Gulf Times

Newspapers cut pay, jobs as revenue falls

- Reuters

India’s vibrant newspaper industry that reaches tens of millions of readers daily has been ravaged by declining advertisin­g revenues due to a nationwide lockdown to fight the coronaviru­s, pushing leading titles to slash jobs and salaries.

Advertisin­g revenues at some top dailies published by market leader The Times Group and publisher ABP Group have nosedived as businesses slash ad spending to conserve cash, senior executives said.

“Our print advertisem­ent revenue, which is 80% to 85% of our total revenue, is almost zero post lockdown,” said D D Purkayasth­a, chief executive of ABP, which publishes English-language daily The Telegraph and top Bengali language newspaper Anandabaza­r Patrika.

The Times of India, among the world’s largest circulatin­g English-language dailies, has shrunk to around 16 pages with supplement­s, compared with 40 plus pages previously, as ads from companies have stopped, said one Times employee.

The Times this week laid off some staff on its Sunday magazine team, a move two journalist­s told Reuters had sparked fears among staff about further job losses.

“There is tension and people are only praying. Who knows what will happen, but everybody is expecting pay cuts,” said one Times Group business journalist, who declined to be named.

The Times Group did not respond to a request for comment.

The government has extended a nationwide lockdown to May 3 to fight the coronaviru­s that has so far infected more than 12,000 and killed over 400 people.

The Hindustan Times, another leading publisher, yesterday said it was moving between 5% and 15% of salaries to variable pay linked to the company’s performanc­e, an internal memo seen by Reuters said.

Companies last year spent nearly $9bn on advertisin­g, including about $2.6bn on print media, according to Pitch Madison advertisin­g report this year.

The Indian Newspaper Society, which represents around 1,000 publishers, has estimated the industry could lose $2bn over the next six to seven months.

It has sought federal support via a 50% increase in government advertisem­ent rates.

The 88-year-old Indian Express this month also announced pay cuts of up to 30% for some staff and warned of more sacrifices to come.” If the situation continues this proposed reduction in salary will also not be enough for us to see through this crisis,” an internal staff memo seen by Reuters said.

The Dainik Bhaskar group, whose Hindi newspaper has the largest circulatio­n of any in India, said it had restructur­ed pay for roughly 1,000 employees, or 12% of its workforce, by introducin­g a variable component dependent on the group’s performanc­e.

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