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IN THIS ISSUE: 

Personal Money Planning's Newsletter
August 20, 2016
Thanks for checking out our newsletter! 

This time, we talk a bit about the Olympics; have links to my recent newspaper articles; share the Monthly Market Monitor; and end with a little snippet about entertaining your plants.

Have a great week!
 

Gary Silverman, CFP®

Soapbox
The Soapbox
Costly Olympics
Gary Silverman caricatureI really get into the Olympics. It's pretty much the only thing I watch on TV for a couple weeks every two years. One nice thing about the Rio games is that they are around the same longitude as us and thus I don't have to watch at 2 a.m. Though trust me, I was watching at 2 a.m. many times in the past.

These Olympics are not just a spectacle, they are an expensive spectacle. While few spend as much as China did back in 2008  or Russia in 2014 (even though winter is supposed to be cheaper to put on), it's hard to call any of them cheap.

While watching the opening celebration for these 2016 Olympic I wasn't even thinking about the pollution, crime, barely finished facilities, Zika and cheating Russian athletes. I suspected that the games would go off without a hitch and be highly-entertaining, despite some of the challenges that the athletes would face in their housing and venues. But once the games are over, the nation of Brazil is likely to experience a familiar dose of economic trauma.

Why? A recent study by the Council on Foreign Relations looked at the economics of different Olympic games, and found that the costs inevitably outweigh the benefits. Part of the problem is enormous cost overruns; when nations bid for the games, they typically underestimate the cost of constructing stadiums, fields, apartments for the athletes, safe transportation and security. The initial budgets for the Beijing and Sochi games were $20 billion and $10.3 billion respectively (the final tabs were $45 billion and $51 billion). Building appropriate venues for the games in Athens, Greece actually led to a government bankruptcy.

If those facilities could be recycled into popular tourist destinations, the expense might be justified. But the report found that the more typical situation is a lot of so-called "white elephants"-expensive facilities that have limited post-Olympics use. Beijing's famous "Bird's Nest" stadium cost $460 million to build and now sits unused. The entire city of Sochi, Russia stands idle. One of the Greek stadiums is being used to hold refugees fleeing from Afghanistan. 

The Rio Olympics are estimated to cost $20 billion for infrastructure alone, even after plans to overhaul the city's sewage system were cancelled due to cost overruns. Estimates suggest that the city will attract only a fraction of the anticipated 480,000 (International Olympic Committee estimate) to 600,000 (Brazilian Ministry of Tourism estimate) visitors, which means that the already-compromised fiscal situation in Brazil will get worse at some point after the games have left town. And don't expect the sewage situation to be cleaned up once the visitors have departed.

Meanwhile, it is getting more expensive simply to bid on hosting the games. When you add up the cost of drawing up construction plans, hiring consultants, organizing the way the event will be run and the necessary travel expenses, a bid can cost as much as $150 million-as it did when Tokyo made its 2016 bid. The city of Toronto recently backed out of bidding on the 2022 games, due to an estimated $60 million in bidding expenses-and of course that doesn't count the rumored under-the-table payments to IOC executives.

That leaves two countries still in the running for the 2022 Winter Games: Kazakhstan and China. It may not be a coincidence that neither country has to worry about pesky voters and citizens claiming that the costs are not justified by the benefits.

Articles
Gary's Latest Articles
From the Times Record News
Life gets in the way of saving
Gary often talks about the "optimal" rate of saving as you go through life, but even he knows that life can get in the way of saving. Read more...

Empty nest, full savings? 
You haven't been saving what you should because the kids needed so much. Now that they're out of the house, you can make that up, right? Read more...
Money101
Money 101:
Monthly Market Monitor
bargraph-money.jpg Take a look at this installment of the Monthly Market Monitor from the folks at Eaton Vance. Click here
Final
Final Thought
Talk to your ficus and sing to your tree (but they're not listening)

seedling_sprout.jpg
Do plants respond to your touch? Do they feel or enjoy music or your singing voice?

According to new research conducted at the University of Western Australia, Lead researcher Olivier Van Aken says that plants rapidly respond when you pinch a flower, step on them or just brush by them while walking.

Although plants don't possess a brain in the ordinary sense, they appear to stay aware of their surroundings and circumstances at the genetic level. In one study, spraying water droplets on plants caused them to change the way thousands of genes were expressed within minutes of the stimulus. The reaction stopped within half an hour. Another study showed that gently touching or patting the leaves and stems of plants elicited the same reaction.

Other studies have shown that plants "know" by the same touch sensitivity when insects are eating them, and secrete hormones which discourage the feeding.

But when the researchers played music or sang to the plants, there appeared to be no genetic response. If you want to sing for your plants, recognize that they're probably not paying attention. You may want to opt for a nice massage instead.



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