Government

The Hidden Costs of Losing Your City's Newspaper

Without watchdogs, government costs go up, according to new research.
The newsroom of the Philadelphia Inquirer, in 2009, when the owners filed for bankruptcy.Joseph Kaczmarek/AP

When local newspapers shut their doors, communities lose out. People and their stories can’t find coverage. Politicos take liberties when it’s nobody’s job to hold them accountable. What the public doesn’t know winds up hurting them. The city feels poorer, politically and culturally.

According to a new working paper, local news deserts lose out financially, too. Cities where newspapers closed up shop saw increases in government costs as a result of the lack of scrutiny over local deals, say researchers who tracked the decline of local news outlets between 1996 and 2015.