Paris follows Athens and London with tourist-driven post-Olympic Games uplift to economy
- The Games will provide a uplift to French gross domestic product in the third quarter, a temporary jolt similar to those of past summer Olympics

As the Paris Olympics fade into memory and the Paralympics get set to start in the French capital, signs of the Games’ immediate benefits to the French economy are emerging.
Services expanded at the fastest pace in more than two years in August, according to S&P Global’s Purchasing Managers’ Index, as tourists flocked to sports venues and filled Parisian cafes and bars to view the events.
Bloomberg Economics predicts the Games will provide a 0.3 percentage point boost to French gross domestic product in the third quarter, “mostly through higher consumption on tickets, broadcasting and travel related services”, said analyst Eleonora Mavroeidi. “This effect, however, will be temporary and we see growth slowing sharply in 4Q.”
The upwards jolt to GDP is similar to those of past summer Games, which ranged from around 0.1 to 0.4 percentage points, according to Bloomberg Economics estimates. Britain’s services PMI jumped in August 2012 during the London Games, and the economy got an immediate boost of about 0.2 percentage points, according to ONS estimates at the time.

The increase suggested “that the Olympic and Paralympic Games may have had a positive and significant effect on household spending patterns”, the ONS said then. In addition, outlays on food, drinks, hotels, transport and even other entertainment services rose, helped by more tourism.