Intergovernmental conflict and censorship: evidence from China's anti-corruption campaign

I study how local Chinese newspapers report on the national anti-corruption campaign by collecting a large-scale dataset of newspaper articles, internet searches, and comments on social media. Despite greater reader interest, local newspapers underreport, and deemphasise corruption scandals involvin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the European Economic Association 2022-12, Vol.20 (6), p.2540-2585
1. Verfasser: Zhuang, Maiting
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description I study how local Chinese newspapers report on the national anti-corruption campaign by collecting a large-scale dataset of newspaper articles, internet searches, and comments on social media. Despite greater reader interest, local newspapers underreport, and deemphasise corruption scandals involving high-level officials from their own province. Underreporting is greater when a corrupt official is well connected, and a newspaper does not rely on advertising revenue. City-level newspapers report less about corruption in their own city but are more likely to report about corruption within the provincial government. I present suggestive evidence that this type of localised censorship reduces the accountability of local governments.
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source Oxford Journals; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects 16 Peace justice and strong institutions
2010-2015
Abgeordnete
Anti-Korruption
China
Korruption
Mediale Berichterstattung
Meinungsfreiheit
Regionalregierung
Soziale Beziehungen
Zeitung
title Intergovernmental conflict and censorship: evidence from China's anti-corruption campaign
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