Women's empowerment and Olympic success
New research shows that nations with greater women’s empowerment win
more medals and send more athletes to the Summer Olympics. The effect
of women’s empowerment held for both men and women, although it was
stronger for female athletes, according to a study by Grand Valley
State University researchers. The findings were published in April
2014 in the Journal of Sports Economics.
The research, led by Aaron Lowen, associate professor of
economics at Grand Valley State, provides evidence for the popular but
previously untested hypothesis that women’s empowerment leads to
international athletic success. The authors examined the success of
more than 130 nations participating in the Summer Olympics from 1996
through 2012. Similar to previous studies, they found that more
populous and wealthier nations were more successful. However, they
also showed that another important predictor of success was the Gender
Inequality Index or GII. The GII includes information on women’s
reproductive health, political empowerment and participation in the
labor force, and it ranges from 0 (no inequality between genders) to
100 (extreme inequality). The authors found that a 10-point decrease
in GII was associated with winning about one extra medal for men and
1.5 medals for women. They found similar results when looking at
participation and other measures of success, such as medals won per athlete.
The researchers focused on the Summer Olympics because it is the
world’s largest elite sports competition in terms of participating
individuals and nations and the number of distinct events. The
Olympics are also ideal because women’s participation has steadily
increased to a level that is almost as high as men’s.
“Many studies have shown that women’s empowerment is linked with
economic development and better outcomes for children, but there’s
been little research on whether it leads to female sports success,”
said Lowen. “We read claim after claim that it does, so we decided it
was worth finding out if it’s true. Fortunately, the results turned
out to be clear cut. No matter how we conducted the analyses or what
measures of success we used, women’s empowerment predicted Olympic success.”
Besides finding support for the connection between gender
equality and Olympic success, there were some unanticipated findings.
One was that greater gender equality was also associated with greater
success for men, even after controlling other success predictors, such
as population and wealth. “The benefit to male athletes was a
surprise, and we don’t really understand why this occurs,” said Lowen.
“One idea is that societies that bring women into the workforce
generate wealth in ways that are not captured with traditional wealth
measures, such as gross domestic product. These societies may afford
both men and women greater opportunities for recreational and personal
pursuits, including elite athletic training and competition.”
Another unexpected finding was that there was no “Title IX
effect” for U.S. women. The well-known federal law prohibits sexual
discrimination in educational opportunities, including sports, and has
been credited with the success of U.S. women in international
competition. Robert Deaner, associate professor of psychology at Grand
Valley State and co-author of the study, said: “Clearly, U.S. women
have been remarkably successful in soccer, basketball and many other
sports. But once we incorporated other key predictors of Olympic
success — population, wealth, and women’s empowerment — we found
little evidence that U.S. women are exceptional in comparison to women
from other countries or even U.S. men. This doesn’t mean Title IX
hasn’t been important for U.S. women — instead it suggests that other
countries must have their own means of supporting elite women’s sports.”
The authors stressed there are still outstanding questions,
including the direction of causality. “We’ve shown that women’s
empowerment and elite athletic success go together, but we can’t say
which causes which,” said Lowen. “To really get at this issue, we’d
need some experimental or exogenous change that directly affected one
or the other. For instance, if several nations randomly received
significant additional resources for women’s sports, we could see if
increased women’s empowerment followed, or vice versa. This is
obviously a difficult question to answer, but it’s an important one.
It might help policy makers decide where to invest their resources.”
The authors of the study were Aaron Lowen, Robert Deaner, and
Erika Schmitt, all of Grand Valley State University.
For more information, contact Aaron Lowen at [email protected].
Aaron Lowen joined the Economics Department at Grand Valley State
University in 2003. He earned a doctorate in economics at the
University of Iowa. His research covers a wide variety of topics
including the gender wage gap, recycling and waste disposal policy,
anti-corruption policies, and sports as it relates to the topics of
motivation and gender equality.
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