Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2012
Public service broadcasters (PSBs) are a central part of national news media landscapes, and are often regarded as specialists in the provision of hard news. But does exposure to public versus commercial news influence citizens’ knowledge of current affairs? This question is investigated in this article using cross-national surveys capturing knowledge of current affairs and media consumption. Propensity score analyses test for effects of PSBs on knowledge, and examine whether PSBs vary in this regard. Results indicate that compared to commercial news, PSBs have a positive influence on knowledge of hard news, though not all PSBs are equally effective in this way. Cross-national differences are related to factors such as de jure independence, proportion of public financing and audience share.
Soroka, McGill University (email: [email protected]); Andrew, Université de Montréal; Aalberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University; Curran, Goldsmiths, London University; Coen, Salford University; Hayashi, University of Tokyo; Jones, University of New South Wales; Mazzeleni, University of Milan; Rhee, Seoul National University; Rowe, University of Western Sydney; Tiffen, University of Sydney. This work was supported by a number of funding agencies, including: Soroka and Andrew, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Aalberg, the Research Council of Norway; Iyengar, the Korean Science Foundation; Curran, the Economic and Social Research Council, UK; Hayashi, the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science; Rhee, a Korea Research Foundation Grant, Korean Government. In addition to the appendix table in the printed version, supplementary material is available in an appendix to be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007123412000555.
1 Holbert, R. Lance, Kwak, Nojin and Shah, Dhavan V., ‘Environmental Concern, Patterns of Television Viewing, and Pro-Environmental Behaviors: Integrating Models of Media Consumption and Effects’, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 47 (2003), 177–197CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soroka, Stuart, ‘Good News and Bad News: Asymmetric Responses to Economic Information’, Journal of Politics, 68 (2006), 372–385CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Hanretty, Chris, ‘Explaining the De Facto Independence of Public Broadcasters’, British Journal of Political Science, 40 (2010), 75–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bardoel, Johannes and d'Haenens, Leen, ‘Reinventing Public Service Broadcasting in Europe: Prospects, Promises and Problems’, Media, Culture & Society, 30 (2008), 337–355CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Connolly, Sara and Hargreaves-Heap, Shaun P., ‘Cross Country Differences in Trust in Television and the Governance of Public Broadcasters’, Kyklos, 60 (2007), 3–14CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baek, Mijeong, ‘A Comparative Analysis of Political Communication Systems and Voter Turnout’, American Journal of Political Science, 53 (2009), 376–393CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iyengar, Shanto, Curran, James, Lund, Anker Brink, Salovaara-Moring, Inka, Hahn, Kyu S. and Coen, Sharon, ‘Cross-National versus Individual-Level Differences in Political Information: A Media Systems Perspective’, Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties, 20 (2010), 291–309CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Hibberd, Matthew, ‘Conflicts of Interest and Media Pluralism in Italian Broadcasting’, West European Politics, 30 (2007), 881–902CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Arma, Alessandro, ‘Broadcasting Policy in Italy's “Second Republic”: National Politics and European Influences’, Media, Culture and Society, 31 (2009), 769–786CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flew, Terry, ‘The Special Broadcasting Service after 30 Years: Public Service Media and New Ways of Thinking about Media and Citizenship’, Media International Australia, 133 (2009), 9–14CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grummell, Bernie, ‘The Educational Character of Public Service Broadcasting: From Cultural Enrichment to Knowledge Society’, European Journal of Communication, 24 (2009), 267–285CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4 Lang, Annie, ‘The Information Processing of Mediated Messages: A Framework for Communication Research’, Journal of Communication, 50 (2000), 46–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5 Bennett, Lance W. and Iyengar, Shanto, ‘A New Era of Minimal Effects: The Changing Foundations of Political Communication’, Journal of Communication, 58 (2008), 707–731CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mullainathan, Sendhil and Shleifer, Andrei, ‘The Market for News’, American Economic Review, 95 (2005), 1031–1053CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6 Norris, Pippa, A Virtuous Circle? Political Communications in Post-Industrial Democracies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000)Google Scholar
Strömbäck, Jesper and Shehata, Adam, ‘Media Malaise or a Virtuous Circle? Exploring the Causal Relationships Between News Media Exposure, Political News Attention and Political Interest’, European Journal of Political Research, 49 (2010), 575–597CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avery, James, ‘Videomalaise or Virtuous Circle?’, International Journal of Press/Politics, 14 (2009), 410–433CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knobloch-Westerwick, Silvia and Meng, Jingbo, ‘Reinforcement of the Political Self through Selective Exposure to Political Messages’, Journal of Communication, 61 (2011), 349–368CrossRefGoogle Scholar
7 See online Appendix for further discussion of this point.
8 But not inconceivable, since news programming judged similar in content might still produce knowledge effects via presentation and/or framing differences from one newscast to another.
9 Peter, Jochen, Lauf, Edmund and Semetko, Holli A., ‘Television Coverage of the 1999 European Parliamentary Elections’, Political Communication, 21 (2004), 415–433CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toril Aalberg, Peter van Aelst and James Curran, ‘Media Systems and the Political Information Environment: A Cross-National Comparison’, International Journal of Press/Politics, 15 (2010), 255–271CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolmer, Christian and Semetko, Holli A., ‘International Television News: Germany Compared’, Journalism Studies, 11 (2010), 700–717CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10 Kerbel, Matthew R., Sumaiya, Apee and Ross, Marc Howard, ‘PBS Ain't So Different: Public Broadcasting, Election Frames, and Democratic Empowerment’, Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 5 (2000), 8–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claes H. de Vreese, ‘Election Coverage – New Directions for Public Broadcasting – The Netherlands and Beyond’, European Journal of Communication, 16 (2001), 155–180CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoynes, William, ‘Political Discourse and the “New PBS”’, Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 7 (2002), 34–56Google Scholar
Lunt, Peter, ‘Television, Public Participation, and Public Service: From Value Consensus to the Politics of Identity’, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 625 (2009), 128–138CrossRefGoogle Scholar
11 Debrett, Mary, ‘Riding the Wave: Public Service Television in the Multi-Platform Era’, Media, Culture and Society, 31 (2009), 807–827CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsen, Håkon, ‘Serving The Democracy: The Debate on Public Service Broadcasting in Norway and Sweden’, Tidsskrift for Samfunnsforskning, 49 (2008), 313–342CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsen, Håkon, ‘Legitimation Strategies of Public Service Broadcasters: The Divergent Rhetoric in Norway and Sweden’, Media, Culture and Society, 32 (2010), 267–283CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brant, Kees, ‘Auditing Public Broadcasting Performance: Its Theory and Practice’, Javnost, 10 (2003), 5–11CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12 Aalberg, Aelst and Curran, ‘Media Systems and the Political Information Environment: A Cross-National Comparison’.
13 Prior, Markus, Post-Broadcast Democracy: How Media Choice Increases Inequality in Political Involvement and Polarizes Elections (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14 Carpini, Michael X. Delli and Keeter, Scott, What Americans Know about Politics and Why It Matters (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1996)Google Scholar
Bennett, Stephen Earl, Flickinger, Richard S., Baker, John R., Rhine, Staci L. and M.Bennett, Linda, ‘Citizen's Knowledge of Foreign Affairs’, Harvard International Journal of Press and Politics, 1 (1996), 1–29Google Scholar
15 Graber, Doris A., Processing Politics: Learning from Television in the Internet Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16 Xenos, Michael and Moy, Patricia, ‘Direct and Differential Effects of the Internet on Political and Civic Engagement’, Journal of Communication, 57 (2007), 704–718CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalrymple, Kajsa E. and Scheufele, Dietram A., ‘Finally Informing the Electorate? How the Internet Got People Thinking about Presidential Politics in 2004’, Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 12 (2007), 96–111CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boulianne, Shelley, ‘Stimulating or Reinforcing Political Interest: Using Panel Data to Examine Reciprocal Effects between News Media and Political Interest’, Political Communication, 28 (2011), 147–162CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tom P. Bakker and Claes H. de Vreese, ‘Good News for the Future? Young People, Internet Use, and Political Participation’, Communication Research, 38 (2011), 451–470CrossRefGoogle Scholar
17 Of course, the impact of one medium versus that of another may have less to do with the medium itself than with the content of that medium. Knowledge effects resulting from selecting newspapers instead of television newscasts are likely to be due to the tendency for newspapers to print more relevant news for the task of answering the knowledge indicators. In this way, findings on newspapers versus television may not be very different from research focused on differences between public and commercial news programmes.
18 Jenssen, Anders Todal, ‘Does Public Broadcasting Make a Difference? Political Knowledge and Electoral Campaigns on Television’, Scandinavian Political Studies, 32 (2009), 247–271CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19 Claes H. de Vreese and Hajo Boomgaarden, ‘News, Political Knowledge and Participation: The Differential Effects of News Media Exposure on Political Knowledge and Participation’, Acta Politica, 41 (2006), 317–341CrossRefGoogle Scholar
20 Aarts, Kees and Semetko, Holli A., ‘The Dividend Electorate: Media Use and Political Involvement’, Journal of Politics, 65 (2003), 759–784CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21 Holtz-Bacha, Christina and Norris, Pippa, ‘To Entertain, Inform, and Educate: Still the Role of Public Television’, Political Communication, 18 (2001), 123–140Google Scholar
Toka, Gabor and Popescu, Marina, ‘Public Television, Private Television and Citizens’ Political Knowledge’, EUI Working Papers RSCASS (2009)Google Scholar
Jenssen, Andres Todal, Aalberg, Toril and Aarts, Kees, ‘Informed Citizens, Media Use, and Public Knowledge of Parties Policy Positions’, in Toril Aalberg and James Curran, eds, How Media Inform Democracy. A Comparative Approach (New York: Routledge, 2012, pp. 138–158Google Scholar
22 Holtz-Bacha and Norris, ‘To Entertain, Inform, and Educate’.
23 Toka and Popescu, ‘Public Television, Private Television and Citizens’ Political Knowledge’.
24 Iyengar, Shanto, Hahn, Kyu S., Bonfadelli, Heinz and Marr, Mirko, ‘ “Dark Areas of Ignorance” Revisited: Comparing International Affairs Knowledge in Switzerland and the United States’, Communication Research, 36 (2009), 341–358CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curran, James, Iyengar, Shanto, Lund, Anker Brink and Salovaara-Moring, Inka, ‘Media Systems, Public Knowledge and Democracy: A Comparative Study’, European Journal of Communication, 24 (2009), 5–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curran, James, Salovaara-Moring, Inka, Coen, Sharon and Iyengar, Shanto, ‘Crime Foreigners and Hard News: A Cross-National Comparison of Reporting and Public Perception’, Journalism, 11 (2010), 1–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
25 Aalberg, Aelst and Curran, ‘Media Systems and the Political Information Environment’.
26 It is important to note that the Aalberg et al. study does not find evidence of cross-national news supply convergence over the past thirty years. If anything, the opposite trend is occurring: that is, the amount of news programming offered (and consumed) in commercialized versus publicly-oriented systems is diverging if we focus on peak viewing hours and audience share.
27 Though note that we should be careful not to blend individual-level and country-level hypotheses. Within countries, exposure to public broadcasting may be associated with higher levels of current affairs knowledge. But across countries, the existence of PSBs may or may not be associated with the provision of (and knowledge of) current affairs news. A strong PSB may increase the volume of current affairs information available on its own; it may encourage private broadcasters in the same market to present similar types of information; and/or it may encourage private broadcasters to do exactly the opposite – to focus exclusively on soft news and entertainment since the PSB takes care of the rest. The ‘net’ effect on the availability of hard news, in short, is not clear; nor is the connection between PSBs and aggregate-level knowledge across countries. See also a related discussion in the conclusions.
28 Aalberg, Toril and Curran, James, ‘Main Conclusions’, in Toril Aalberg and James Curran, eds, How Media Inform Democracy: A Comparative Approach (New York: Routledge, 2012), pp. 189–199CrossRefGoogle Scholar
29 Curran et al., ‘Crime Foreigners and Hard News’; Curran et al., ‘News Content, Media Consumption, and Current Affairs Knowledge’, in Aalberg and Curran, How Media Inform Democracy.
30 Hallin, Daniel C. and Mancini, Paolo, Comparing Media Systems: Three Models of Media and Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
31 Iyengar et al., ‘ “Dark Areas of Ignorance” Revisited’.
32 Three of those countries – Greece, Columbia and India – are not included here due to differences in survey methodology and data availability.
33 Russell W. Neuman, Marion R. Just and Ann N. Crigler, Common Knowledge: News and the Construction of Political Meaning (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
34 Rubin, Donald B., ‘Matching to Remove Bias in Observational Studies’, Biometrics, 29 (1973), 153–183Google Scholar
Rubin, Donald B., ‘Estimating Causal Effects to Treatments in Randomized and Nonrandomized Studies’, Journal of Educational Psychology, 66 (1974), 688–701CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenbaum, Paul R. and Rubin, Donald B., ‘The Central Role of the Propensity Score in Observational Studies for Causal Effects’, Biometrika, 70 (1983), 41–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenbaum, Paul R. and Rubin, Donald B., ‘The Bias due to Incomplete Matching’, Biometrics, 41 (1985), 103–116CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
35 Note, then, that unmatched individuals are dropped from matching analyses. This is of course one of the major differences between matching and more traditional approaches.
36 Heckman, James J., Ichimura, Hidehiko and Todd, Petra E., ‘Matching as an Econometric Evluation Estimator: Evidence from Evaluating a Job Training Programme’, Review of Economic Studies, 64 (1997), 605–654CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, Dan A. and Smith, Jeffrey A., ‘How Robust Is the Evidence on the Effects of College Quality? Evidence from Matching’, Journal of Econometrics, 121 (2004), 99–124CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Michalopoulos, Charles, Bloom, Howard S. and Hill, Carolyn J., ‘Can Propensity-Score Methods Match the Findings from a Random Assignment Evaluation of Mandatory Welfare-to-Work Programs?’ Review of Economics and Statistics, 86 (2004), 156–179CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Jeffrey and Todd, Petra, ‘Does Matching Overcome LaLonde's Critique of Nonexperimental Methods?’ Journal of Econometrics, 125 (2005), 305–353CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arceneaux, Kevin, Gerber, Alan S. and Green, Donald P., ‘Comparing Experimental and Matching Methods Using a Large-Scale Voter Mobilization experiment’, Political Analysis, 14 (2006), 37–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar
37 Levendusky, Matthew S., ‘Rethinking the Role of Political Information’, Public Opinion Quarterly, 75 (2011), 42–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar
38 Those advantages are discussed in some detail elsewhere; see fnn. 34 and 35, as well as the online appendix. And note that in this case, just to be sure, all the results reported below were replicated using a more traditional regression approach. Results are very similar, though with a somewhat larger effect for media exposure. This is in line with the expectation that proximity matching would yield somewhat more conservative estimates; but our focus here is not to test the relative merits of proximity matching, but rather the impact of public versus private broadcasting on knowledge, and in this regard the differences across media and across countries are very similar using either approach.
39 Becker, Sascha O. and Ichino, Andrea, ‘Estimation of Average Treatment Effects Based on Propensity Scores’, Stata Journal, 2 (2002), 358–377CrossRefGoogle Scholar
40 For a particularly useful discussion, see Marco Caliendo and Sabine Kopeinig, ‘Some Practical Guidance for the Implementation of Propensity Score Matching’ (IZA Discussion Paper No. 1588, 2005).
41 Dehejia, Rajeev H. and Wahba, Sadek, ‘Causal Effects in Nonexperimental Studies: Reevaluation of the Evaluation of Training Program’, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 94 (1999), 1053–1062CrossRefGoogle Scholar
42 Additional results are available upon request.
43 Age is divided into groups, rather than used in its raw, interval-level form, in order to achieve balance for the matching procedure. That said, results do not change when the interval-level measure of age is used as a control in an OLS regression.
44 Shehata, Adam and Strömbäck, Jesper, ‘A Matter of Context: A Comparative Study of Media Environments and News Consumption Gaps in Europe’, Political Communication, 28 (2011), 110–134CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blekesaune, Arild, Elvestad, Eiri and Aalberg, Toril, ‘Tuning out the World of News and Current Affairs’, European Sociological Review, 28(2010), 110–126CrossRefGoogle Scholar
45 See online appendix for complete results.
46 Established in 1982, Channel 4 was Britain's second commercial broadcaster, though it was not exclusively commercial – rather, it reflected (and continues to reflect) a compromise between public-service and commercial approaches. It is publicly owned, and largely commercially funded; at the same time, it has a remit of public service obligations and is regulated by the Office of Communications (Ofcom).
47 Note that the negative coefficient for ITV news is a little peculiar. We might expect private news to not contribute to knowledge; to actually reduce knowledge is another matter. That said, the impact is not implausible: exposure to private television content may distract enough from current affairs information gleaned elsewhere that viewers know less about current affairs than they would had they not spent so much time on ITV. Of course, this may also be partly a product of self-selection – those who know less about current affairs continue to know less by watching ITV.
48 All financial information applies to the 2010 fiscal year (ending 31 March 2011) and is sourced from Annual Reports published online by each broadcaster.
49 Note that we do not distinguish between public monies derived from licence fees versus parliamentary appropriation. Though we might expect that those broadcasters reliant on compulsory, universal licence fees would be most inclined to air content with broad appeal (i.e., something for everyone/audience-driven); and parliamentary appropriation may be the funding model best suited for public broadcasters to act as ‘market failure broadcasters’ – filling gaps in programming created by entertainment-driven commercial media. This is purely conjecture at this stage, however.
50 Here, audience share is proportion of total television viewing, on average, for each hour of prime time. Note that we include all channels available from the main public broadcaster in each country. Thus in Britain, for instance, audience share is the combined share for BBC One, BBC Two, BBC Three and so forth. Note also that the standard definition of prime time varies somewhat by country, but ranges from a minimum of 18:00 to a maximum of 23:00. Audience numbers are current (2010 and 2011), as reported in the Annual Report of each broadcaster and which frequently appear in press reports within in each country. Media use is typically measured by private, independent firms such as BBM Canada, Auditel Italy, BARD UK, and Gallup Norway.
51 Iyengar et al., ‘Cross-National versus Individual-Level Differences in Political Information’; Curran et al., ‘Media Systems, Public Knowledge and Democracy’.
52 Hanretty, Chris, Public Broadcasting and Political Interference (London: Routledge, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
53 Note, the de jure independence statistic for RAI corresponds with 2005 broadcasting legislation in Italy. It is possible that the impact of the Gasparri Law on RAI, enacted in the spring of 2004, is not fully captured by this statistic.
54 Brekken, Tove, Thorbjørnsrud, Kjersti and Aalberg, Toril, ‘News Substance: The Relative Importance of Soft and De-contextualized News’, in Toril Aalberg and James Curran, eds, How Media Inform Democracy: A Comparative Approach (New York: Routledge, 2012), pp. 64–78Google Scholar
55 Hamilton, James T., ‘The (Many) Markets for International News: How News from Abroad Sells at Home’, Journalism Studies, 11 (2010), 650–666CrossRefGoogle Scholar
56 Napoli, Philip M., ‘Market Conditions and Public Affairs Programming: Implications for Digital Television Policy’, Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 6 (2001), 15–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
57 McChesney, Robert W. and Nichols, John, The Death and Life of American Journalism: The Media Revolution that will Begin the World Again (Philadelphia: Nation Books, 2010)Google Scholar
58 In Norway and Britain, for instance, television viewing has about twice the impact of newspaper consumption on what people know about the world.
59 Devra C. Moehler and Naunihal Singh. ‘Whose News Do You Trust? Explaining Trust in Private versus Public Media in Africa’, Political Research Quarterly, 64 (2011), 276–292CrossRefGoogle Scholar
60 Recall also that knowledge variance between disadvantaged and advantaged groups is directly related to the broadcasting model. Disadvantaged groups in the United States perform especially poorly on knowledge indicators which suggests that gaps between groups will grow as media systems become more commercialized and/or if PSBs weaken.
61 Iosifidis, Petros, Public Television in Europe: Technological Challenges and New Strategies (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007)Google Scholar
62 Seymour, Emily and Barnett, Steven, ‘Factual International Programming on UK Public Service Television, 2005’ (London: Communication Research Unit, University of Westminster, 2006)Google Scholar
Winston, Brian, ‘Towards Tabloidization? Glasgow Revisited, 1975–2001’, Journalism Studies, 3 (2002), 5–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
63 Tracey, Michael, The Decline and Fall of Public Service Broadcasting (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
64 Hanretty, Chris, Public Broadcasting's Continued Rude Health (London: British Academy Report, 2011)Google Scholar
65 Gavyn Davies, ‘The BBC and Public Value’, in Dieter Helm, Damian Green, Mark Oliver, Simon Terrington, Andrew Graham, Bill Robinson, Gavyn Davies, Jeremy Mayhew and Luke Bradley-Jones, eds, Can the Market Deliver? Funding Public Service Television in the Digital Age (New Barnet, Herts.: John Libbey, 2005), pp. 129–50; Andrew Graham and Gavyn Davies, Broadcasting, Society and Policy in the Multimedia Age (Luton: University of Luton Press, 2001).