OTTAWA, ON (July 31, 2025):
Canada’s approach to saving news media is “burying the lede” by focusing on newsroom subsidies while ignoring the fundamental threat posed by the social media induced “attention economy,” argues a new paper from the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.
In Dismantling the Attention Economy, author Andrew MacDougall reveals how platforms like Meta, X, TikTok, and YouTube have created an information ecosystem hostile to quality journalism by monetizing human attention through deliberately addictive features.
The scale of destruction is staggering: 450 Canadian media outlets have closed since 2008, throwing around one-third of journalists out of work.
But the damage extends far beyond newsrooms. “Social media is driving cognitive overload, addiction, and worsening mental health – especially among children and young women,” the author states, with rising depression rates and constant digital distraction becoming the norm.
The volume of content makes traditional regulation impossible. Over a billion stories are shared on Facebook daily, while YouTube uploads 500 hours of video every minute. “The attention economy is virtually unpoliceable at these volumes,” MacDougall writes.
Instead of policing outputs, Canada must target the business models and product features driving this flood of content. The paper recommends:
To learn more, read the full paper here:
For further information, media are invited to contact:
Skander Belouizdad
Communications Officer
(613) 482-8327 x111
skander.belouizdad@macdonaldlaurier.ca





