Levelling the playing field
Which countries punch above their weight at the Olympics? Is there any correlation between gun control laws and gun crime? And why do US presidents' mums live so long?
Levelling the statistical playing field
If you adjust for the fact that some countries are richer than others, and some have more people in them, can we work out what the Olympic medal tally should look like, based only on those factors?
Gun control
Last week's mass-shooting at a cinema in Colorado has - not surprisingly - intensified America's bitter and long-running argument with itself about gun control. The argument is political and highly partisan. But it is also practical: would tighter gun laws actually lead to fewer gun deaths? You might think it's obvious that they would. But it seems the evidence isn't quite that clear.
Tax
The treasury minister David Gauke came in for some stick this week for arguing that people who pay plumbers and cleaners cash-in-hand, while not breaking the law, are immoral. Several commentators have argued that the problem is small beer compared to the huge amounts sheltered from the taxman by large companies and rich individuals. Are they right?
Leaders' mums
Listener Mike Shearing wrote to us after noticing that the mums of post-war US presidents seem to have died very late, while British prime ministerial mothers seem to die young. Had he - he asked - found something of significance? He certainly had.
How has Britain changed since 1908?
A new book by researchers at the House of Commons Library charts in numbers how Britain has changed since it hosted the 1908 Olympics. Their findings may surprise you.
Presenter: Tim Harford
Producer: Richard Knight.
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Which countries will get the most Olympic medals?
Duration: 02:48
Broadcasts
- Fri 27 Jul 2012 16:30Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Sun 29 Jul 2012 20:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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