Sunday, November 24, 2019
Media language accelerates recovery - Emphasis
Media language accelerates recovery   Media language accelerates recovery  The increasing use of the word recovery in the press during the  recent financial crisis may have contributed to the UKs eventual climb  out of recession, new research from Emphasis has found.  This unique project  the second from the Emphasis Research Centre  began as a positive alternative to The Economists R-word index, which predicts economic downturns by tracking the use  of the word recession. The research charts the use of the term  recovery (along with green shoots) in the British broadsheets during  the recent recession and the months leading up to it. It reveals what  appears to be a significant link between the number of press articles  mentioning the word and climbs in both the FTSE 100 and Nationwide  Consumer Confidence Index.  The sudden increase in the use of recovery actually began long  before any real sign of one existed. In fact, the UK was sliding further  into recession and the markets were in freefall at the time. But the  continued and ever-increasing reference to a tentative recovery may have  helped precipitate a slight return to form, as both indexes began to  rise slowly in February 2009.  Other factors undeniably played a part in renewed faith in the  markets. The stimulus package announced in November 2008, the start of  quantitative easing the following March, and the G20 summit in April  2009 are all likely to have influenced confidence. And mentions of  recovery, though regular, were often far from positive.  Yet the apparent link between the rise in newspapers references to  recovery and the fluctuations in both the FTSE 100 and Consumer Confidence Index during the most intense periods of the economic crisis  seem significant.  It could be that merely repeating the word recovery, like a  mantra, somehow seeped into the subconscious of both the public and the  market, says Rob Ashton, Chief Executive of Emphasis. This may be an  example of journalists creating the news as well as reporting it.  Download the full Recovery Watch research report here. Download the press release here.    
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