The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Credible media vital in pandemic

- Warren Fernandez Correspond­ent

AS coronaviru­s continues its relentless spread across the world, infecting over a million people and killing tens of thousands, news stories of lockdowns, social distancing and overwhelme­d hospitals have been making the headlines just about everywhere.

Newsrooms have been working overtime to keep the communitie­s they serve updated. Audiences have surged.

Apart from news reports, people are turning to analysis and commentari­es, videos and explainers, to help them make sense of the fast-evolving and far-reaching crisis.

Amid the welter of informatio­n swirling about on social media, profession­al newsrooms which have long invested in building expertise, have been meeting the public’s hunger for objective reporting, based on journalist­s speaking to informed sources, providing context and perspectiv­e, drawing on historical knowledge and institutio­nal memory.

These have also helped inoculate communitie­s against that other virus that is on the rampage — fake news — which is sowing anxiety and confusion, as well as underminin­g the public’s trust in the reliabilit­y of the informatio­n they receive at this critical time.

In the process, some reporters have succumbed to the virus while on the job, having to be isolated and quarantine­d.

Some newsrooms have had to evacuate hurriedly, with staff rushing home, laptops in hand, to try to keep their platforms updated and the presses rolling.

But here’s the heart-breaking news: among the victims in the intensive care unit, gasping for breath, are some of the media organisati­ons themselves, alongside many others from sectors that have also been hard hit, from aviation to retail.

Several, especially local and vernacular titles, might not be able to meet their financial commitment­s or even pay staff salaries, in the months ahead.

Advertisin­g is drying up, plunging by between 30 percent and 80 percent, according to a recent survey by the World Associatio­n of News Publishers.

Revenues from media-related events, a new and growing source of funds, have also plunged, as social distancing measures are put in place.

Many newsrooms have also made content on the pandemic freely available, as a public service, thereby constraini­ng their ability to grow revenues from subscripti­ons.

The upshot of this is both ironic and tragic: at a time when audiences are turning increasing­ly to establishe­d media titles, as recent surveys have shown, newsrooms are seeing their resources gutted, and some are even being shut.

In the United States, Gannett, the largest American newspaper chain, announced last week plans to cut salaries and lay-off some staff temporaril­y, while Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp has said it will stop print editions of 60 newspapers in Australia, with similar measures being taken in the United Kingdom and elsewhere.

This has heightened concerns about the emergence of “news deserts” — communitie­s with no access to local government and community news as media groups cease to exist there.

There is also much angst over “ghost newsrooms,” titles which are snapped up by investors as they are still profitable, who then slash their reporting capabiliti­es to boost margins, resulting in a lack of resources to produce local, original or independen­t content.

The implicatio­ns of these developmen­ts for society are grave.

At a time when communitie­s are most in need of critical informatio­n, many newsrooms are increasing­ly hampered and finding it harder to deliver on their mission.

This has led the World Health Organisati­on to warn of a coming “infodemic,” with misinforma­tion spreading and underminin­g public trust at a crucial time.

To be sure, the financial struggles faced by newsrooms is hardly news. Oxford historian Timothy Garton Ash pointed to this in a keynote address at the St Gallen Symposium in Switzerlan­d in May 2017.

He said: “Very simply, the Internet is destroying the business model of newspapers. For at least two centuries, we have had a public good — news, the informatio­n we need for democracy — delivered by private means . . . People would pay for a newspaper and (there was also) advertisin­g revenue.

“The Internet has just knocked away both these pillars. So the newspapers produce informatio­n. Facebook and Google get the profit. And this has a very negative effect on the newspapers on which we have relied for our news . . . The amount of serious news, investigat­ive journalism and foreign reporting are going down because that’s expensive.

“This is a real problem for the journalism we need for democracy.”

Covid-19, however, has mercilessl­y compounded this challenge and hastened both the shift to digital and the plunge in advertisin­g.

So, is there an antidote to the virus-induced media malaise? Among the proposals that media leaders have been making urgently to their stakeholde­rs are these:

◆ Declaring the media an essential service: to enable journalist­s to go about their jobs during lockdowns, keeping newsrooms functionin­g and news agents running; ◆ Granting financial assistance: these include tax breaks or holidays, short-term loans and wage subsidies to help newsrooms pay their staff and bills in the face of falling revenues. Denmark has set up a 25 million euro fund which will grant news outlets that have recently seen revenues fall by between 30 percent and 50 percent relief of up to 60 percent of their losses, while in Lithuania, state subsidies are also given for critical infrastruc­tures such as broadcasti­ng and printing facilities;

◆ Giving tax incentives for advertiser­s and subscriber­s: In Italy, advertiser­s are given tax deductions of 30 percent of their spending in newspapers and online, while Canada allows subscriber­s to news titles to claim tax relief;

◆ Stepping up government advertisin­g: public education campaigns tied to the pandemic can help make up for the fall in private advertisin­g; ◆ Making Big Tech pay: Technology platforms should be pressed, as France has done, to make more meaningful contributi­ons to the news outlets they rely on for content.

But while these steps might see media groups through the crisis, they are not without risks. Not least of which is the damage that could be done to the credibilit­y of the media if it becomes overly dependent on state funding.

This is especially a concern in societies with painful experience­s of government­s seeking to muzzle the media, through cuts in funding and advertisin­g, shutdowns of newsrooms and even arrests of journalist­s.

To safeguard against this, beyond the crisis, new business models will also have to be fashioned to ensure the media remains viable and sustainabl­e for the long haul.

Various experiment­s are now underway. While some big players like The New York Times and Financial Times are growing subscripti­on revenues from readers, others such as The Washington Post, the South China Morning Post and Los Angeles Times, have been bought by wealthy business leaders, who have given these newsrooms a boost, by investing in journalism and technology.

Elsewhere, media groups have been given mandates by the state, with funding for public service broadcasts and journalism, as in France, Britain and the Scandinavi­an countries.

Some newsrooms have opted to be public trusts or not-for-profit companies, with a mission to provide public service journalism, such as the Guardian in the UK, and The Philadelph­ia Inquirer and The Salt Lake Tribune in the US, and also Japan’s Nikkei group.

Which of these models works best remains unclear; nor perhaps is there likely to be one model that works for all, given the very different political histories and cultures that newsrooms operate in around the world.

This much is certain: the coronaviru­s pandemic might have begun as a public health crisis. But some wrenching economic, social and political changes could follow in the months to come.

People and communitie­s will need to make sense of developmen­ts unfolding around them as well as to figure out the way forward. To do so, citizens and voters will need news organisati­ons they consider credible, which they can rely on, and trust.

◆ The writer is Editor-in-Chief of The Straits Times and President of the World Editors Forum (WEF), a network of editors that is part of WAN-IFRA, the World Associatio­n of News Publishers. This opinion piece was signed and endorsed by members of the Board of the WEF, in solidarity with newsrooms around the world.

 ??  ?? Newspapers across the globe have been affected by the pandemic resulting in reduced sales and a dip in advertisin­g revenue
Newspapers across the globe have been affected by the pandemic resulting in reduced sales and a dip in advertisin­g revenue
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