Info District dispatch: Missing markets

 

Info District dispatch: Missing markets

Simon Galperin · October 23, 2018 · Updated March 2, 2020

 
 
An unused newspaper box advertises electronic delivery of New Jersey’s Star Ledger newspaper.

An unused newspaper box advertises electronic delivery of New Jersey’s Star Ledger newspaper.

Many local news deserts are “missing markets.” They have the resources to support local news and information production but lack the information, trust, and coordination to do so. Info districts provide all three to communities in order to create effective local news markets where there are none.

TL;DR


Info District dispatches are brief, public updates on the Info Districts Project produced during the Community Info Coop’s institutional fellowship at the Reynolds Journalism Institute in 2019. This post was originally published on Medium and has slightly edited for readability.


A University of North Carolina census of local news deserts puts the number of counties without a single local daily newspaper at 2,000. Digital outlets have emerged but face the same economic challenges as newspapers do. What local news communities do receive is sparse. A Duke University study found that only 17% of the local news a municipality received was about itself.

In many places, it’s not for want of a good local news source that this is the case. These local news deserts are missing markets, places where a lack of information, trust, and coordination keep a market from emerging and sustaining itself. It is a common occurrence with public goods.

In the case of missing local news markets, folks may not know how they’d benefit from better news; they may not trust each other enough to allay free rider concerns; and, even if they did, setting up a local news market requires upfront, well-intentioned financing, something few places can find.

Info districts aim to create conditions that jumpstart and maintain effective local news markets.

Info districts are set up by local stakeholders who understand the local news and civic engagement crisis and can communicate it to their neighbors. They use a participatory process that builds trust and involves their community in designing and implementing solutions to the crisis. And the public financing and accountability structure ensures that local news, information, and communication needs can begin being met swiftly and for the benefit of the public.