Abstract

Sustainable Finance (SF) has been identified as one of the biggest trends in the financial industry in the past years. By channeling capital into sustainable investments, it is hoped that finance can accelerate the transition towards a greener and more sustainable future. However, given that the discussion about SF lacks consistency and a common understanding of SF, the role of financial journalists in reporting about this trend and in enacting their role as watchdogs becomes of paramount interest. To do so, 33 semi-structured interviews with journalists who have covered SF in six countries (AT, BE, CH, DE, NL, UK) were conducted to find out about journalistic role perceptions and daily journalistic practices (such as sources, style of writing and role of the audience). Findings show that journalists mainly enact the role of a chronicler, informant and educator when writing about SF, but fail to fulfil an active watchdog role. Furthermore, the coverage of SF is predominately event-driven, directed at a financial elite, and has become highly professionalized at financial news outlets. Given the urgency of the climate crisis, journalists reported that they found themselves in a moral dilemma between enacting their professional role as a journalist on the one hand and providing a platform for unsubstantiated claims about SF (greenwashing) made by the industry, on the other hand.

Highlights

  • Sustainable Finance (SF) has been identified as one of the biggest trends in the financial industry in the past years

  • One of the key normative roles of journalists is to act as watchdogs (Norris, 2014), and to check whether the claims made by the financial industry and governments about sustainable finance are truthful, and to uncover whether the financial sector is truly following the path towards a greener, resource efficient and more stable economy

  • A financial journalist for a mainstream newspaper in Germany stated, ‘We thoroughly think about what we have reported about in the past, and what would be a new twist

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainable Finance (SF) has been identified as one of the biggest trends in the financial industry in the past years. Recent proclamations made by the industry, national governments (UK, New Zealand, etc.), international communities and organizations (e.g. UN Climate Action Summit 2019) have talked to the need to increase investments in green projects and industries, thereby securing a future that meets targets for net-zero carbon emissions. In this context, the role of financial journalism in covering these topics becomes of paramount interest. The purpose of this paper is to study how financial journalists in Europe perceive their role in covering SF and what journalistic practices they employ when reporting about the topic

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