We build a model of the news market where advertisers allocate their ads between a social media platform and a news website. Our objective is to evaluate policy interventions aimed at fostering news creation by transferring revenues from social media to news websites (already introduced in Australia, Canada, and Indonesia). We show that social media may voluntarily contribute to news development, but only suboptimally. Beyond a certain level of state-mandated transfer, the social media platform can credibly threaten to remove news content. We demonstrate that the improvement of zero-click searches may have an adverse equilibrium effect on consumers. Finally, we provide some guidance on how to design a policy that improves welfare by promoting news creation.

News media bargaining codes

Sandrini L.
;
2026

Abstract

We build a model of the news market where advertisers allocate their ads between a social media platform and a news website. Our objective is to evaluate policy interventions aimed at fostering news creation by transferring revenues from social media to news websites (already introduced in Australia, Canada, and Indonesia). We show that social media may voluntarily contribute to news development, but only suboptimally. Beyond a certain level of state-mandated transfer, the social media platform can credibly threaten to remove news content. We demonstrate that the improvement of zero-click searches may have an adverse equilibrium effect on consumers. Finally, we provide some guidance on how to design a policy that improves welfare by promoting news creation.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3590738
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