Media Coverage & Charitable Giving After the 2004 Tsunami

Phil Brown, Jessica H. Minty
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引用次数: 29

Abstract

Media coverage of humanitarian crises is widely believed to influence charitable giving, yet this assertion has received little empirical scrutiny. Using Internet donations after the 2004 tsunami as a case study, we show that media coverage of disasters has a dramatic impact on donations to relief agencies, with an additional minute of nightly news coverage increasing donations by 0.036 standard deviations from the mean, or 13.2% of the average daily donation for the typical relief agency. Similarly, an additional 700-word story in the New York Times or Wall Street Journal raises donations by 18.2% of the daily average. These results are robust to controls for the timing of news coverage and tax considerations. We repeat the analysis using instrumental variables to account for endogeneity bias, and the estimates are unchanged. However, we also find that the effect of news coverage varies considerably by relief agency.
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2004年海啸后的媒体报道与慈善捐赠
人们普遍认为,媒体对人道主义危机的报道会影响慈善捐赠,但这种说法几乎没有得到实证检验。以2004年海啸后的互联网捐款为例,我们发现媒体对灾难的报道对救援机构的捐款产生了巨大的影响,每增加一分钟的夜间新闻报道,捐款就会增加0.036个标准差,即典型救援机构平均每日捐款的13.2%。同样,《纽约时报》或《华尔街日报》每增加一篇700字的报道,就会增加18.2%的日平均捐款。这些结果对于新闻报道和税收考虑的时间控制是稳健的。我们使用工具变量重复分析,以解释内生性偏差,估计不变。然而,我们也发现新闻报道的效果因救援机构而异。
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