• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Olympics bonuses tailored to prevent squandering

BANGKOK
Mon May 12, 2008 12:49pm EDT

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand is offering its athletes big cash incentives for Olympic gold medals -- but will pay out in installments to stop them squandering it.

Oddly Enough  |  China

Gold medalists will earn 10 million baht ($314,000), silver medal winners will take six million baht, while a bronze is worth four million baht -- sizable sums in a country where the minimum wage is just 203 baht ($6) a day.

However, half of the money will be paid over a 20-year period to prevent Thai Olympians, many of whom are from poor backgrounds, from frittering it away.

"We don't want them to spend it all at once, they might need this money when they get old," Thai Olympic committee member Charoen Wattanasin told Reuters.

"We will give it to them every month. Most of them manage their finances but there have been a few bad examples in the past."

Thai Olympic chiefs decided to stagger the payments after several cases of athletes finding instant fame and blowing their money on gambling and expensive party lifestyles.

In 2004, boxer Manus Boonjumnong famously squandered the $600,000 his Athens Olympics gold medal earned him on card games, soccer betting and excessive partying.

His pregnant wife left him and his coaches sent him overseas in a penniless state to help resurrect his career. Manus, who insists he is now a reformed character, is favorite to win again in Beijing.

Thailand, which has around 70 Beijing-bound athletes so far, has only won Olympic medals in weightlifting, boxing and taekwondo.

Its athletes won three golds, one silver and four bronze medals at the 2004 Games.

(Editing by Ossian Shine)

("Countdown to Beijing Olympics" blog at blogs.reuters.com/china)



More from Reuters

Photo

Time Warner Cable, Fox at impasse; blackout looms

NEW YORK (Reuters) - About 13 million Time Warner Cable Inc subscribers will lose Fox programing at midnight unless the cable service provider reaches a last-minute deal to pay News Corp fees to broadcast the network's shows.

 A picture of an arrow in this file photo. REUTERS/File

The coming Great Inflation

Real or imagined, Americans have plenty of things to worry about. Should inflation be one of them?  Full Article 

Lawyer Wilfred Goh poses for a photo at his office in Singapore December 30, 2009. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash

Good-bye, Dubai

Dubai's debt bombshell in November sealed the deal, but many expats were eyeing greener pastures well before that.  Full Article