ExplorerEnvironmental ScienceEconomics
Research PaperResearchia:202605.19041

Engagement vs. Commitment: The Economic Trade-Offs of Polarizing News Content

Shunyao Yan

Abstract

Content that drives engagement need not be the same content that drives willingness to pay. We study how polarizing content affects engagement (time on site) and commitment (subscriptions and retention) on a major news platform. We measure article-level polarization with deep-learning classifiers and large language models tailored to a multiparty system, and identify causal effects with two complementary instrumental variables: a Bartik instrument exploiting supply-side editorial variation, and ...

Submitted: May 19, 2026Subjects: Economics; Environmental Science

Description / Details

Content that drives engagement need not be the same content that drives willingness to pay. We study how polarizing content affects engagement (time on site) and commitment (subscriptions and retention) on a major news platform. We measure article-level polarization with deep-learning classifiers and large language models tailored to a multiparty system, and identify causal effects with two complementary instrumental variables: a Bartik instrument exploiting supply-side editorial variation, and an election instrument exploiting demand-side political salience. We find that supply-driven increases in polarizing content raise engagement but not subscriptions. During the high-salience election window, the same content reduces subscriptions and accelerates churn, with affective polarization driving the sharpest divergence. On the mechanism, we find evidence inconsistent with confirmation bias: three pre-determined ideology proxies do not moderate the engagement or subscription effects. By contrast, on ideological dimensions where the publisher covers both sides, exogenous shifts in the publisher's supply of content opposite readers' baseline ideology raise their consumption of that content, consistent with balanced consumption. These results document an asymmetric engagement-commitment trade-off for digital publishers: polarizing content reliably captures attention but does not convert to subscriptions, and actively damages commitment when political salience is elevated


Source: arXiv:2605.18357v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.18357v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.18357v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.18357v1

Please sign in to join the discussion.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Access Paper
View Source PDF
Submission Info
Date:
May 19, 2026
Topic:
Environmental Science
Area:
Economics
Comments:
0
Bookmark
Engagement vs. Commitment: The Economic Trade-Offs of Polarizing News Content | Researchia