Media Freedom, Political Knowledge, and Participation

Originally published in Journal of Economic Perspectives

This paper examines the relationship between media freedom from government control and citizens' political knowledge, political participation, and voter turnout. The paper shows that where government owns a larger share of media outlets and infrastructure, regulates the media industry more, and does more to control the content of news, citizens are more politically ignorant and apathetic.

This paper examines the relationship between media freedom from government control and citizens' political knowledge, political participation, and voter turnout. To explore these connections, the paper first examines media freedom and citizens' political knowledge in thirteen central and eastern European countries with data from Freedom House's Freedom of the Press report and the European Commission's Candidate Countries Eurobarometer survey. Next, is media freedom and citizens' political participation in 60 countries using data from the World Values Survey. Finally, media freedom and voter turnout in these same 60 or so countries with data from the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance. The paper shows that where government owns a larger share of media outlets and infrastructure, regulates the media industry more, and does more to control the content of news, citizens are more politically ignorant and apathetic. Where the media is less regulated and there is greater private ownership in the media industry, citizens are more politically knowledgeable and active. These results are robust to sample, specification, and alternative measures of media freedom.

Read the article at the American Economic Association.

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