This among other things is what data released by the Audit Bureau of Circulations throws up.
The newspaper market in India, contrary to global trends, just keeps
growing. In the 7 year period from 2006 to 2012 the total number of paid copies certified by the ABC, rose by over 10 million to hit 48.29 million.
If you take unpaid circulation into account then the total goes well over 100 million copies making India the second largest newspaper market in the world after China.
The ABC, which certifies the circulation for 678 editions of various member publications, recently changed its system.
Its press release on that gives a very comprehensive picture of circulation growth.
Add readership numbers to it and three things about the daily newspaper market in India jump at you. One, English newspapers have hardly grown on any parameter.
The time spent on English papers has fallen by over 6.5 per cent between 2006 and 2012.
So unless they can reinvent themselves for the digital age, English newspapers will go the American way.
Two, Indian language newspapers, especially Hindi, Malayalam, Marathi and Telugu are seeing some phenomenal growth.
This is evident from the growth in both copies and readers. But more important is the ratio of readers per copy sold.
In most of these languages it has started falling, indicating that less people are sharing newspapers
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