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Debate: Should governments bailout journalism?
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Revision as of 00:12, 7 May 2009 (edit) Brooks Lindsay (Talk | contribs) (→Background and context) ← Previous diff |
Current revision (15:39, 27 October 2010) (edit) Omega Venom2 (Talk | contribs) (→Background and context) |
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===Background and context=== | ===Background and context=== | ||
- | [[Image:Newspapers.jpg|right|120px]][[Capital.jpg|left|150px]]In 2008 and 2009, journalism entered what many called a crisis in its existence, with many newspapers and media companies failing to become profitable in the wake on significant shifts to online content and online advertising, in the face of rising competition from classifieds services such as Ebay and Craigslist, and in the face of the 2009 and 2009 financial crisis.[[Image:United States With many major newspapers closing down, such as the Seattle PI and Rocky Mountain News, media companies declaring bankruptcy, The Tribune Company (which owns many of US newspapers) - including the Los Angeles Times - filing for bankruptcy protection in December of 2008, and with significant government bailouts going to the banking and automobile manufacturing industry, many began calling for a "bailout" or government subsidization for the journalism industry. | + | [[Image:Newspapers.jpg|right|120px]][[Image:United States Capital.jpg|left|180px]]In 2008 and 2009, journalism entered what many called a crisis in its existence, with many newspapers and media companies failing to become profitable in the wake on significant shifts to online content and online advertising, in the face of rising competition from classifieds services such as Ebay and Craigslist, and in the face of the 2009 and 2009 financial crisis.[[Image:United States With many major newspapers closing down, such as the Seattle PI and Rocky Mountain News, media companies declaring bankruptcy, The Tribune Company (which owns many of US newspapers) - including the Los Angeles Times - filing for bankruptcy protection in December of 2008, and with significant government bailouts going to the banking and automobile manufacturing industry, many began calling for a "bailout" or government subsidization for the journalism industry. |
- | A variety of proposals have been presented for how the government might "bailout" the journalism industry. Some have suggested a direct lump sum gift to specific companies, amounting, some suggest, to between 5 and 10 billion dollars. Others suggest a tax exemption of various kinds for newspapers, or the elimination of postal fees. Another proposal includes offering credits of around $200 to all citizens to be used to subscribe to any news publication they choose. There is much debate about these approaches, covered below in this pro/con article. | + | |
+ | ariety of proposals have been presented for how the government might "bailout" the journalism industry. Some have suggested a direct lump sum gift to specific companies, amounting, some suggest, to between 5 and 10 billion dollars. Others suggest a tax exemption of various kinds for newspapers, or the elimination of postal fees. Another proposal includes offering credits of around $200 to all citizens to be used to subscribe to any news publication they choose. There is much debate about these approaches, covered below in this pro/con article. | ||
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====Con==== | ====Con==== | ||
- | *'''Society would be better off with creative destruction in journalism.''' [http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9787518-38.html Declan McCullagh. "Should you be taxed to subsidize 'The New York Times'?". CNET. September 28, 2007] - "probably the biggest reason to be wary of higher taxes to help out newspapers is the broader one: Bailing out an industry that's suffering because of technological change or increased competition is not a wise choice in the long run. Afternoon newspapers are largely a defunct breed for the obvious reasons; would society really be better off if taxes were raised to subsidize such money-losing ventures for purposes of nostalgia?" | + | *'''[[Argument: Creative destruction in journalism would be good for society| Creative destruction in journalism would be good for society]]''' [http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9787518-38.html Declan McCullagh. "Should you be taxed to subsidize 'The New York Times'?". CNET. September 28, 2007] - "probably the biggest reason to be wary of higher taxes to help out newspapers is the broader one: Bailing out an industry that's suffering because of technological change or increased competition is not a wise choice in the long run. Afternoon newspapers are largely a defunct breed for the obvious reasons; would society really be better off if taxes were raised to subsidize such money-losing ventures for purposes of nostalgia?" |
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====Con==== | ====Con==== | ||
- | *'''Journalism is not dying, it is more alive and open than ever.''' [http://www.inquisitr.com/14118/journalist-calls-for-government-assistancefor-journalists/ Duncan Riley. "Journalist Calls For Government Assistance…For Journalists". The Inquisitr. January 2, 2009] - "The argument that journalism is dying has already been disproved many times before. It is the last argument of those unable to adapt to the new reality of publishing news. Quite the opposite, journalism, in its many forms is the strongest it has ever been in the history of man kind. No longer is the written word the exclusive domain of an elite few, and guided by media proprietors with set agendas." | + | *'''[[Argument: Journalism is not dying, it is more alive than ever| Journalism is not dying, it is more alive than ever]]''' [http://www.inquisitr.com/14118/journalist-calls-for-government-assistancefor-journalists/ Duncan Riley. "Journalist Calls For Government Assistance…For Journalists". The Inquisitr. January 2, 2009] - "The argument that journalism is dying has already been disproved many times before. It is the last argument of those unable to adapt to the new reality of publishing news. Quite the opposite, journalism, in its many forms is the strongest it has ever been in the history of man kind. No longer is the written word the exclusive domain of an elite few, and guided by media proprietors with set agendas." |
- | *'''Daily newspapers add little value, should be allowed to die.''' [http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=96292 Joseph Farah. "Bail out newspapers?". World News Net. April 28, 2009]: "Now, it occurs to me that Brooks is laboring under the delusion that newspapers like the one that formerly employed her services are actually doing investigative journalism into government waste, fraud, abuse and corruption. They aren't. They haven't been for a long time. [...] And this is the very reason they are going bankrupt. No one wants to read them any more – at any price. They have out-served their usefulness." | + | *'''[[Argument: Daily newspapers add little, let them die| Daily newspapers add little, let them die]]''' [http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=96292 Joseph Farah. "Bail out newspapers?". World News Net. April 28, 2009]: "Now, it occurs to me that Brooks is laboring under the delusion that newspapers like the one that formerly employed her services are actually doing investigative journalism into government waste, fraud, abuse and corruption. They aren't. They haven't been for a long time. [...] And this is the very reason they are going bankrupt. No one wants to read them any more – at any price. They have out-served their usefulness." |
- | *'''Newspapers can succeed by adopting new media.''' [http://www.inquisitr.com/14118/journalist-calls-for-government-assistancefor-journalists/ Duncan Riley. "Journalist Calls For Government Assistance…For Journalists". The Inquisitr. January 2, 2009] - "That some journalists are finding it tough does not equal there is no money to be had either. Smart journalists, and media companies have embraced new media, and while they may not have replaced their offline revenue streams in full yet, even during the recession online streams at some outlets have actually increased at a time print advertising in particular is dying. The true difference today is that the closed markets of old have been replaced by open markets with vibrant competition, and it is in these spaces that some journalists believe that the market is unfair. The time of Journalism as a closed shop with life long opportunities has passed." | + | *'''[[Argument: Newspapers can succeed by adopting new media| Newspapers can succeed by adopting new media]]''' [http://www.inquisitr.com/14118/journalist-calls-for-government-assistancefor-journalists/ Duncan Riley. "Journalist Calls For Government Assistance…For Journalists". The Inquisitr. January 2, 2009] - "That some journalists are finding it tough does not equal there is no money to be had either. Smart journalists, and media companies have embraced new media, and while they may not have replaced their offline revenue streams in full yet, even during the recession online streams at some outlets have actually increased at a time print advertising in particular is dying. The true difference today is that the closed markets of old have been replaced by open markets with vibrant competition, and it is in these spaces that some journalists believe that the market is unfair. The time of Journalism as a closed shop with life long opportunities has passed." |
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*'''[[Argument: Subsidization would damage independence of journalism| Subsidization would damage independence of journalism]]''' [http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9787518-38.html Declan McCullagh. "Should you be taxed to subsidize 'The New York Times'?". CNET. September 28, 2007] - "The main reason I say the answer should be [that government do] nothing [for the journalism industry] is that government money tends to come with strings attached. Sure, at first, a handout may seem free. But over time, that tends to change. Look at the ongoing controversies over the National Endowment for the Arts. In response to controversial photographs (including a provocative retrospective of photographer Robert Mapplethorpe's work) in an NEA-funded exhibit, Congress did two things. It reduced the NEA's budget for the next fiscal year and then slapped a new restriction on the agency, saying that its grants must take 'into consideration general standards of decency and respect for the diverse beliefs and values of the American public.'" | *'''[[Argument: Subsidization would damage independence of journalism| Subsidization would damage independence of journalism]]''' [http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9787518-38.html Declan McCullagh. "Should you be taxed to subsidize 'The New York Times'?". CNET. September 28, 2007] - "The main reason I say the answer should be [that government do] nothing [for the journalism industry] is that government money tends to come with strings attached. Sure, at first, a handout may seem free. But over time, that tends to change. Look at the ongoing controversies over the National Endowment for the Arts. In response to controversial photographs (including a provocative retrospective of photographer Robert Mapplethorpe's work) in an NEA-funded exhibit, Congress did two things. It reduced the NEA's budget for the next fiscal year and then slapped a new restriction on the agency, saying that its grants must take 'into consideration general standards of decency and respect for the diverse beliefs and values of the American public.'" | ||
- | *'''Subsidization damages journalism's freedom to criticize government.''' [http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9787518-38.html Declan McCullagh. "Should you be taxed to subsidize 'The New York Times'?". CNET. September 28, 2007] - "One argument for tax subsidies, and the Columbia Journalism Review article invokes it at length, is that newspapers' 'role of informing citizens is crucial to democracy' through aggressive reporting on government malfeasance. But supporting that kind of aggressive reporting, it seems to me, is the worst argument for government funding--it would be the first type of reporting killed, openly or covertly, when the inevitable political pressure is brought to bear. (I wonder if I'd even be permitted to write this commentary if my salary were paid by the government. And would a taxpayer-subsidized newspaper ever publish an editorial calling for lower taxes?)" | + | *'''[[Argument: Subsidization damages journalism's freedom to criticize| Subsidization damages journalism's freedom to criticize]]''' [http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9787518-38.html Declan McCullagh. "Should you be taxed to subsidize 'The New York Times'?". CNET. September 28, 2007] - "One argument for tax subsidies, and the Columbia Journalism Review article invokes it at length, is that newspapers' 'role of informing citizens is crucial to democracy' through aggressive reporting on government malfeasance. But supporting that kind of aggressive reporting, it seems to me, is the worst argument for government funding--it would be the first type of reporting killed, openly or covertly, when the inevitable political pressure is brought to bear. (I wonder if I'd even be permitted to write this commentary if my salary were paid by the government. And would a taxpayer-subsidized newspaper ever publish an editorial calling for lower taxes?)" |
- | *'''Journalism bailout would be payoff for biased election coverage.''' [http://www.ourblook.com/The-Media/Gov-t-Bailout-for-Newspapers.html Gerry Storch. "Gov't Bailout for Newspapers?". Our Blook]: "Consider also that many people feel America's newspapers were basically in the tank for Obama with slanted coverage during last year's presidential election. As Washington Post ombudsman Janet Howell wrote after the election, 'I'll bet that most Post journalists voted for Obama. I did.' If papers were now to take a bailout from the Obama administration, wouldn't it have the look ... and smell ... of a payoff?" | + | *'''[[Argument: Journalism bailout would be payoff for biased election coverage| Journalism bailout would be payoff for biased election coverage]]''' [http://www.ourblook.com/The-Media/Gov-t-Bailout-for-Newspapers.html Gerry Storch. "Gov't Bailout for Newspapers?". Our Blook]: "Consider also that many people feel America's newspapers were basically in the tank for Obama with slanted coverage during last year's presidential election. As Washington Post ombudsman Janet Howell wrote after the election, 'I'll bet that most Post journalists voted for Obama. I did.' If papers were now to take a bailout from the Obama administration, wouldn't it have the look ... and smell ... of a payoff?" |
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|colspan="2" width="45%" bgcolor="#F2F2F2" style="border:1px solid #BAC5FD;padding:.4em;padding-top:0.5em;"| | |colspan="2" width="45%" bgcolor="#F2F2F2" style="border:1px solid #BAC5FD;padding:.4em;padding-top:0.5em;"| | ||
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===Pro/con sources=== | ===Pro/con sources=== | ||
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[[Category:Journalism]] | [[Category:Journalism]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Free speech]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Politics]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Media]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Government]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Government funding]] | ||
[[Category:Government subsidies]] | [[Category:Government subsidies]] | ||
[[Category:Government intervention]] | [[Category:Government intervention]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Government bailout]] | ||
[[Category:Business]] | [[Category:Business]] | ||
- | [[Category:Markets]] | + | [[Category:Capitalism]] |
+ | [[Category:Socialism]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Political systems]] | ||
+ | [[Category:United States]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Taxes]] |
Current revision
[Edit] Background and contextIn 2008 and 2009, journalism entered what many called a crisis in its existence, with many newspapers and media companies failing to become profitable in the wake on significant shifts to online content and online advertising, in the face of rising competition from classifieds services such as Ebay and Craigslist, and in the face of the 2009 and 2009 financial crisis.[[Image:United States With many major newspapers closing down, such as the Seattle PI and Rocky Mountain News, media companies declaring bankruptcy, The Tribune Company (which owns many of US newspapers) - including the Los Angeles Times - filing for bankruptcy protection in December of 2008, and with significant government bailouts going to the banking and automobile manufacturing industry, many began calling for a "bailout" or government subsidization for the journalism industry.
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[Edit] [ ![]() Public good: Is journalism a public good warranting of subsization? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con
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[Edit] [ ![]() Crisis? Is journalism in crisis? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con
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[Edit] [ ![]() Independence: Can journalism remain independent while receiving subsidies? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con
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[Edit] [ ![]() Free markets: Is it best to leave journalism to the markets? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con
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[Edit] [ ![]() NPR/PBS: Are these organizations good examples of subsidization? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con
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[Edit] [ ![]() Decentralized journalism: Is decentralized journalism and citizen journalism inadequate? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con |
[Edit] [ ![]() Postal rates: Should governments cut postal rates for some newspapers? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con |
[Edit] [ ![]() Subsidizing viewers/readers: Should governments subsidize viewers/readers? | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con |
[Edit] [ ![]() Pro/con sources | |
[Edit] Pro
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[Edit] Con
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[Edit] External links |