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Paper #800

Título:
What do the papers sell?
Autores:
Matthew Ellman y Fabrizio Germano
Data:
Diciembre 2004
Resumen:
We model the market for news as a two-sided market where newspapers sell news to readers who value accuracy and sell space to advertisers who value advert-receptive readers. We show that monopolistic newspapers under-report or bias news that sufficiently reduces advertiser profits. Newspaper competition generally reduces the impact of advertising. In fact, as the size of advertising grows, newspapers may paradoxically reduce advertiser bias, due to increasing competition for readers. However, advertisers can counter this effect of competition by committing to news-sensitive cut-off strategies, potentially inducing as much under-reporting as in the monopoly case.
Palabras clave:
Two-sided markets, advertising, media accuracy, media bias, media economics.
Códigos JEL:
L13, L82
Área de investigación:
Dirección de Empresa y Estudios de las Organizaciones
Publicado en:
Economic Journal, 119, 537, pp. 680-704. 2009
Con el título:
What do the papers sell? A model of advertising and media bias

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