Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries: The Newspaper Publishing Industry
Table 2: Number of employees and annual average growth rate for the EU27 newspaper
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- Total EU economy 226.604.600 1.1 Source: Eurostat.
- Total publishing sector 58,219 83,472 100 1.9 10.7 -2.6 Total EU
- Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries 28
Table 2: Number of employees and annual average growth rate for the EU27 newspaper
publishing industry 7 Number of employees Annual average growth rate in % 1995 2007 1995-2007 Publishing of newspapers 358,716 302.300 -1.4 Total EU economy 226.604.600 1.1 Source: Eurostat. Table 3: Number of firms, annual average growth rate, average firm size and growth in firm size for the EU27 newspaper publishing industry 2007 Number of firms Number of firms As share of total publishing in % Annual average growth rate between Average firm size Annual average growth firm size, in % 1995 2007 2007 1995-2007 2007 1995-2007 Publishing news- papers 7,251 9,006 10.8 1.8 33.6 -15.9 Total publishing sector 58,219 83,472 100 1.9 10.7 -2.6 Total EU economy 16,175,213 20,865,302 2.1 10.9 -1.4 Source: Eurostat. 7 The number of employees does not take into account individual journalists working freelance: these are included in NACE category 92.31 rather than in category 22.1. Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries 28 In 2007, the newspaper publishing industry in the EU27 consisted of approximately 9,000 companies that employed slightly more than 300,000 people, with an average firm size of 33.6 employees. Between 1995 and 2007, the newspaper publishing sector witnessed an average annual growth of 1.8% in the number of firms. The average firm in 1995 had about 125 employees, which declined between 1995 and 2007 to an average of almost 33.6 employees in 2007. The data show a simultaneous annual average decline in the average firm size (-15.9%) and in the number of employees (-1.4%). The small overall growth in the number of firms in combination with the decline in the total number of employees and the rather steep decline in the average firm size could indicate that especially the smaller firms survived as independent news paper publishers. Another explanation for these figures might be that some of the bigger newspaper publishers are no longer represented in these figures as they merged with multimedia companies that fall in a different statistical category. There are no more recent figures available in Eurostat, but given the economic crisis and the fact that many newspaper publishers needed to cut their costs, it is to be expected that the annual growth rate of the number of employees in 2011 is still negative. In the US for instance, between 2007 and 2009, approximately 12,000 journalists lost their jobs (Tucker, 2009) and between 2009 and 2010, an estimate of 17,588 jobs were lost in the newspaper sector in the US (Jensen, 2010). Table 4 shows some variation between the different EU countries. A distinction is made between first two groups of EU Member States (EU6 and EU9, together EU15) and the new Member States that joined in 2004 and after. The differences between these groups of Member States express different stages in economic development and market maturity of the newspaper publishing industry. The assumption is that newspapers are a luxury good, of which consumption rises with growing economic wealth. This explains the growth visible in the new EU Member States, whose GDP and newspaper consumption are catching up. Another explanation could be that newspapers became more popular due to the liberalisation of the market, with less state control compared to the time of the communist regime. In most of the old Member States the newspaper publishing market seems to be over its top and employment in the newspaper industry suffers from the shift from print to online news production and consumption, as well as possibly from a decline in readership amongst younger generations. Table 4 shows average annual growth rate in employment for different categories of EU member states. This table shows how employment numbers in the sector show decline in all European member states, except for the new accession countries, where employment increased with on average 1.2%. The largest average decline in employment is visible in the EU6; it decreased by 2.7% annually. Download 1.37 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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