| I think the biggest issue is big cities have most of this infrastructure in place this basically acts as an excuse to do city wide renovations. The problem is when it's dumped into smaller countries and into small cities where everything is built for no reason. Expanding a highway or improving subway systems in a major city like London or New York is shit the city governments fight over getting done. A small city building rail connections and expanding highways, building swathes of luxury condos, etc is destined to collapse the economy. When they have to sell off condos in the Olympic village for $0.10 on the dollar you have a cascade effect down the property market. Why by an ordinary condo when I can get this luxury one no ones buying because everyone who could is now buying in the Olympic village. Why buy a small house on the edge of town when I can buy a nice condo downtown that would've been double my price. The Olympics are an international event. I don't get why it can't be held internationally. Why do we need soccer in the same country as track and field? Do we have people doing high dive also doing shotput? Is it on a scale we should even care about if we prevent one Olympian? It would be more manageable, at less risk of failure and would actually benefit the cities its in by not overwhelming the infrastructure. |
Because its a money losing proposition for the host(s) in any case, and the payoff (such as it is) is the prestige of being the unique host. I suspect that splitting the events N ways would result in per-host costs of greater than 1/N times the single-host cost, and per-host perceived benefits of less than 1/N times the single-host benefits, and even less willingness to host.