Olympic programs for nationalistic purposes. Hitler set
this trend in motion in preparation for the Munich Olympics in 1936. This is
what the Soviet block did throughout the Cold War, and what Russia and
Communist countries such as China and North Korea still do today. To such
countries, sports and the Olympic games are tools of propaganda to maximize
national prestige. Cheating is often used as an enhancement.
Culture: In addition, many
countries such as Hungary, Kazakhstan and the Baltic States have hung on to a
tradition of athletic excellence, a national focus on “physical culture.”
Countries seem to value sports in and
of itself. Nowhere is the importance of CULTURE more evident than “down under:”
I have personally experienced the enormous focus on sports, athletic
competition and physical culture in Australia and New Zealand.
Remember
that the Olympic movement is a WESTERN phenomenon. It began in ancient Greece
in 776 BC, and was resurrected in 1894 by the French Baron Pierre de Coubertin.
The events featured at the Olympics are largely Western sports. The more
westernized a society is, the more successful it is likely to be at the
Olympics. The absence of India and of most Muslim countries from among the
ranks of successful Olympic participants does not indicate any inferiority on
their part, but the fact that young people in those cultures have different
hobbies, games, pastimes and sports than we do in the West. It is no
coincidence that Japan, South Korea and to a lesser extent Malaysia and Taipei
have achieved Olympic success: They are by far the most westernized Asian
societies. Today, China is westernizing at breakneck speed, with similar
Olympic results.
Conclusion: I personally find
“physical culture” (as the French refer to the entire fitness movement) an
extremely positive thing. Apart from when it is pushed to Spartan extremism, it
is an essential element of modern societies’ public health and quality of life.
The ancients knew it, calling it mens
sana in corpore sano - a healthy mind in a healthy body. The modern Olympic
movement revived this ancient ideal. It also aimed to replicate the Greeks’
genius by offering the games as a substitute for war in international
competition.
Sports
and athletic competition are positive values. So is fandom, by and large.
Olympic success is strongly correlated to a country’s quality of life and the
quality of its public health. Olympic success is an indication that a country
enjoys good quality of life and good public health because its culture values
physical culture. The absence of Olympic success on the part of India,
Indonesia, Vietnam, many other Asian countries and much of the Muslim world is
not only due to poverty (and currently, war), but also to the fact that such
countries are less far along the process of modernization and the adoption of
Western-style physical culture.
Africa’s
and Latin America’s poor Olympic
performances reflects something different: These are the two poorest continents of the world, and clearly they
lack the resources for generous funding of sports programs. In addition, many countries on both continents are politically unstable and dysfunctional.
In
sum, while money is important, so is culture. At first, a society has a
culture. This culture results in a political system that is either functional
or dysfunctional, and that system in turn produces an economy which provides
the population with an adequate standard of living and distribution of wealth -
or NOT. It must be the goal of any society to provide the population with good
quality of life. I firmly believe that a proper level of physical culture is an
important ingredient and contributor to quality of life. The pursuit of Olympic
success is a positive value, as long as it is not part of a nationalistic and
chauvinistic propaganda campaign.
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© Tom Kando 2016
© Tom Kando 2016