Greg Ip on the WSJ, the Economist, and Blogging

How could Greg Ip leave the WSJ for the Economist? I mean, he’s a brand – and the Economist doesn’t do brands, except its own. (And that it does exceedingly well.) What did he mean when he told Reuters that he’s looking forward to "a more analytical and critical style of writing"? Was he not allowed to do that at the Journal? And what about Real Time Economics, his extremely successful WSJ blog? Could he really just walk away from such a franchise? I felt I had to ask. And Ip, mensch that he is, replied in some detail.

Ip certainly didn’t have anything but praise for the Journal. But he did seem to imply that the Economist will give him a bit more elbow room:

The Journal has traditionally encouraged its reporters to become

knowledgeable enough in their beat that they can apply their own

analysis to their subjects, and I certainly followed that tradition.

That said, I think The Economist by its nature is particularly conducive

to the application of one’s critical judgment (they sometimes call

themselves a "Viewspaper"), so long as that judgment is based on facts,

rigorous analysis and, where possible, economic principles.

And the blog?

I’m proud of what Real Time Economics has become – a source of added

value on economic issues that draws high traffic especially from

economists and people on Wall Street. Traffic is particularly high on

days when big economic news breaks, like a surprise Fed decision. Though

I did take the lead in its creation, it is now the product of many

people in the U.S. and overseas (allow me a shoutout to editor Phil Izzo

who more than anyone else keeps it vital). That means I was able to take

a break from blogging without worrying it would have no fresh material.

I am sorry to leave RTE but I will now be contributing to the

online edition and the blogs of The Economist, in particular Free Exchange, the

economics blog. Like the newspaper, the blog is

anonymous, the idea being that readers would want to engage with The

Economist rather than individual writers.

It’ll be interesting to see whether Ip can help turn Free Exchange into something as vital as RTE; at the moment it’s not somewhere to turn when big economic news breaks, although since it serves only a very truncated RSS feed I have to admit I barely read it at any time (Update: There is a full feed, here, already. Who knew? Mark Thoma, for one.) Maybe Ip can change their mind on that front!

It’s worth noting that Ip made the decision very early on to make all the blog entries on RTE anonymous – maybe he’ll fit quite well into the Economist. Indeed, RTE’s the only anonymous WSJ blog: perhaps that too will change now Ip’s leaving.

Ip signed off by saying that "the people I most want to reach almost

all read The Economist," which I daresay is true. I wonder how many of them will be trying to second-guess which articles came from Ip.

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