The Newspaper Publishing Industry
75
Table 13: Number of employees in news publishing industry in China, India, Japan and the USA
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
% change
2005/2009
China
-- -- -- --
--
India
-- -- -- --
--
Japan
1
49.523 49.668 48.069 48.331
47.599
-4%
USA
2
54.100 53.600 55.000 52.600
46.700
-14%
EU27
3
304.300 310.000 302.300 na na
1
WAN-IFRA (2010) Source NSK: the figures include employees working for news agencies.
2
WAN-IFRA (2010) Source: 2005-2008 American
Society of Newspaper Editors; 2009 American
Society of Newspaper Editors; US Bureau of Labour Statistics. Included are journalists and
newsroom staff. For 2009 a Total number of employees in the Newspaper publishing industry is
provided: 295.010.
3
Based
on Eurostat data, total number of employees, not only journalists and newsroom staff.
4.3 Online
news
As we have seen in Chapters 2 and 3, a considerable part of print newspaper readers has
shifted to online news sources. To assess the vitality of the EU newspaper publishing market
it is therefore also of interest to compare how newspapers in the EU are performing online in
comparison with newspapers in the US and the main Asian newspaper markets.
The report of
the worldwide industry organisation WAN-IFRA provides figures on the number of unique
visitors per month of the top 100 newspapers websites. Whereas of the top-100 print
newspapers (measured in circulation), only 10% find their origin in Europe, the top-100 of
daily newspaper websites (measured in unique visitors per month) shows a rather different
picture. In the top-10
of this list, Europe is represented by seven newspapers, five from the
UK and two from Spain. In total, 40 websites of European newspapers are in the top-100 list.
If we add-up the number of unique visitors of these news sites per continent, 47%
of the total
amount of visitors can be attributed to websites of European newspapers, 33% to Asian
newspapers and 20% to American or Australian newspapers (see Figure 27). The differences
in ranking of European, Asian and US newspapers between the off-
and online readership can
probably be explained by the fact that more Europeans than Asians have access to the
internet, and consequently are more likely to read online newspapers than people in Asia. The
fact that some of the European newspaper can, through their online presence, also gain new
audiences
across borders, might also contribute to their success. However more data on the
composition and origin of news website visitors would be needed to be able to provide a
better interpretation of the figures.