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The media's role in the financial crisis
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The Media's Role In The Financial Crisis
By Dan Gillmor
January 23, 2009
Our government's current operating principle seems to be bailing out people who were culpable in the financial
meltdown. If so, journalists are surely entitled to billions of dollars.
Why? Journalists were grossly deficient when it came to covering the reckless behavior, sleaze and willful
ignorance of fundamental economics, much of which was reasonably obvious to anyone who was paying attention,
that inflated the housing and credit bubbles of the past decade. Their frequent cheerleading for bad practices -- and
near-total failure to warn us, repeatedly and relentlessly, of what was building -- made a bad situation worse.
Journalists are notoriously thin-skinned, defensive about even legitimate criticism. But this lapse has been too
blatant even for reporters to miss. Two-thirds of financial journalists in a recent survey said the news media
"dropped the ball" in the period before the crisis became apparent. (Still, almost none of them assigned the press
any responsibility for what has occurred.)
It's not as if this is the first time a big issue has had too little discussion while there was still time to fix the problem.
Journalism has repeatedly failed to warn the public about huge, visible risks. The media's complicity in the Iraq
War-mongering and 1990s stock bubble were the most infamous recent examples until the financial bust came
along, but the willful blindness to reality was uncannily similar.
To be fair, in these cases and in every other such foreseeable calamity, at least several journalists or news
organizations stood out in retrospect for having seen what was coming. Almost alone among the Washington press
corps, the Knight Ridder (now McClatchy) newspaper group's Washington Bureau asked the right questions as the
Bush Administration herded the nation toward war. A few scattered stories in the media, including Fortune
magazine and The New York Times business section, wondered about the stock and housing price bubbles, not to
mention the implications of new financial policies and instruments that made the credit expansion so dangerous.
And some commentators (including bloggers who did serious, if widely ignored, reporting) were firmly on the case.
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- 2. But to say that the press was all over the housing/credit mess before it blew up, as the American Journalism
Review argued recently, defies reality. The good journalism was overwhelmed by the happy-face, herd coverage,
usually laced with quotes from people who stood to benefit from the bubble's continued inflation. We saw story after
story about new cadres of home-loan borrowers, about people who "flipped" homes for big short-term profits, and
about the way home values kept rising in unprecedented ways. We saw few cautionary tales about what happens
when bubbles burst, how families can and economies can face ruin. It's probably no coincidence that most
newspapers have weekly real estate pages or sections, the main purpose of which is to collect advertising for
property sales.
And even when the reporting was solid, which was rare enough, news organizations didn't follow up in appropriate
ways. If we can foresee a catastrophe, it's not enough to mention it once or twice and then move on.
That common practice suggests an opportunity. When we can predict an inevitable calamity if we continue along
the current path, we owe it to the public to do everything we can to encourage a change in that destructive behavior.
In practice, this means activism. It means relentless campaigning to point out what's going wrong, and demanding
corrective action from those who can do something about it.
So in Florida, Arizona and California, among other epicenters of the housing bubble, newspapers might have told
their readers -- including governmental officials -- the difficult truth. They could have explained, again and again,
that the housing bubble would inevitably lead, at least locally, to personal financial disaster for many in their regions,
not to mention fiscal woes for local and state governments. How many should have done this, given the media's at
least partial reliance on advertising from those who profited from the bubbles? Any that cared to do their jobs.
Some plain-as-day woes don't present any financial conflicts. For example, the threat to New Orleans from
hurricane-created flooding was clear long before Katrina, and the New Orleans Times-Picayune did run a series of
articles warning of what might happen years before the hurricane struck. What it didn't do was follow up in the
relentless kind of way that might have spurred local, state and federal action to prevent or mitigate the inevitable
disaster.
Californians are absurdly unprepared for the epic earthquake that everyone knows is coming. News organizations
have warned about it, but haven't drilled home the message in sufficiently graphic ways of the havoc it will cause,
and haven't campaigned enough for pre-quake mitigation that would save lives and treasure.
Californians are especially practiced at pretending not to see what's visible in front of them. The state's fiscal crisis
is far worse than most, in large part because the governor and state legislature -- with media winks and nods --
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Asia Pacific Head Office
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©2009
- 3. generated a torrent of new red ink, via borrowing, to cover new spending and earlier debts. The piper is now
demanding his payment, and his price threatens to be ruinous. (Will this be our national fate in a few years?)
Journalists have an opportunity, right now, to ask questions we need answered -- and they should be asking again
and again, and again. Taxpayers (or rather our children and grandchildren, who'll pay for this) are forking over $700
billion to bail out financial institutions, the first installment of trillions we're collectively spending to try to save
American capitalism itself. Yet we aren't allowed to know how the money is being spent. This isn't merely opaque;
it's the blackest of boxes, and occasional queries from journalists aren't helping to make it transparent. Congress is
the most culpable party in this case; as usual, lawmakers have dodged their responsibility, but an insistent
journalistic campaign wouldn't hurt and might actually help dislodge some facts.
Once upon a time, news people went on campaigns when they saw the need. Sometimes this led to yellow
journalism, as when newspaper owners used their publications to stir up the populace in dangerous ways. At other
times, however, old-fashioned press campaigns led to change for the better; back when editorial pages had more
influence in communities, a few courageous newspaper editors in the South campaigned for school integration, and
made an enormous difference.
Journalistic activism -- precisely what we need despite most journalists' disdain for the idea -- won't save
newspapers that are suffering from a perfect storm of dwindling leadership and advertising losses. But as Online
Journalism Review's Robert Niles recently wrote, journalists should "accept the responsibility to demand action"
based on what they learn when they do their jobs right.
The media's collective irresponsibility has ill-served its audience. If journalists want to keep the audience they have,
never mind build credibility for the future, they need to become the right kind of activists. More than ever, we need
what they do, when they do it well.
For further information on this article and the
coaching programs available please contact:
Image Group International
Asia Pacific Head Office
Tel: (+61 3) 9820 4449
E: info@imagegroup.com.au
W: www.imagegroup.com.au
©2009