Press Subsidies
Press Subsidies
- Mart OtsMart OtsMedia, Management, and Transformation Centre, Jönköping University
- and Robert G. PicardRobert G. PicardReuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford
Summary
Due to its function as a watchdog or fourth estate in democratic societies and a variety of commercial challenges, policy-makers have undertaken initiatives to support the production and distribution of news. Press subsidies are one such policy initiative that particularly aims to provide support to private news producers. Paid as direct cash handouts or indirect reduced taxes and fees, they exist in some form in almost every country in the world. Subsidies are not uncontroversial, their effectiveness is unclear, and their magnitude, designs, and areas of application, differ across nations and their unique economic, cultural, and political contexts.
After periods of declining political and public interest in media subsidies, the recent economic crisis of journalism, and the rising influence of various forms of click-bait, fake, native, or biased news on social media platforms, has brought state support of original journalism back on the agenda.
Subjects
- Journalism Studies
- Mass Communication
- Media and Communication Policy