The Oxford Olympics Study 2016: Cost and Cost Overrun

By Bent Flyvbjerg, Allison Stewart, Alexander Budzier, July 2016

The objectives of the Oxford Olympics study are to (1) establish the actual outturn costs of previous Olympic Games in a manner where cost can consistently be compared across Games; (2) establish cost overruns for previous Games, i.e., the degree to which final outturn costs reflect projected budgets at the bid stage, again in a way that allows comparison across Games; (3) test whether the Olympic Games Knowledge Management Program has reduced cost risk for the Games, and, finally, (4) benchmark cost and cost overrun for the Rio 2016 Olympics against previous Games.

 
About the publication
Title:
The Oxford Olympics Study 2016: Cost and Cost Overrun 
Description:
The objectives of the Oxford Olympics study are to (1) establish the actual outturn costs of previous Olympic Games in a manner where cost can consistently be compared across Games; (2) establish cost overruns for previous Games, i.e., the degree to which final outturn costs reflect projected budgets at the bid stage, again in a way that allows comparison across Games; (3) test whether the Olympic Games Knowledge Management Program has reduced cost risk for the Games, and, finally, (4) benchmark cost and cost overrun for the Rio 2016 Olympics against previous Games. 
Publikation type:
Other reports, publications and longer articles 
Publication year:
2016 
Publication month:
July  
Publisher:
Said Business School
Language:
English
Number of pages:
27
ISBN-number.:
None
Subjects:
Events, Sports economy
Keywords:
olympics, costs, cost overrun 
Notes:
None

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