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Roque Rivas Zambrano

As an editor, I saw more than one journalist fleeing the economy. In the newsrooms, they called it one of the "hard sources". We had to deal with numbers, percentages, laws and financial measures, among other complex terms.

The fear of the unknown and the implications of an error prevented journalists who were new to the profession from seeing the potential of economic problems and all that could be said about them.

Luis Miguel González, editorial director of the newspaper El Economista de México, at a seminar of the Foundation for New Ibero-American Journalism (FNPI), listed several ideas to redefine the agenda of journalism in the region.

From their contributions, one can conclude that the key lies in the development of a program of their own, betting more on the badysis, explanation and concentration on the mic. For Gonzalez, monitoring public accounts and businesses is only one aspect of the coin. The other is in the stories of workers, consumers, landowners.

Martin Caparrós, an Argentine journalist and writer, managed to do this exercise by writing his book "El hambre". To approach and fully explore a reality (currently nearly 800 million people do not eat enough), Caparrós traveled around the world to experience the causes and effects of lack of food.

For him, it was essential to stop engaging in the "badgraphy of misery" and opt, rather, to talk about people.

In an interview with Carlos Laorden, for El País de España, the columnist criticized: "You think about hunger and think about numbers and percentages, not about people, it boils down to removing the potential for violence." Putting the face on the numbers is the best way to show the real impact of the problems in society.

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