Jeff Jarvis has been pooh-poohing news that’s subsidized by governments or do-gooders:
I see another danger … that not-for-profit ventures will delay or even choke off for-profit, sustainable entrepreneurship in news. I would prefer to see various of the many funders who gave funds to not-for-profit endeavors – note $5 million give to a new not-for-profit entity in the Bay area – instead had invested in for-profit companies that can build companies that support and sustain themselves rather than rely on hand-outs. That is God’s work.
Jarvis intends this as a paean to capitalism. But he’s got a weirdly non-capitalist way of thinking about nonprofits.
Jarvis’s notion that nonprofits are an anomaly in the market system — and therefore less “sustainable” — forgets the fact that nonprofits produce goods and function within the market system like anybody else.
Sometimes they produce public services for governments. Sometimes they produce warm fuzzies for rich donors.
Wherever the money comes from, a successful nonprofit has found a market for whatever it’s producing. That’s God’s work, too.
