The Olympic Stadium and the Anatomy of Incompetence

Politics Economy Society Culture

Katō Hideki [Profile]

Prime Minister Abe Shinzō has finally pulled the plug on a controversial Olympic stadium plan that seemed to epitomize irresponsible government spending, but the uproar is far from over. Katō Hideki, a former Ministry of Finance official and a longtime critic of Japan’s bureaucratic and political culture, analyzes the roots and implications of the stadium fiasco.

Planning for the Long Term

Whenever a new stadium is built to host the Olympics, officials must grapple with the question of how to make use of the facility after the games are over. The Olympics and Paralympics together occupy only one month. How can one make effective use of such a structure over the next 50 or 100 years?

In recent years, the dominant trend has been to build a stadium that can later be adapted to a different purpose, as by removing temporary seating. The stadium built for the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta, was designed to facilitate its conversion to a baseball stadium, and it has since become the home of the Atlanta Braves. Sydney’s stadium was scaled down and is now used for soccer, rugby, and Australian rules football. By contrast, the huge stadium known to the world as the Bird’s Nest, home of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, was built without such a clear plan for the future and as a result has rarely been put to use in the seven years since the games. (There has been talk of demolishing the facility, given the high cost of maintenance.)

The designers of the abandoned plan for the new Tokyo Olympic stadium were looking to the future, but instead of allowing the facility to be adapted to another purpose, they tried to accommodate a wide range of functions from the outset. The main reason the planned stadium was so large and so costly to build is that it was designed from the start as a multi-purpose facility that could be used for soccer, rugby, and a wide array of cultural events, as well as future track and field meets. For the same reason, the annual cost of maintenance was estimated at a whopping ¥4 billion—about eight times the upkeep of the old National Stadium and more than enough to keep the new one operating in the red indefinitely.

With hundreds of billions of yen in public funds at stake, one might expect the officials and other involved in the process to feel the weight of responsibility for their decisions. But a sense of responsibility has been conspicuously lacking at each stage of the process.

Who's in Charge Here?

The climax and denouement of this debacle resembled a round robin of finger pointing. JSC President Kōno Ichirō insisted that any decision to pull the plug lay with MEXT, not the JSC. Education and Sports Minister Shimomura called on architect Andō Tadao, who chaired the judging committee for the design competition, to explain why such a costly design was selected in the first place. Andō countered that the jury had completed its job when it chose the design, and called on the government to explain how costs subsequently spiraled out of control. So, who bears responsibility?

Organizationally speaking, the administrative body overseeing the Olympic stadium’s design and construction is the Japan Sport Council, an incorporated administrative agency that operates under the supervision of MEXT. In 2012, the JSC set up a so-called Expert Panel in charge of the new National Stadium. The Expert Panel established a judging committee, chaired by Andō Tadao, to hold an international competition and choose a design concept from among the submissions. The committee drew up the contest rules and guidelines and ultimately selected Zaha Hadid’s design. But both the rules and the selection had to be approved at a meeting of the Expert Panel attended by two top MEXT officials—a vice-minister and the director-general of the Sport and Youth Bureau. Presiding over the entire process, presumably, was the Minister of Education and Sports.

By rights, all of these individuals from the minister on down share in the responsibility for the fiasco. But almost without exception, their response has been to pass the buck. The Expert Panel claims that JSC officials had the final say, while the JSC officials alternately point to the Expert Panel and MEXT.

A key factor behind this sorry state of affairs is the wide discretion given the JSC, a body with no expertise in the field of architecture or stadium design. Like dozens of other incorporated administrative agencies created since 1999, the JSC allows its own officials and those of its parent agency to spend vast sums of taxpayer money largely free from accountability or legislative oversight.

This lack of accountability was built into the contract concluded between the JSC and Zaha Hadid. The architect was paid ¥1.3 billion for her blueprint and associated services on the understanding that the JSC and MEXT would take over from there, handling all decisions concerning the actual construction. These decisions were essentially rubber-stamped by the Expert Panel, a group conspicuously lacking in architectural expertise. Here, in a nutshell, is a prescription for allocating huge sums of money without taking responsibility for those decisions.

next: Opacity and Incongruity

Related Tags

sports MEXT National stadium Shimomura Hakubun Japan Sport Council Zaha Hadid

Katō HidekiView article list

President of the think tank Japan Initiative. Graduated from the Kyoto University Faculty of Economics and served in the Ministry of Finance until 1997, when he founded the Japan Initiative. Has served as a professor of policy management at Keiō University and secretary general of the Government Revitalization Unit under the Cabinet Office. Author of Ajia kakkoku no keizai/shakai shisutemu (Economic and Social Systems of East Asia), Kin’yū shijō to chikyū kankyō (Financial Markets and the Global Environment), and other works.

Other articles in this report