Wimbledon Effect
The Wimbledon Effect is a chiefly British and Japanese analogy, which possibly originated in Japan, that compares the tennis fame of the Wimbledon Championships with the economic success of the United Kingdom's financial services industries – especially those clustered in the City of London.
The point of the analogy is that a national and international institution can be highly successful despite the lack of strong native competition, as in modern tennis Britain has produced very few Wimbledon singles champions, with only Anne Jones, Virginia Wade and Andy Murray winning the tournament in the Open Era.
Financial context
London's financial industry has boomed since the deregulation of British financial markets in the 1980s under the Thatcher government – but has also become dominated by foreign companies, especially American investment banks, rather than British firms.The analogy is typically used to mark a debate over whether it matters if an industry is primarily domestically owned if easing of foreign ownership restrictions allows the economy to benefit from foreign investment and increased global competition. The phrase can be used positively to assert the economic success of liberal attitudes towards foreign ownership ; or it can be used negatively to emphasize how these policies have eroded a nation's ability to produce globally leading domestic companies. This opposing perspective is represented by economic patriotism and "national champion" policies.
File:Asashoryu and Hakuho glare at each other 2008 May.jpg|thumb|left|190px|The 68th yokozuna Asasyoryu and the 69th yokozuna Hakuho, who are both from Mongolia
The analogy has also been used in policy discourses outside Britain – most notably in the business discourse of Japan, whose financial markets and other parts of the economy have not yet been substantially opened up to foreign competition compared with its international peers. It has also, for instance, been used in banking reform debates in South Korea, as well as in discussing business process outsourcing in India.