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Ailing tigers bite into sport

Tuesday, January 13, 1998 Published at 13:08 GMT
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image: [ Organisers are having to cut their budgets, sometimes by as much as half ]
Ailing tigers bite into sport
The economic difficulties in Asia are having an impact on the three major sports events scheduled to take place in the region this year.

Japan will stage the Winter Olympics as planned next month, though the organisers have had to cope with a soaring budget and sagging economy.

But doubts are being expressed over future bids to hold the games, while the Commonwealth Games in Malaysia and the Asian Games in Thailand have suffered from major budget reductions.

The biggest impact has been on the Asian Games in Bangkok later this year.

The organisers have already announced that the total budget for the games had been cut by almost half from the original projection to $38 million.

The committee has denied that a major sponsor is threatening to pull out. But it admitted the organisers and the sponsor were trying to negotiate a compromise.

It is just the latest hitch in preparations for the Asian Games. The construction of some of the venues is behind schedule and plans for a $3 billion mass transport system has been scrapped.

The Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur in September are also under financial pressure.

The initial budget allocation was almost $700 million, but devaluation and the falling value of the Malaysian currrency, the ringgit, has reduced it by 40%.

The budget has been cut for the opening and closing ceremonies, overseas training programmes for athletes has been reduced, and there are reports that plans to buy 20 ambulances have been shelved.

The better news for both events is that much of the revenue from the games will be coming in as dollars.

According to a newspaper survey, interest in bidding to stage the Olympics at Osaka in the year 2008 is waning.

The survey of more than 2,000 readers in Osaka showed support had fallen below 60%.


Relevant Stories

The downward spiral of the Asian tigers (08 Jan 98 | Special Report)
Asian markets recover (13 Jan 98 | Business)
British, Japanese premiers pledge action against financial turmoil (12 Jan 98 | World)

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Winter Olympics - Japan
Asian Games - Thailand

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Summaries

In this section

Indonesia signs IMF deal
Factory sales 'to protect jobs'
Judge rejects Microsoft challenge over 'biased' adviser
British unions demand better deal for part-time workers
Red light for privatised trains
Markets get jitters despite Indonesia pact
Decision due on £40m van package
Seven-year director's ban for Venables
Millennium bug could cripple government (From Sci/Tech)
Dixons customers cash in on sales
Jobless drop worsens skills shortage
Microsoft clashes with Internet case judge
Profit warning over ferry passenger lists
Christmas sales down
Inflation down but target missed
Microsoft Tokyo offices raided
Far East woes could hit exporters
Job-cuts ahead for UK finance sectors?


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