Feb
24
2007

State funding of Italian newspapers

Following a tip [thanks Costanza], I found a wonderful transcript of an episode of Report on the state funding of Italian newspapers. The state spends 667 million euros a year to subsidize newspapers; the intention behind the subsidies was originally to help struggling ‘newspapers of ideas’. Instead, with a 1987 law permitting two deputies to certify that such-and-such a newspaper is the in-house newspaper for a political movement, the subsidies blossomed. The transcript does a wonderful review of some of the less credible newspapers:

NEWSPAPER VENDOR
What, ‘L’opinione’?

INTERVIEWER
You’ve never heard of it?

NEWSPAPER VENDOR
No, if it’s a newspaper it doesn’t arrive here

INTERVIEW [to EDITOR of L'Opinione]
How many copies do you sell?

ARTURO DIACONALE-EDITOR L’OPINIONE
Our circulation is… limited, let’s say. We’re at about three, four thousand copies.

INTERVIEWER [off-screen]
Three, four thousand copies, and you receive two million euro

posted in corruption, funding, italy, newspapers, press by Chris

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1 Comment to "State funding of Italian newspapers"

  1. Chris Hanretty - Appointments, dismissals, funding wrote:

    [...] field for “intervention” , or whether the government should end this scheme altogether. As discussed before, the consequences fit no subsidy justification I’ve heard [...]

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