Home / Local News
Wed, Jun 06, 2001 - Page 2 News List

Bad economy forces some newspapers to admit defeat

THROWING IN THE TOWEL The proliferation of cable TV and a saturated market are partly responsible for the closures and staff cutbacks of many publications

AP , TAIPEI

Newspapers are high-profile businesses often founded by tycoons who hate to admit defeat. But that's what some Taiwanese media moguls are doing as the nation's economy slumps and the crowded media market undergoes a shakeout.

Within the past four months, Taiwan's only sports paper, The Great Sports Daily, shut down, along with the Tomorrow Times, Taiwan's first Internet newspaper, which opened last year with a huge bash attended by hundreds at one of Taipei's finest hotels.

Other victims include two newspapers, Taiwan Shin Wen Daily News (台灣新聞報) and Taiwan Shin Sheng Daily News (新生報), which were recently sold and are limping along. And the debt-laden Taiwan Daily News (台灣日報) recently lost the backing of key investor Wang Yung-ching (王永慶), chairman of Formosa Plastics Corp, Taiwan's largest business conglomerate.

A combination of factors has caused the papers to hit hard times. Taiwan's economy is slowing down and a recent explosion in cable TV and radio stations has gobbled up advertising revenue that once went to papers, analysts say.

"The years of making big profits are gone, and newspapers are making changes to face up to the unprecedented challenge," said Hu You-wei (胡幼偉), journalism professor of National Taiwan Normal University.

The changes may have been inevitable. With a population of only 23 million, the country's market appears to be too small for 21 national newspapers -- more than twice the number in Malaysia, which has a similar sized population.

Taiwan also has four major afternoon dailies and three English-language newspapers, though it has a smaller English-reading population compared to other Asian markets, such as Hong Kong, which has two English-language dailies.

The battle for advertising, which account for about 70 percent of newspapers' revenue, gets keener as potential advertisers -- from real estate firms to food companies -- all feel the pinch of the sluggish economy, hurt in part by a global slowdown and sagging demand for a key export: computer parts.

Competition is heating up even more with brash Hong Kong businessman Jimmy Lai's (黎智英) new Taiwanese version of his splashy tabloid Next Magazine, which is Hong Kong's most popular weekly. Lai launched the Taiwan edition last week.

Chen Kuo-hsiang (陳國祥), president of the China Times Express (中時晚報), a leading evening paper, agreed competition is tough but maintained that is the way of life for most Taiwanese businesses.

"All business sectors are overly saturated in Taiwan. Broadcasting is even more so than the print media," Chen said.

Taiwan has seven 24-hour cable TV news channels, launched after tight government control of the broadcasting industry ended when martial law was lifted in 1987.

"TV is a more forceful medium," said Chang Chung-jen (張崇仁) , an official of the Government Information Office. "As they get more viewers, they get a larger share of advertisements."

The cable stations have fleets of trucks equipped with satellite dishes that race around reporting live from the scenes of attempted suicides, drunk driving arrests, prostitution raids and other sensational events.

Taiwan has 1.4 television sets per household, with an 80 percent cable penetration, compared to 60 percent in the US.

Meanwhile, the newspaper reading rate dropped from 86 percent in 1991 to 73 percent last year, according to an AC Nielson survey.

This story has been viewed 2292 times.
TOP top