Séminaire

TThe Power of Propaganda: The Effect of U.S. Government Bias on Cold War News Coverage of Human Rights Abuses

Nancy Qian (Brown University)

28 mai 2009, 11h00–12h30

Toulouse

Salle MF 323

Development Economics Seminar

Résumé

This paper investigates the extent to which the government can strategically distort a free media market by examining the e¤ect of the U.S. State Department's bias in human rights reporting on coverage in the New York Times. To establish causality, we exploit a novel source of variation in the strategic value of a country to the U.S. government. We show that the State Department favorably under-reports abuses in countries that it values strategically. This reduces news coverage by approximately 28% from what it should be. Our findings suggest that these distortions are not likely to be consumer driven. (P16 Political Economy, L82 Media) The need for high-quality reporting is greater than ever. It's not just the journalist's job at risk here. It's American democracy. Walter Cronkite in a speech at Columbia University, January, 2007.

Voir aussi