Confidence Game
ABC Skips 3-Year High in
Consumer Confidence
But Reports Heavily on Negative Number
By Dan Gainor
Director, Business & Media Institute
Megan
Alvarez
July 1, 2005
Consumers are confident that the economy is doing well, better than
any time in three years, but ABC and NBC didnt think enough of that
June 28, 2005, news to even report it. For ABC, this is part of an
ongoing trend of focusing on negative economic news. In the three
years covered by the latest consumer confidence report, ABC has
covered negative numbers twice as often as positive.
ABC had no trouble detailing the downside of the
economic outlook with a lengthy list of adjectives, describing
consumer confidence as: waning, falling, taken a hit,
dropping, spiraling down, way down, terribly low, and going
down dramatically. Overall, ABC covered consumer confidence 41
times in three years, but 28 of those stories were negative and just
13 positive. The networks coverage leaned heavily toward those
negative numbers. ABC covered 11 out of 20 of the months where
consumer confidence was down but just 6 out of 16 where the index
was up.
The Consumer Confidence Index is the result of a
monthly survey done for the non-profit Conference Board. The survey
asks five questions about the economy to a sample of 5,000 U.S.
households. As those numbers went down in six of the seven months
from June through December 2002, ABC covered them 25 times on all of
its news shows.
However, as the economy has steadily improved, the
networks coverage of consumer confidence numbers has declined. In
2003, the network did nine stories as the index showed six of 12
months positive, with a steady upward trend for the year. ABC did
just five stories in 2004 as the overall trend upward continued.
That year had six months that were positive, five negative and one
unchanged. There have been only two stories so far in 2005, despite
overall strong numbers and an even split between positive and
negative months.
When the news was positive, ABC was cautious. In eight
of the 13 positive stories, ABC reporters qualified the good news in
some way with but or yet.
Derek McGinty of World News This Morning was
especially downbeat about positive news. On Nov. 18, 2002, he
stressed terrible news before good consumer confidence numbers.
We got factory production numbers that say that it fell 0.8 percent
in October, terrible news there, but consumer confidence is up a
little bit. What the heck is going on? Im confused, maybe the
markets are too. The next day, he followed on the same program with
a report saying the that recent surges in consumer confidence
might be enough to make the holiday season okay.
Cokie Roberts from ABCs This Week spoke in a
similarly negative tone on July 7, 2002: And if you have consumer
confidence down when consumer spending has been the engine thats
been driving the economy, and you have investor confidence down,
then the economy goes in the tank and then hes (Bush) cooked.
As of July 2005, there have been 25 straight months of
positive employment growth resulting in more than 3 million new jobs
and the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is doing better than expected
at 3.8 percent but ABC is still critical of the economy. On the
June 12, 2005, broadcast of World News Tonight, Terry Moran said,
The search for a summer job. A tight economy and waves of older
workers are making it hard for millions of teenagers.
The previous month, on the May 10, 2005, broadcast of
World News Tonight, Dean Reynolds discussed pension problems at
United Airlines. American industry as a whole is watching the case
intently, to see what it says about how far a company can go to stay
alive in this economy.
On Dec. 31, 2003, Reynolds was at it again on World
News Tonight. Manufacturing still stuttering, home sales
flattening, and consumer confidence sapped by worry over the job
market. As the Bush administration talks up the recovery, the jobs
are still not there. Actually, Reynolds was wrong. At that point,
the United States was several months into a job recovery. ABC also
ignored the June 29, 2005, adjustment to the first quarter GDP
upward from 3.5 percent to 3.8.
Although NBC didnt cover the three-year high in
consumer confidence, it did report on the GDP adjustment. On June
29, 2005, NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams said, Now to the
economy in general, which turned in a solid performance in the first
quarter of this year, it turns out. He continued, The gross
domestic product, the broadest measure of the economy, grew at
annualized rate of 3.8 percent. That's from January through March, a
bit better than an estimate from a month ago.
NBC also had done a story about a year before
highlighting a two-year high in consumer confidence. On June 29,
2004, Williams was again addressing the issue on the NBC Nightly
News, saying On Wall Street today, a report showing consumer
confidence at a two-year high sends stocks higher.
Thats not to say that NBC has always been positive
about the economy. The June 4, 2005, NBC Nightly News had reporter
Ron Mott talking about the problems of young people finding summer
jobs. But it's not just the budget pinch these young people are
feeling. They are facing one of the harshest realities of today's
economy: that when business slows, as it has here around metro
Detroit, they are usually the first to be locked out of the labor
market.
In all, NBC covered consumer confidence 53 times in the
three-year period. Of those, 34 stories discussed negative numbers
while only 18 discussed positive numbers. One story covered the
issue without going into detail about whether the numbers were up on
down. When the economy wasnt doing well, NBC focused heavily on
consumer confidence doing 20 stories from June through December of
2002 and 24 stories in 2003.
As the economy rebounded, the coverage dropped to eight
stories in 2004 and just one in 2005. NBC didnt follow the ABC
policy of using negative news to offset the positive consumer
confidence numbers.
NBC was fairly consistent with its coverage. The
network covered 14 out of 20 of the months where consumer confidence
was down and 10 out of 16 where the index was up.
CBS, CNN and Fox News all covered the latest milestone
when the Consumer Confidence Index hit a three-year high June 28,
2005. Anchor Bob Schieffer of the CBS Evening News reported it the
same evening. On the CBS MoneyWatch, it was reported today that a
widely watched survey of consumer confidence rose sharply to a
three-year high in June; that and a drop in crude oil prices pushed
the stock market higher.
Earlier that day, CNNs Kitty Pilgrim had referred to a
strong reading on consumer confidence during Inside Politics.
And Shepherd Smith of the Fox Report said, New buyers sure are
confident. In fact, consumer confidence rose more than analysts
expected in June. That's according to business research group, the
Conference Board. It's at its highest level in three years. He
added that The Conference Board says the improvement in consumers'
mood likely means economic growth for the next several months.