论文标题
回归尾巴:为什么奥运会爆炸
Regression to the Tail: Why the Olympics Blow Up
论文作者
论文摘要
奥林匹克运动会是由城市和国家主持的最大,最高的,最昂贵的大型运动。与体育相关的平均托管成本为120亿美元。非竞技相关的成本通常是几倍。自1960年以来的每一次奥运会都超过了预算,平均以172%的态度,这是任何类型的大型标准的记录中最高的超支。该论文针对游戏成本测试了理论统计分布,以解释东道国和国家面临的成本风险。它首次记录了游戏的成本和成本超支,遵循了幂律分配。奥林匹克成本受到无限均值和差异的影响,对可预测性和计划产生了可怕的后果。我们将这种现象命名为“回归尾巴”:直到发生新的极端事件,迄今为止的超级事件比最大的,因此更大,因此更加破坏性和更易计划。奥林匹克力量定律的生成机制被确定为六个因果驱动因素引起的强凸力:不可逆性,固定的截止日期,空白检查综合征,紧密的耦合,较长的计划范围和一个永恒的初学者综合征。 《权力法》解释了为什么游戏如此难以计划和管理成功,以及为什么城市和国家在竞标前要三思而后行。根据权力法,确定了两种启发式方法,以更好地决定托管。最后,本文在计划和管理游戏方面制定了良好实践的措施,包括如何减轻奥运会权力法的极端风险。
The Olympic Games are the largest, highest-profile, and most expensive megaevent hosted by cities and nations. Average sports-related costs of hosting are $12.0 billion. Non-sports-related costs are typically several times that. Every Olympics since 1960 has run over budget, at an average of 172 percent in real terms, the highest overrun on record for any type of megaproject. The paper tests theoretical statistical distributions against empirical data for the costs of the Games, in order to explain the cost risks faced by host cities and nations. It is documented, for the first time, that cost and cost overrun for the Games follow a power-law distribution. Olympic costs are subject to infinite mean and variance, with dire consequences for predictability and planning. We name this phenomenon "regression to the tail": it is only a matter of time until a new extreme event occurs, with an overrun larger than the largest so far, and thus more disruptive and less plannable. The generative mechanism for the Olympic power law is identified as strong convexity prompted by six causal drivers: irreversibility, fixed deadlines, the Blank Check Syndrome, tight coupling, long planning horizons, and an Eternal Beginner Syndrome. The power law explains why the Games are so difficult to plan and manage successfully, and why cities and nations should think twice before bidding to host. Based on the power law, two heuristics are identified for better decision making on hosting. Finally, the paper develops measures for good practice in planning and managing the Games, including how to mitigate the extreme risks of the Olympic power law.