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A recent survey says a majority of nearly 50 crore smartphone users in India spend most of their time (72 percent) surfing the net on their mobile phones. News and entertainment are two sectors most consumers tap into. No wonder, digital media platforms have witnessed exponential growth in the last few years. But have digital news platforms replaced the good old newspapers, like they have done elsewhere in the world? The answer is an emphatic no.
According to an Audit Bureau of Circulation (ABC) report (May 2017), India has bucked the global trend of declining readership of print media.
In his piece, The Last Bastion of a Profitable Press, parliamentarian Shashi Tharoor affirms this and says:
Spurt in literacy levels in the last two decades, rising disposable income and the perceived credibility of written words are some of the reasons why this has happened. Noted media commentator Vinita Kohli-Khandekar observes:
The consumption of printed words is not confined to the generation of older die-hard readers. Young India too is quite keen to rely on multiple platforms. The perceived credibility of the printed word may have also contributed to the growth in circulation of newspapers.
However, what needs further elaboration is wide variation in growth rates of Indian language newspapers vis-a-vis English newspapers. English newspapers used to have total domination in the 1960s, with nearly 27 percent market share in overall circulation.
Hindi and Tamil newspapers used to be distant second and third respectively. The situation began to change rather dramatically after the 1990s.
The trend continues till date.
What is even more noticeable is the exponential rise in the demand for Hindi dailies. An Audit Burea Circulation (ABC) report (December 2016) points out that in 2016, two of the top three circulated newspapers were Dainik Jagran and Dainik Bhaskar, both Hindi dailies, followed by The Times of India in English.
Also Read: The Indian Newspaper Industry is on a Roll
Media researcher Sandeep Bhushan, however, has a slightly different take.
Alleged artificial spikes aside, credibility of newspaper brands and less-than-satisfactory offerings of television news may have also contributed to the growth of newspapers.
But why have Hindi dailies seen the kind of growth they have over the last few years?
The growth in circulation of Hindi dailies has been as swift as the rise in literacy levels in predominantly Hindi speaking states. While literacy rates have gone up from 52 to 74 percent (a growth of 42 percent) at the national level between 1991 and 2011, the rise has been rather swift – from 42 to 69 percent, which means a growth of 65 percent – in Empowered Action Group (EAG) states. States like Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh, Rajasthan and Odisha are part of EAG states.
Growing urbanisation too may have played its part. A UN World Urbanisation Prospects report (2014) states that the annual rate of urbanisation in India between 2010 to 2015 was 1.1 percent, the highest among major global economies. India is expected to add over 400 million people to its urban population between 2014 and 2050. More people in the cities means more readers for newspapers.
Incidentally, between 2001-2011, growth in size of urban population – at 91 million – was more than that of rural population.
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