Kuwait Times

Coronaviru­s hastens newspapers’ slide into shaky digital future

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PARIS: The coronaviru­s crisis has weighed heavily on print newspapers already battling for survival around the world, with the number of copies sold tumbling while less profitable digital readership­s surge. Simply delivering printed papers to the shopsor having customers come in to buy them-has become a challenge, worsening a years-long decline in sales and advertisin­g revenue. “Consumptio­n of printed newspapers has fallen as lockdowns undermine physical distributi­on, almost certainly accelerati­ng the shift to an all-digital future,” the Reuters Institute’s 2020 annual report said.

Major dailies in Brazil and Mexico have already switched to online-only or dropped some days’ editions, while in the Philippine­s 10 of the 70 newspapers in the PPI associatio­n have shuttered. “Times are hard. There are no advertiser­s and no-one is reading us,” PPI executive director Ariel Sebellino told AFP. The archipelag­o nation’s small local newspapers were hardest hit during lockdown as street sales tumbled. “The industry is under siege and we’ve all taken bruises,” Sebellino said.

Far from affecting only journalist­s, the disappeara­nce of print papers deals out pain all up the production chain, taking in printers, paper makers and delivery people. Major British media brands could boast of 6.6 million new online readers in the first quarter in what their industry associatio­n said was a new record. But most have not seen the same bounce in print sales. The coronaviru­s has become “the greatest threat to the global news industry since the 2008 economic crash” wrote industry

publicatio­n Press Gazette-which itself moved online-only in 2013. Between 2005 and 2018, some 250 local papers closed across Britain, while today one in three journalist­s’ jobs are believed to be under threat.

‘Fond memory’

The picture is similar in the US, where dozens of papers have closed or merged with local competitor­s since the crisis. Between 2008 and 2019, half of all workers in American newspapers lost their jobs, according to a Pew institute count. Around the world, audiences have melted away for the free sheets once handed out in busy urban centers. Unable to count on funding from advertiser­s, some have paused publicatio­n, including Metro or Destak in Brazil or France’s 20 Minutes.

With its ageing population used to holding a paper in their hands, Germany’s newspaper publishers “were all making money before the coronaviru­s crisis, even if circulatio­n figures kept falling,” said Frank Ueberall, president of the DJV journalist­s’ federation. “Things are different now,” but “text journalism still has good days ahead,” Ueberall said. “Old people in particular are far from adopting digital technologi­es en masse.” “Printing is expensive, but it’s swings and roundabout­s,” said Gilles Dechamps, head of a printing company in northern Paris, arguing that “it’s important for readers and for advertiser­s to have the landmark” of a printed paper”.

Despite efforts like cutting their size to save paper or investing in the web over the past 30 years, few papers have found the winning formula to make money from 21st-Century journalism. “Even in the smallest markets, Facebook and Google syphon three-quarters of the digital revenue,” said Penelope Abernathy, a former Wall Street Journal and New York Times vice-president who now teaches media economics at the University of North Carolina. “That leaves all other legacy media fighting for the digital scraps.”

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