-
Market Shocks and Newspaper Ideology: Evidence from
Taiwan
Chun-Fang Chiang Long-Yu Chiou David Jinkins
Abstract
This paper investigates the influence of market forces on newspaper ideologies and readers’ choices in Taiwan. We measure a newspaper’s political position by counting a newspaper’s relative frequency of use of the terms “China” and “Mainland”. This captures a newspaper’s position on Taiwanese Independence, a major issue in Taiwanese politics. We find that Liberty Times had significantly changed its newspaper political position in 2003, when a tabloid newspaper owned by a Hong-Kong media firm entered the newspaper market in Taiwan. Using survey data, we estimate consumer preferences for newspaper consumption and examine the newspapers’ best strategies on choosing political positions. We find that the ideological change made by Liberty Times was necessary to maintain its market share in the face of competition. Finally, we analyze changes in newspaper ideologies in 2008 when China Times was sold to Want Want Group.
---------------------------------------------------
Chiang (corresponding author): Department of Economics, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan. TEL: 866-2-23519641; E-mail:[email protected]. Chiou: Department of Economics, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan. Jinkins: Department of Economics, Pennsylvania State University, PA, USA.
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Suppose Eve hadn't bitten into that forbidden fruit. There wouldn't be evil or
wrongdoing in the world, and of course no news either.
– The founder of Apple Daily
1. Introduction
The naughties were frightening for a traditional Taiwanese newspaperman. In 2003,
a tabloid newspaper from Hong Kong burst into the staid Taiwanese newspaper market.
Apple Daily quickly devoured market share from established newspapers. Newspapers
reacted to the competition by changing dramatically. Respectable newspapers began to
publish more pictures, color spreads and less editorials, as well as increasing the size of
headlines (Zhou 2004, Zhang 2005).
A theoretical paper by Mullanaithan and Schleifer (2003) implies that to avoid price
wars, media firms react to competition by increasing news slants. In this paper, we first
test if three major Taiwanese newspapers altered their political slants in addition to
cosmetic changes. Using a divisive Taiwanese political issue we construct an ideology
index that measures the frequency of using “China” instead of “Mainland” or “Mainland
China” in a newspaper. We find that indeed Liberty Times increased its frequency of use
of the term “China” significantly after Apple's appearance, while United Daily and
China Times did not change their choices of words significantly. We also find that
readers of major newspapers became more politically segregated.
Next we use the dynamic Taiwanese newspaper market to estimate consumer
preferences for newspapers and ask how media sources choose slant. An individual-level
survey with information on newspaper consumption and political preferences helps us to
avoid potential problems of demand estimation when using aggregate market share data.
The significant change in Liberty Times help us to identify consumer preferences for
newspaper ideology. Combining our ideology index along with the survey data around
2003, we use nested logit model to estimate consumer preferences. This exercise is
similar to the demand estimation in Gentzkow and Shapiro (2010) on newspaper
ideology, except that our detailed household-level data allows us to use a much simpler
specification.
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Using the estimated parameters in the utility function, we examine strategies made
by newspapers when facing a new competitor. Simulations of the Taiwanese newspaper
market show that the ideological change made by Liberty Times was necessary to
maintain its market share in the face of competition but two other newspapers were
leaving money on the newsstand. If one of these two newspapers shifted its editorial
slant, it could increase readership.
The literature on media bias has argued that media owners may choose an editorial
position in line with personal political views, even if such a position reduces profits
(Povich 1996, Lichter, et al. 1986, Weaver and Wilhoit 1996, Balan, DeGraba, and
Wickelgren (2009)). We test whether ownership affects the ideology using the 2008
purchase of a major newspaper, China Times, by a group with a China-friendly political
position. The regression results suggest that the change in the ideology measure of China
Times was statistically significant but small after the ownership transition. This paper
adds evidence to the recent empirical literature on economic incentives and political bias
in the media (Gentzkow and Shapiro, 2010; Shapiro and Sinkinson 2012). Gentzkow
and Shapiro (2010) find that readers prefer to read newspapers with ideologies closer to
their own and the owner of a newspaper does not affect its ideological slant. Shapiro and
Sinkinson (2012) focus on the strategies of media firms under competition and show that
newspaper competition in the early 20th century caused newspapers in the U.S. to
choose different party affiliations.
General theoretical work on product differentiation is much older (Hotelling, 1929;
d’Aspremont, Gabzwicz and Tisse 1979). Early duopoly studies of exactly one quality
dimension and one variety dimension found that firms will maximize differentiation in
one dimension and minimize in the other (Economides 1989; Neven and Thisse 1989).
Later studies generalized this result to duopolies with any number of attribute
dimensions, some considering only variety or quality differentiation (Ansari,
Economides et al. 1998; Irmen and Thisse 1998; Garella and Lambertini 1999), and
others considering both types (Dos Santos Ferreira and Thisse 1996). These studies
suggest that firms will choose to differentiate maximally in one attribute in order to
avoid harsh price competition, but will choose minimum differentiation in all other
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attributes to get the largest possible share of the market. 1 Vogel (2008) creates a model
in which firms differ in productivity and concludes that more productive firms will be
more isolated.
The paper is organized as follows. Section 2 introduces background of the
newspaper market in Taiwan, our newspaper ideology index, and the data for estimation.
Section 3 presents the econometric model of demand estimation. Section 4 presents the
estimation results. Section 5 examines newspaper strategies under competition based on
simulations. Section 6 concludes.
2. Background and Data
Before the entry of Apple Daily in 2003, there were three major newspapers in
Taiwan, United Daily, China Times, and Liberty Times. These three newspapers
comprised 80 percent of the newspaper market share. As shown in Figure 1, Apple Daily
successfully entered the newspaper market in Taiwan in 2003 and became the second
largest newspaper by 2005.2 Apple Daily is owned by a subdivision of Next Media,
which is based in Hong Kong and is known for introducing tabloid-style journalism into
Hong Kong. On the one hand, Apple Daily in Taiwan has been criticized for its
sensational news style and has caused concern regarding possible violations of private
rights tabloid news features. On the other hand, Apple Daily differs from the existing
newspapers in its ability of attracting readers’ eyes. It has larger headlines, more
pictures/tables, and more soft news with practical information. Overall, Apple Daily was
able to leverage foreign knowledge and technology into Taiwan and appear as a strong
competitor to existing newspapers.
Given its success in the newspaper market, it is natural to ask, then, why didn’t
Apple Daily or a similar newspaper enter the Taiwan market earlier? The answer lies in
1 The degree of product differentiation may depend on market size. If market size is very large, the unique
location equilibrium of firms is that both firms agglomerate at the center (Anderson, Simon and Neven,
1991). However, as the market size is relatively small, there exist two equilibria: one is the agglomeration
but which is unstable, and the other is dispersed equilibrium. Furthermore the distance of the firms’
location would increase as market becomes smaller (Chamorro-Rivas, 2000. Liang et at., 2005). 2 Newspaper readership is calculated from the data of AGB Nielson. The readership of a particular
newspaper is defined as the number of readers who read the particular newspaper yesterday divided by the
number of people who read one or more newspapers yesterday.
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government regulation. Although Taiwan’s newspaper prohibition ended in 1988, it was
not until the late 1990’s that the Taiwanese government began to relax its publishing
laws relating to foreign companies. The change in policy was largely due to Taiwan’s
application to join the World Trade Organization, which was accepted in 19993 with
Taiwan officially becoming a member on January 1, 2002. As part of Taiwan’s WTO
agreement, Taiwan cannot restrict the news agency services, except to require the
residence of an editor and publisher in Taiwan (WTO 2001). It should be noted that the
first 500,000 trial issues of Apple Daily were actually distributed on March 20, 2002,
just three months after Taiwan entered the WTO (Zhou 2005).
2.1 Political Positions of Newspapers
There have been two dominant political forces in Taiwan after the martial law
regime. One is the pro-unification Pan-Blue coalition, comprised of the Kuomintang, the
People First Party (PFP), and the New Party. The other is the pro-independence
Pan-Green coalition, comprised of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and the
Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU). The Pan-Blue coalition and the Pan-Green coalition
have different policies regarding cross-strait politics and their differences are reflected in
the language used by politicians.
Researchers have come up with various ways to measure media slant. Groseclose
and Milyo (2005) compare the think tanks and the policy groups cited by Congress
members and those cited by news media outlets, and derive a way to measure the
ideology for several major media outlets.4 Gentzkow and Shapiro (2010) compare the
language used by Congress members and newspapers to measure media slant of
newspapers. In our study, we use the frequency of using “China” instead of “Mainland”
or “Mainland China” in article titles to measure political ideologies of newspapers in
Taiwan. This captures a newspaper’s position on cross-strait politics, a major issue in
Taiwanese politics. We searched for the phrases “China”, “Mainland China” and
3 Geopolitics dictated that the People’s Republic of China had to become a member before the Republic
of China. Although Taiwan had fulfilled all the conditions required for entry by 1999, it had to wait until
after China’s entry in December, 2001 for formal membership. 4 The ideology of Congress members is measured by adjusted ADA scores constructed by Groseclose,
Levitt, and Snyder (1999). In their findings, there exists a strong liberal trend in the average member of
Congress during 1947-94.
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“Mainland” in the article titles, and excluded phrases such as “China Bank” because the
term China in this case does not refer to the country. There are two newspaper archives,
the Taiwan News Smart Web and the Central News Agency Archive. The Taiwan News
Smart Web covers most of the news articles but did not include( the Liberty Times until
2003, and Apple Daily was not included in the archive until 2005. The Central News
Agency Archive covers all major newspapers but does not collect all news articles. We
therefore use the Central News Agency Archive to examine changes in newspaper
ideologies due to the entry of Apple Daily, and use Taiwan News Smart Web to examine
changes in newspaper ideologies due to the ownership switch of China Times at the end
of 2008.
As shown in Figure 2, we find that indeed Liberty Times increased its frequency of
use of the term “China” significantly after Apple's appearance, while United Daily and
China Times did not significantly change their terminology choices. In addition, we
have checked that the general editor of Liberty Times was not replaced from 1996 to
2012 in the past 15 years,5 thus the significant change in the ideology measure of
Liberty Times is unlikely attributed to the editor’s personal ideology.
2.2 Other Newspaper Characteristics
Other than political ideologies, some additional features influence readers’ choices
of newspapers: price, diversity of news articles, layout, and other factors. Facing
competition from Apple Daily, the retail prices of all three traditional newspapers
declined from $15 to $10 in 2003. All three papers also changed their layout, from a
vertical format to a horizontal format, the same layout as used by Apple Daily. One of
the most significant features of Apple Daily was its undisguised and bloodthirsty style.
The headline news articles of Apple Daily are often crime news or scandals with
colorful and vivid pictures. While the tabloid style was criticized, it might have affected
the news selection of other newspapers. We therefore include the ratio of crime news for
one newspaper’s characteristics as a proxy for the tendency to report sensational news.6
We also include the diversity index reported by Lee (2007) in our estimation, although
she finds that news diversity in the three traditionally dominant newspapers after was 5 Wen-Hui Hu took over the position of general editor after February, 2013, and the ex- general editor
Jin-Rong Chen was promoted to the position of vice president. 6 The Criminal news includes murder, violence, sex crimes and larceny.
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not statistically different from that before the launch of Apple Daily in the Taiwan
market.
Table 2 presents newspaper characteristics of three major newspapers before and after
Apple Daily.
2.3 Readership Composition
Information on individual newspaper consumption came from TEDS and TSCS in
the following years: 1998, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2008. Table 1 provides a
timeline of the surveys we use in this paper. These surveys have information on
newspapers they read most and their background information such as age, gender,
education, and political party preference.
Since newspaper ideologies varied over time, readership composition in terms of
political preferences may have changed after the entry of Apple Daily into Taiwan. We
classified respondents into three groups based on their preferred political party.
Respondents who support KMT, NP or PFP are classified as Pan-Blue supporters. Those
who support DPP or TSU are classified as Pan-Green supporters. Those who neither
belong to Pan-Blue nor Pan-Green are Independents. Figure 3 presents choices of
newspapers over four major newspapers by political preferences before and after the
entry of Apple Daily. As shown, with or without Apple Daily, the Pan-Blue readers
prefer United Daily to China Times to Liberty Times. On the other end of the political
spectrum, the Pan-Green supporters prefer Liberty Times to China Times to United
Daily. The segregation pattern is stronger after the entry of Apple Daily. In terms of
readership, China Times and United Daily both lost some readership after facing
completion, especially among independents. The influence of the new tabloid newspaper
on the readership numbers of Liberty Times is relatively smaller.
The changes in the political composition of newspaper readers indicate that readers
may react to changes in political ideologies of newspapers. In the next section, we
estimate consumer preferences over newspapers and then examine newspapers’ choices
on ideologies.
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3. Consumer Preferences and Newspaper Ideologies
Combining information on newspaper ideologies and readers’ choices of newspapers,
we estimate consumer preferences by a two level Nested Logit model. The first level
offers distinct choices into four types: reading a traditional newspaper, reading an
entertainment newspaper, Apple Daily, reading other newspapers, and not reading a
newspaper. In the second level, the traditional newspapers include Liberty Times,
United Daily, and China Times, as presented in Figure 4. The nested logit model permits
the choices of United Daily, Liberty Times, and China Times to be correlated.
In the market of traditional newspapers, readers can choose from Liberty Times, United Daily, and China Times. Other than reading a traditional newspaper, an individual may also choose to read Apple Daily when Apple Daily is available, other newspapers, or to not read a newspaper.
The random utility of reader i to read newspaper k in type j can be expressed as:
, (1)
, where includes newspaper characteristics, and represents individual characteristics. The error terms are distributed Gumbel’s multivariate extreme-value distribution. We assume that readers care for political ideologies of newspapers only when reading a traditional newspaper. The utility of reader i when reading a traditional newspaper k can be expressed as:
, (2)
is the ideology of newspaper k, and is the preferred news slant of reader i. A higher value of or denotes ideologies closer to the ideologies of Pan-Green Coalition. We assume that the readers’ preferred media slant, can be approximated by their political party preferences.
3 Substituting equation (3) into equation (2), we have
, 1, … , , 1, … ,
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Where 2 , , 2 , 2 .
In our estimation, we use the variable fraction of China, the frequency of the word China” instead of “Mainland” or “Mainland China” in the article titles of the newspaper, as the measure of newspaper ideology. X includes individual characteristics such as party preferences, age, gender, and years of schooling that would affect choices of newspapers. Z includes newspaper price, diversity index, and crime news ratio.
Without newspaper fixed effects, the coefficient of fraction of China^2 will be , and the coefficients of the interaction terms of fraction of China and political party preferences (Green and Blue) will be 2 and 2 respectively. We expect that derived β and a will be negative, and derived b to be positive, meaning that readers prefer to read a newspaper with their preferred news slant, and their preferred news slant is correlated with their political preferences.7
4. Empirical Strategy and Estimation Results
We are interested in estimating parameters in the model of newspaper demand. Without exogenous variation in newspaper ideologies, the correlation between newspaper ideologies and consumer ideologies could be due to reverse causality. Newspaper ideology may affect readers’ beliefs and therefore the correlation between newspaper ideologies and consumer ideologies could reflect newspapers’ influence instead of readers’ preferences. We use a survey sample from 2000 to 2005 to estimate parameters in the demand model. During the sample period, the change in newspaper ideologies was mainly driven by the entry of Apple Daily.
A. Results from the baseline model
We first estimate the model without newspaper × time fixed effects, and the results are reported in 3. The coefficient of newspaper ideologies is negative and significant, implying that readers do care about the ideologies of newspapers. The coefficients of the interaction terms, fraction of China*Blue and fraction of China*Green, are negative and positive respectively, implying that the readers’ preferred newspaper ideologies are correlated with their own ideologies. These results suggest that Pan-green supporters prefer to read newspapers with positions on pro independence, and Pan-blue supporters prefer to read newspapers with China friendly positions.
In Table 4A, besides newspaper ideology, we include other newspaper characteristics such as the ratio of crime news, news diversity index, and the retail price 7 All results in the paper are estimated by the software “Limdep-NLOGIT 5”.
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in our estimation. Table 4B presents partial/marginal effects based on the estimation results in Table 4A.
B. Results with newspaper × time fixed effects
While we have a ratio of crime news, the news diversity index, and retail prices, we may not capture all the newspaper characteristics that changed after the entry of Apple Daily. Therefore, in Table 5, we include newspaper fixed effects and their interaction terms with a dummy variable, After, which indicates that the respondent was interviewed after the entry of Apple Daily. These variables help us to capture the influence of unobserved newspaper characteristics on overall readership.
In Table 6, we include newspaper × month fixed effects instead of newspaper × After fixed effects. By doing so, the variables fraction of China and its square term are dropped in the estimation. The coefficient of fraction of China*Blue remains negative and significant, and the coefficient of fraction of China*Green remains positive and significant, suggesting that readers are more likely to read newspapers with ideologies approximating their own ideologies.
C. Robustness Checks
The people who support Pan-Blue coalition and the people who support Pan-Green coalition usually have different characteristics. The Pan-Blue coalition supporters are usually more educated and have higher income. While the changes made by newspapers could have also changed readership composition by education or income, we include the interaction terms of newspaper ideologies and the readers’ years of schooling and annual income in our estimation as robustness checks. The results are reported in Table 7 columns (1) to (3).
We also restrict the samples in 2001 and 2003 to estimate consumer preferences again. On the one hand, the variation in newspaper ideologies will mainly came from dramatic ideological changes due to competition from Apple Daily. On the other hand, the influence of the newspaper on readers’ beliefs is unlikely to have large effects in a short period of time. These estimation results are presented in the last column of Table 7. Overall, the results are consistent with previous findings.
5. Would a newspaper gain more readership by changing its political ideologies?
It is possible that not all newspapers have selected their optimal positions to maximize their profits. For example, newspaper ideologies may be affected by preferences of the owner, editors, and reporters. Facing the entry of Apple Daily, we observed that Liberty Times responded by changing its position significantly while
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United Daily did not adjust its political position. Here we examine whether these newspapers had made the right choices to maintain their market share. Using consumer preferences estimated above, we predict their market share if the newspapers had not changed their political ideologies after the entry of Apple Daily. The results are presented in Table 8. The simulated results suggest that the significant change in political positions made by Liberty Times had increased its market share by 10% in the competition.
We also further explore the possibility for newspapers to gain more market share by changing their political ideologies. First we simulate the market share of Liberty Times under different political ideologies without changing ideologies of the other newspapers. As shown in Table 9A, there is not much room for Liberty Times to further increase its market share. The ideology, measured by fraction of China, of Liberty Times after Apple Daily was 0.95, and decreasing the value will not give Liberty Times more readers. However, the results in Table 9B indicate that China Times and United Daily could have gained more market share by adjusting their political ideologies.
Finally we calculate the newspaper ideologies in the Nash Equilibrium, given the condition that the ideology of Liberty Times is 1. As shown in Table 10, in the Nash Equilibrium, the ideology of China Times is 0.471, and the ideology of United Daily is 0.398. The market shares of China Times and United Daily are larger than their actual/predicted market share under the observed ideologies. These results further confirmed that China Times and United Daily could have gained more market share by adjusting their political ideologies.
6. Ownership Transition
As the discussion in the literature, a newspaper owner’s political ideologies may affect the news slants of newspapers. We are interested in whether the ideology of China Times slants toward China after having been sold to Want Want group which is a pro-China enterprise in November 2008. We continue to use the ratio of China mentions as a measurement. Figure 6 shows that the ideology of China Times was closer to that of the United Daily after it was sold to Want Want group. To examine if the change in ideologies are statistically significant, we use newspaper ideology as a dependent variable in OLS regression. In the table 9, the estimation results suggest that the frequency of using the word “China” had decreased approximately 10 % around the beginning of 2009.
7. Conclusion
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In this paper, we investigate the influence of market forces and owner preferences on newspaper ideologies and readers’ choices from 2002 to 2009 in Taiwan. We measure a newspaper’s political position by counting a newspaper’s relative frequency of use of the terms “China” and “Mainland”. This captures a newspaper’s position on Taiwanese Independence, a major issue in Taiwanese politics. We find that newspapers significantly changed their newspaper political positions in 2003, when a tabloid newspaper owned by a Hong-Kong media firm entered the newspaper market in Taiwan. Using survey data, we estimate consumers’ preferences of newspaper reading and find that readers are sensitive to newspaper ideologies. Then we examine newspapers’ best strategies on choosing political positions in the face of competition. We find that the ideological change made by Liberty Times was necessary to maintain its market share in the face of competition, and China Times and United Daily could have gained more market share by adjusting their political ideologies.
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Figure 1: Newspaper readership
Figure 2: Newspaper ideologies
.1.2
.3.4
Per
cent
age
1997Q1 1999Q1 2001Q1 2003Q1 2005Q1 2007Q1 2009Q1 2011Q1Time line
China Times Liberty TimesUnited Daily Apple DailyOther newspapers
Normalized Newspaper Readership0
.2.4
.6.8
1Fr
actio
n of
Chi
na
1998-01 2000-01 2002-01 2004-01 2006-01 2008-01Date
China Times United DailyLiberty Times
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Figure 3: Newspaper Reading by Political Preferences
Figure 4. Choice Tree in the nested logit model
0.1
.2.3
blue no party green blue no party greenSource: sample from TEDS and TSCS Source: sample from TEDS and TSCS
Before entry of Apple Daily After entry of Apple DailyReadership Readership
United China timesLiberty Apple
perc
enta
ge
Graphs by apple_entry
Readers
Other Newspapers
General newspapers
United Daily China times Liberty Times
Apple Daily Not reading newspapers
-
Figure 5. Predicted newspaper reading by political preferences
Figure 6 Newspaper ideologies around the end of 2008
0.1
.2.3
.4
Bule Neutral Green Bule Neutral GreenSource: sample from TEDS and TSCS Source: sample from TEDS and TSCS
Before Apple Daily After Apple DailyPrediced Probability Prediced Probability
United Dialy China timesLiberty Times
Per
cent
age
.2.4
.6.8
1Fr
actio
n of
Chi
na
2008-01 2008-07 2009-01 2009-07 2010-01Date
China Times United DailyLiberty Times
-
Table 1: TEDS and TSCS Survey Outline
Table 2. The Newspapers characteristics (2000 - 2005) China Times United Daily Liberty Times
Before After Change Before After Change Before After Change
Fraction of China 0.178 0.229 28.65% 0.164 0.171 4.27% 0.602 0.948 57.48%
Diversity index 0.857 0.862 0.58% 0.817 0.857 4.90% 0.841 0.855 1.66%
Crime news ratio 5.559 5.963 7.27% 6.961 5.601 -19.54% 4.872 6.110 25.41%
Retailing Price $15 $10 -33.33% $15 $10 -33.33% $10 $10 0%
Survey Date Sample size
TSCS 1998.07.05-08.18 1,435 TSCS 2000.07.22-08.03 1,960 TEDS 2002.01.04-04.02 2,022 TSCS 2003.08.10-12.01 2,158 TEDS 2004.01.15-09.31 3,075 TSCS 2005.07.05-09.18 2,146 TEDS 2008.01.10-09.05 2,945
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Table 3. Consumer Preferences
A. Newspaper characteristics
Fraction of China 2.38*** (0.83)
Fraction of China^2 -0.61** (0.31)
Blue*Fraction of China -0.94***
(0.44)
Green*Fraction of China 0.48*** (0.22)
Newspapers CT UD LT AD Others
B. Individual characteristics
Pan-Blue 0.81***(0.13)
0.94***(0.12)
0.30 (0.33)
1.18*** (0.30)
0.46*** (0.09)
Pan-Green 0.48
(0.38) -0.51***
(0.12) 0.82** (0.37)
0.05 (0.27)
0.27*** (0.09)
Sex 0.05
(0.08) 0.14* (0.08)
0.08 (0.08)
0.04 (0.11)
-0.01 (0.07)
Age 0.04** (0.02)
0.07***(0.02)
0.05***(0.01)
0.00 (0.02)
0.04*** (0.01)
Age2 -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00)
Years of education 0.21***(0.01)
0.23***(0.01)
0.18***(0.01)
0.15*** (0.02)
0.14*** (0.01)
Log income 0.39***(0.05)
0.25***(0.05)
0.26***(0.05)
0.24*** (0.07)
0.17*** (0.05)
Note. 1.Sample: 2000-2005. 2. Coefficients reported. 3.Reference Choice: not to read a newspaper. 2. The number of observations is 7893.
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Table 4A. Estimation results with more newspaper characteristics
A. Newspaper characteristics
Fraction of China 2.58** (1.11)
Fraction of China^2 -0.31***
(0.05)
Blue*Fraction of China -0.93** (0.42)
Green*Fraction of China 0.89** (0.43)
Crime news ratio 2.21** (1.09)
Diversity index 6.02** (2.50)
Price -0.11* (0.05)
Newspapers CT UD LT AD Others
B. Individual characteristics
Pan-Blue 0.79***(0.13)
0.94***(0.12)
0.29 (0.33)
1.17*** (0.30)
0.46*** (0.10)
Pan-Green -0.08 (0.12)
-0.52***(0.13)
0.81** (0.37)
0.04 (0.27)
0.28*** (0.09)
Sex 0.05
(0.08) 0.14* (0.08)
0.08 (0.08)
0.05 (0.11)
-0.01 (0.07)
Age 0.04** (0.02)
0.07***(0.02)
0.05***(0.01)
0.00 (0.03)
0.04*** (0.01)
Age2 -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00)
Years of education 0.21***(0.01)
0.23***(0.01)
0.19***(0.01)
0.15*** (0.02)
0.14*** (0.01)
Log income 0.39***(0.05)
0.25***(0.05)
0.26***(0.05)
0.23*** (0.08)
0.17*** (0.05)
Note. 1.Sample: 2000-2005. 2. Coefficients reported. 3.Reference Choice: not to read a newspaper. 2.The number of observations is 7893.
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Table 4B. Marginal Effects from Table 4A
A. Newspaper characteristics Fraction of China 0.1622 Fraction of China^2 -0.0201 Blue*Fraction of China -0.0578 Green*Fraction of China 0.0568 Crime news ratio 0.1389 Diversity index 0.3759 Price 0.0069
Newspapers CT UD LT AD Others B. Individual characteristics Pan-Blue 0.0491 0.0593 0.0182 0.0735 0.0277 Pan-Green -0.0055 -0.0311 0.0512 0.0018 0.0176 Sex 0.0024 0.0088 0.0050 0.0018 -0.0001 Age 0.0025 0.0037 0.0031 0.0025 0.0025 Age2 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 Years of Education 0.0131 0.0154 0.0132 0.0093 0.0088 Log-income 0.0245 0.0151 0.0163 0.0145 0.0107
Note. 1.Sample: 2000-2005. 2. Coefficients Reported. 3.Reference Choice: not to read a newspaper
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Table 5. Consumer preference with newspaper * after fixed effects
Newspaper characteristics
Fraction of China 2.69*** (1.13)
Fraction of China^2 -0.48** (0.23)
Blue*Fraction of China -0.98** (0.43)
Green*Fraction of China 0.97** (0.44)
After*China Times After*United Daily After*Liberty Times After*Others
-1.74*** -1.48*** -2.37*** -2.31***
Newspapers CT UD LT AD Others
Individual characteristics
Blue 0.82***(0.14)
0.95***(0.13)
0.15 (0.34)
1.38*** (0.31)
0.37*** (0.10)
Green -0.22 (0.13)
-0.65***(0.13)
1.09***(0.38)
-0.10 (0.29)
0.03 (0.10)
Sex 0.09
(0.08) 0.18** (0.08)
0.11 (0.07)
0.08 (0.11)
0.04 (0.08)
Age 0.04***(0.01)
0.07***(0.01)
0.05***(0.01)
0.00 (0.02)
0.04*** (0.01)
Age2 -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00***
(0.00) -0.00** (0.00)
-0.00** (0.00)
Years of education 0.25***(0.02)
0.27***(0.02)
0.22***(0.01)
0.17*** (0.02)
0.20*** (0.02)
Log income 0.42***(0.06)
0.29***(0.05)
0.29***(0.05)
0.22*** (0.08)
0.22*** (0.05)
Newspaper*After fixed effects V V V V V
Note. 1.Sample: 2000-2005. 2. Coefficients reported. 3.Reference Choice: not to read a newspaper. 2. The number of observations is 7893.
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Table 5B. Marginal effect from table 5A.
Newspaper characteristics
Fraction of China 0.1712
Fraction of China^2 -0.0321
Blue*Fraction of China -0.0624
Green*Fraction of China 0.0617
After entry
China Times United Daily Liberty Times
Others
-0.1107 -0.0942 -0.1510 -0.1471
Newspapers CT UD LT AD Others
Individual characteristics
Blue 0.0526 0.0615 0.0099 0.0864 0.0235
Green -0.0140 -0.0406 0.0694 -0.0064 0.0023
Sex 0.0057 0.0115 0.0078 0.0051 0.0025
Age 0.0025 0.0044 0.0032 0.0000 0.0025
Age2 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000
Years of education 0.0155 0.0172 0.0142 0.0108 0.0129
Log income 0.0248 0.0185 0.0185 0.0140 0.0140
Newspaper*After fixed effects V V V V V
Note. 1.Sample: 2000-2005. 2. Coefficients reported. 3.Reference Choice: not to read a newspaper.
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Table 6. Estimation with Newspaper*month fixed effects
Newspaper characteristics
Blue*Fraction of China -0.81***
(0.23)
Green*Fraction of China 0.89** (0.40)
Newspapers CT UD LT AD Others
Individual characteristics
Blue 1.02***(0.12)
1.11***(0.11)
0.11 (0.34)
1.06*** (0.22)
0.41*** (0.07)
Green -0.22 (0.19)
-0.64***(0.17)
1.06***(0.25)
-0.19 (0.30)
0.13 (0.11)
Sex 0.07
(0.07) 0.14* (0.06)
0.08 (0.06)
0.06 (0.14)
0.00 (0.08)
Age 0.04**(0.02)
0.07***(0.01)
0.05***(0.01)
-0.04 (0.03)
0.04*** (0.02)
Age2 -0.00**(0.00)
-0.00***(0.00)
-0.00***(0.00)
-0.00 (0.00)
-0.00** (0.00)
Years of education 0.29***(0.02)
0.29***(0.02)
0.24***(0.01)
0.12*** (0.02)
0.21*** (0.03)
Log income 0.42***(0.06)
0.31***(0.04)
0.21***(0.04)
-0.11* (0.04)
0.20*** (0.06)
Newspapers*month V V V V V
Note. 1.Sample: 2000-2005. 2. Coefficients reported. 3.Reference Choice: not to read a newspaper. 2. The number of observations is 7893.
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Table 7. Robustness Checks
Newspaper characteristics (1) (2) (3) (4) Sample:2001-2003
Fraction of China 6.83***(2.13)
6.21***(1.91)
10.34***(3.05)
8.85***(2.78)
8.03*** (3.05)
Fraction of China^2 -1.88**(0.92)
-1.82**(0.88)
-2.97***(0.87)
-3.17***(0.81)
-3.57*** (0.87)
Blue*Fraction of China -0.96**(0.41)
0.81**(0.39)
-0.88**(0.44)
-0.72***
(0.24)
Green*Fraction of China 0.93***(0.40)
1.11***(0.41)
1.07** (0.49)
0.57*** (0.19)
Green index*Fraction of China
0.27***(0.09)
Taiwanese* Fraction of China
-0.02 (0.40)
-0.02 (0.40)
-0.07 (0.36)
-0.02 (0.40)
Log-income* Fraction of China
-0.31 (0.25)
-0.31 (0.25)
-0.32 (0.23)
-0.31 (0.25)
Education year* Fraction of China
-0.12***(0.04)
-0.11**(0.05)
-0.11**(0.05)
-0.07 (0.05)
No. of observations 7893 7893 7893 7893 3192
Newspaper fixed effects*After V V V V V
Individual characteristics V V V V V
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Table 8. Predicted and Simulated Market Share
China Times United Daily Liberty TimesPredicted Market Share after Apple Daily
22.42% 23.53%
32.66%
Predicted Market Share before Apple Daily
25.82% 24.20%
26.41%
Simulated Market Share if political positions unchanged in the presence of Apple Daily.
22.06% 25.22%
23.68%
Note: Predictions and simulation are based on the estimation results of table 4A.
Table 9A. Simulated Market Share of LT after Apple Daily
-5% -3% Baseline +3% Up to 100% Liberty Times 30.70% 31.22% 32.66% 33.61% 35.01%
Note. The ideology index of Liberty Times was around 0.95 after the entry of Apple Daily.
Table 9B. Simulated Market Share after Apple Daily China Times United Daily
Baseline 22.42% 23.53% +10% 24.90% 26.11% +20% 25.68% 27.51% +30% 26.42% 27.33% +40% 25.87% 24.92% +50% 21.54% 22.60% +60% 17.71% 19.04% +70% 13.90% 14.49%
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Table 10. Newspaper Ideologies and Simulated Market Share under Nash Equilibrium
China Times United Daily Liberty TimesObserved Newspaper ideologies 0.23 0.17 0.95 Newspaper ideologies under Nash equilibrium
0.47 0.40
1
Market share under Nash equilibrium
24.12% 25.67%
30.51%
Note: Simulation is based on the estimation results of table 4A.
Table 11. Ownership Transition and Newspaper Ideologies Dependent Variable: Fraction of China
Sample Period 2000-2009 2003-2009 2008-2009
China Times*year2009 -0.08***
(0.03) -0.11***
(0.04) -0.13***
(0.05)
China Times 0.11*** (0.02)
0.14*** (0.02)
0.16*** (0.04)
Year2009 0.23*** (0.02)
0.20*** (0.02)
0.08*** (0.03)
Constant 0.19*** (0.01)
0.22*** (0.01)
0.34*** (0.03)
Number of Observations 240 168 48
R squared 0.22 0.27 0.47
Note. Control group is United Daily.