Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-vvkck Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T20:39:35.262Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Media Bias against Foreign Firms as a Veiled Trade Barrier: Evidence from Chinese Newspapers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2018

SUNG EUN KIM*
Affiliation:
Korea University
*
Sung Eun Kim is an Assistant Professor of Political Science, Department of Political Science and International Relations, Korea University, 145 Anam-ro, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul, Korea, 02841 (sung_kim@korea.edu).

Abstract

While the rules of international trade regimes prevent governments from employing protectionist instruments, governments continue to seek out veiled means of supporting their national industries. This article argues that the news media can serve as one channel for governments to favor domestic industries. Focusing on media coverage of auto recalls in China, I reveal a systematic bias against foreign automakers in those newspapers under strict government control. I further analyze subnational reporting patterns, exploiting variation in the level of regional government interest in the automobile industry. The analysis suggests that the media’s home bias is driven by the government’s protectionist interests but rules out the alternative hypothesis that home bias simply reflects the nationalist sentiment of readers. I show that this home bias in news coverage has meaningful impact on actual consumer behavior, combining automobile sales data and information on recall-related web searches.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 2018 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

I thank Andrew Cheon, Shigeo Hirano, Xian Huang, Dong Jung Kim, Florence Larocque, Yotam Margalit, Tamar Mitts, Andrew Nathan, Krzysztof Pelc, Pablo Pinto, Subhasish Ray, Johannes Urpelainen, Joonseok Yang, Boliang Zhu, three anonymous reviewers, and the journal’s editor for their useful comments. I also benefited from feedback from seminar participants at Columbia, LSE, NUS, NYU, NYU-Abu Dhabi, UPenn, Yale, and Yale-NUS and conference participants at APSA, IPES, and MPSA. I thank Kay Key Teo and Lee Shu Hui Jesslene for their excellent research assistance. All errors are my own. Replication files are available at the American Political Science Review Dataverse: https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/JSR0OE.

References

REFERENCES

Besley, Timothy, and Prat, Andrea. 2006. “Handcuffs for the Grabbing Hand? Media Capture and Government Accountability.” American Economic Review 96 (3): 720–36.Google Scholar
Chang, Pi-Chuan, Galley, Michel, and Manning, Christopher D.. 2008. “Optimizing Chinese Word Segmentation for Machine Translation Performance.” In Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Statistical Machine Translation. Association for Computational Linguistics, pp. 224–32.Google Scholar
Chaudoin, Stephen, Kucik, Jeffrey, and Pelc, Krzysztof. 2016. “Do WTO Disputes Actually Increase Trade?International Studies Quarterly 60 (2): 294306.Google Scholar
Davis, Christina L., and Bermeo, Sarah Blodgett. 2009. “Who Files? Developing Country Participation in GATT/WTO Adjudication.” The Journal of Politics 71 (3): 1033–49.Google Scholar
Djankov, Simeon, McLiesh, Caralee, Nenova, Tatiana, and Shleifer, Andrei. 2003. “Who Owns the Media?Journal of Law and Economics 46 (2): 341–82.Google Scholar
Friebel, Guido, and Heinz, Matthias. 2014. “Media Slant against Foreign Owners: Downsizing.” Journal of Public Economics 120: 97106.Google Scholar
Gentzkow, Matthew, and Shapiro, Jesse M.. 2010. “What Drives Media Slant? Evidence from U.S. Daily Newspapers.” Econometrica 78 (1): 3571.Google Scholar
Gerth, Karl. 2012. “A New Brand of Chinese Economic Nationalism: From China Made to China Managed.” In Globalization and Economic Nationalism in Asia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 202–23.Google Scholar
Grafton, Steven M., Hoffer, George E., and Reilly, Robert J.. 1981. “Testing the Impact of Recalls on the Demand for Automobiles.” Economic Inquiry 19 (4): 694703.Google Scholar
Kim, Moonhawk. 2016. “Enduring Trade Disputes: Disguised Protectionism and Duration and Recurrence of International Trade Disputes.” The Review of International Organizations 11 (3): 283310.Google Scholar
Kono, Daniel Y. 2006. “Optimal Obfuscation: Democracy and Trade Policy Transparency.” American Political Science Review 100 (3): 369–84.Google Scholar
Kono, Daniel Y., and Rickard, Stephanie J.. 2014. “Buying National: Democracy, Public Procurement, and International Trade.” International Interactions 40 (5): 657–82.Google Scholar
Ku, Lun-Wei, and Chen, Hsin-Hsi. 2007. “Mining Opinions from the Web: Beyond Relevance Retrieval.” Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 58 (12): 1838–50.Google Scholar
Maggi, Giovanni. 1999. “The Role of Multilateral Institutions in International Trade Cooperation.” American Economic Review 89 (1): 190214.Google Scholar
Mansfield, Edward D., Milner, Helen V., and Rosendorff, B. Peter. 2002. “Why Democracies Cooperate More: Electoral Control and International Trade Agreements.” International Organization 56 (3): 477513.Google Scholar
Mansfield, Edward D., and Busch, Marc L.. 1995. “The Political Economy of Nontariff Barriers: A Cross-National Analysis.” International Organization 49 (4): 723–49.Google Scholar
Milner, Helen V., and Kubota, Keiko. 2005. “Why the Move to Free Trade? Democracy and Trade Policy in the Developing Countries.” International Organization 59 (1): 107–43.Google Scholar
Naoi, Megumi. 2009. “Shopping for Protection: The Politics of Choosing Trade Instruments in a Partially Legalized World.” International Studies Quarterly 53 (2): 421–44.Google Scholar
Oh, Seung-Youn. 2013. “Fragmented Liberalization in the Chinese Automotive Industry: The Political Logic behind Beijing Hyundai’s Success in the Chinese Market.” The China Quarterly 216: 920–45.Google Scholar
Qin, Bei, Strömberg, David, and Wu, Yanhui. 2016. “Media Bias in China.” Working Paper.Google Scholar
Rickard, Stephanie J. 2012. “A Non-Tariff Protectionist Bias in Majoritarian Politics: Government Subsidies and Electoral Institutions.” International Studies Quarterly 56 (4): 777–85.Google Scholar
Rickard, Stephanie J., and Kono, Daniel Y.. 2014. “Think Globally, Buy Locally: International Agreements and Government Procurement.” The Review of International Organizations 9 (3): 333–52.Google Scholar
Roberts, Margaret E., Stewart, Brandon M., Tingley, Dustin, Lucas, Christopher, Leder-Luis, Jetson, Gadarian, Shana Kushner, Albertson, Bethany, and Rand, David G.. 2014. “Structural Topic Models for Open-Ended Survey Responses.” American Journal of Political Science 58 (4): 1064–82.Google Scholar
Staiger, Robert W. 2012. “Non-Tariff Measures and the WTO.” World Trade Organization Staff Working Paper ERSD-2012-01.Google Scholar
Stockmann, Daniela. 2013. Media Commercialization and Authoritarian Rule in China. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Truex, Rory. 2016. “Bias and Trust in Authoritarian Media.” Princeton University Working Paper.Google Scholar
Zhang, Hongzhong, Zhou, Shuhua, and Shen, Bin. 2014. “Public Trust: A Comprehensive Investigation on Perceived Media Credibility in China.” Asian Journal of Communication 24 (2): 158–72.Google Scholar
Link
Supplementary material: PDF

Kim supplementary material

Online Appendix

Download Kim supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 658.2 KB