ROGER PARTRIDGE: Why subsidising news won't save democracy
- Administrator

- Sep 23
- 3 min read
A response to Koi Tū's “news deserts” report
Local journalism faces genuine crisis. Towns across New Zealand risk becoming “news deserts” where civic life unfolds without professional scrutiny. Dr Gavin Ellis’s comprehensive report for Koi Tū documents this decline with sobering thoroughness.
Ellis deserves credit for mapping an urgent problem. His 48-page analysis reveals how newspaper closures correlate with reduced civic engagement, higher corruption rates, and weakened democratic participation. The data is extensive, the international scope impressive.
Where the report falters is not in diagnosing the disease but in prescribing the cure. Ellis puts forward a long menu of options for government intervention – funding schemes, tax credits, infrastructure platforms, and obligations for state advertising in local outlets. His analysis faces several challenges: dismissive treatment of legitimate concerns raised by New Zealand’s experience with the $55 million Public Interest Journalism Fund, questionable assumptions about market failure, and weak international evidence for subsidy effectiveness.
The PIJF’s real lessons
Ellis describes criticism of the PIJF as a “disinformation campaign.” This mischaracterises legitimate concerns about the fund’s design and consequences. The problem wasn’t imaginary bribery but the structural risk created when government funding comes with political conditions.
The fund required recipients to commit to specific political interpretations and policy positions as eligibility criteria. Whatever the merit of those positions, requiring journalists to affirm particular viewpoints to access taxpayer money creates obvious independence concerns. The problem isn’t the content of the conditions but the principle of conditioning media funding on political alignment.
This created a form of state capture – where government effectively controls an industry through funding conditions. Even outlets that didn’t receive funding understood they needed to maintain positions acceptable to funders to remain eligible. As I wrote in the Herald earlier this year, the result was predictable: trust in media fell from 53% to 45% during the fund’s operation.
Market evolution, not failure
Ellis frames journalism’s decline as market failure requiring correction. But markets adapt to consumer preferences. If people increasingly choose different information sources, this may reflect changing needs rather than collective delusion.
The report notes New Zealanders show high interest in local news but low willingness to pay for it. This “paradox” might simply mean people value local information but not the particular bundle traditional outlets offer. Facebook groups, community blogs, and WhatsApp networks may serve neighbourhood connection better than we realise.
Modern audiences increasingly bypass traditional media for social networks, podcasts, and direct sources. This shift may reflect rational preferences rather than market failure requiring correction.
The correlation problem
Ellis’s report suffers from another weakness common to policy advocacy: confusing correlation with causation. Yes, areas without newspapers show higher corruption and lower civic engagement. But this doesn’t prove that creating subsidised outlets will restore civic health.
Perhaps both newspaper closures and civic dysfunction reflect deeper changes in how communities function and citizens engage with public life. The report acknowledges that “institutional trust is in short supply, affecting both media and governments.” But it doesn’t seriously consider whether declining trust drives both media failure and democratic problems. If citizens don’t trust institutions, subsidising one institution to monitor others may not restore civic engagement.
International evidence
Ellis catalogues government media interventions worldwide but provides little evidence they’ve solved democratic problems. Canada spends millions on journalism tax credits. Ireland has launched democracy reporting schemes. Sweden heavily subsidises newspapers. Yet none show measurably improved civic participation.
Nordic countries supposedly exemplify successful media support. But these societies achieved high civic engagement and low corruption long before current subsidy schemes. Their success likely reflects deep cultural factors that can’t be replicated through journalism funding.
Moreover, even subsidised European newspapers struggle with the same technological forces disrupting New Zealand media. Government money may delay closures but hasn’t solved the fundamental challenge of connecting with modern audiences.
A different path
Ellis's menu does include some healthy choices that avoid the pitfalls of state funding. Relaxing charitable status rules for community journalism would remove barriers without creating dependence. Philanthropic funding could support outlets without political interference.
These targeted approaches work through civil society rather than state bureaucracy.
They diversify funding sources instead of concentrating risk in political decisions about eligibility and conditions.
The distinction matters because any government funding scheme faces an impossible choice. Either it’s so broad that profitable companies receive windfalls, or so targeted that conditions inevitably creep in. The PIJF chose targeting and got political conditions. Future schemes would face identical pressures.
Professional journalism serves vital democratic functions, and local democracy deserves better than news deserts. But it also deserves better than subsidised journalism whose independence becomes negotiable. The cure must not prove worse than the disease.
This piece was sourced from Roger Partridge's substack, Plain Thinking
Localism is so obviously a perfect match with online based platforms. Minimal cost, plenty of local "citizen journalists" voluntarily providing far more coverage than one harassed employed journo possibly could, and local advertisers getting a low cost connection to local customers. Defaulting to regard "online" as ensuring the dominance of the biggest and most global, is self-fulfilling pessimism. It is also the best enabler ever, of localism.
MSM like to claim victim & blame the public for their demise, without looking at the content they're creating.
A return to ethical journalism, where truth & balance are sought, would help but given trust levels are now so low, it won't be an overnight fix.
The rot starts in the teaching schools so that would need to be cleaned up first. There's little point addressing the symptoms if the cause is left to fester.
I worked for twenty years at the largest printing organisation in Australasia. In the late 90s it was obvious to Blind Freddy that suburban newspapers, Weekly Magazines and Telephone directories (remember them) were walking zombies. To suggest that local papers play a significant role in local democracy is just laughable. Please. You know how you get anything you want editorialised in a local paper? Simple, buy an advertisement and they will put an article on the opposite page.
Lets see some specific examples of this regional democracy in action. I will cheerfully accept that occasionally a paper will produce a story that is both genuinely informative and newsworthy.
The reality, of course is that is not their role. Fairfax would…
"Philanthropic funding could support outlets without political interference."
Except when the "philanthropist also has an agenda.
To save democracy it must be alive and from what I see democracy is already dead.
We have governments elected on promises that they have no intention of delivering on and no ability to remove them until the next election cycle by which time they have managed to string along another bunch of imbeciles to believe their now refined promises.
We have an unelected judiciary, local government managers and senior public servants operating as political allies of one faction and no ability to address this.
We have a police force dedicated to serving one master or mistress and treating innocent citizens as criminals not…
Supposedly we now live in a post truth world, so when it comes to the infotainment dished out every day who should we believe?
If you believe the following examples, which tell us we're on the brink of WW3, then consuming daily mis/disinformation should be the least of your worries. We should be flat out building a nuclear winter survival bunkers & stocking up fur the duration.
https://europeanconservative.com/articles/commentary/europes-hour-of-peril/
https://www.rt.com/russia/625098-eu-moldova-nato-occupy/
Who is the good guy & who the bad, who is right & who wrong? It's very important to have an open mind & shop around. In these dangerous, confrontational times we live in, fixed ideas & traditional ideological loyalties should be the lest of your priorites.
Why? Well all the…