Is competition in the mass media market an effective deterrent against media capture? Does it prevent political groups from influencing reporting? This paper shows that in some cases it does not. Building on the literature on media capture, the model highlights that, under fairly generic assumptions, high competition in the media market can drive the cost of media capture to zero, making capture easier. Moreover, it highlights conditions on the parameters where the effect of competition on capture is non-monotonic, i.e. capture may occur for levels of competition lower, but also higher, than those leading to media freedom.
Trombetta, F., Rossignoli, D., The Price of Silence: Media Competition, Capture, and Electoral Accountability, <<EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY>>, 2021; (69): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2020.101939] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/179252]
The Price of Silence: Media Competition, Capture, and Electoral Accountability
Trombetta, Federico
Primo
;Rossignoli, DomenicoSecondo
2021
Abstract
Is competition in the mass media market an effective deterrent against media capture? Does it prevent political groups from influencing reporting? This paper shows that in some cases it does not. Building on the literature on media capture, the model highlights that, under fairly generic assumptions, high competition in the media market can drive the cost of media capture to zero, making capture easier. Moreover, it highlights conditions on the parameters where the effect of competition on capture is non-monotonic, i.e. capture may occur for levels of competition lower, but also higher, than those leading to media freedom.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.