书城社会科学追踪中国——民生故事
19117300000009

第9章 Eye on China(8)

It was a bold move that bucked the international trend but the 43-year-old was more than confident that a “dignified, thoughtful and valuable” current affairs magazine would turn a profit.

Compared to saturated markets in Britain and the United States, Zhu said his research showed the print media market in China had a great deal of potential, thankslargely to an increase in readership and a growing desire among the public for in-depth,analytical news coverage.

“Chinese readers are thirsty for human values … and that’s exactly what magazines sell,” he said. “You can always find magazines that target certain groups of people, talking about their life, beliefs and interests.”

Spending on advertising with national magazines in the US alone fell 19.3 percent in 2009, according to preliminary figures released by the Nielsen Company, a global marketing research firm. In August 2010, the Washington Post Company sold Newsweek for 1, with the 77-year-old publication reportedly suffering operating losses of 44 million since 2007.

Yet, despite print media worldwide facing serious challenges from the Internet and devices like Apple’s iPad, magazines have experienced rapid growth in recent years in China and many experts agree with Zhu that the print media is holding strong with a large proportion of China’s 1.3 billion people.

Among the most popular magazines, Sanlian Lifeweek has seen distribution and advertising increase 15 to 20 percent every year since 2005, while Chinese National Geography (circulation 800,000) has maintained an annual growth of 30 to 40 percent.

An independent audit by BPA Worldwide also found that Vista, a news digest published every 10 days, sold 650,000 copies per issue in the first half of 2010, up from 490,000 in the second half of 2009.

Industry analysts say the boom is closely linked to the economic development that began in 2003, which boosted public demand and enabled readers to afford magazines,which are more expensive than newspapers.

Magazines also remain popular with advertisers. China’s gross advertising spending hit 277 billion yuan (40 billion) in the first half of 2010, with about 7.1 billion yuan of that going to magazines, an increase of 21 percent year-on-year, according to Beijing-based CTR Market Research.

“Compared to television and newspapers, magazines started late in China and have always had a relatively small market share,” said Daphne Wu Chuanhui, managing director of Caixin Media, which publishes Century Weekly, a national news magazine.

A decade ago, if someone said they worked for a business magazine “no one would have any idea what they were talking about”, she said. “But the fact that the market share is tied to GDP growth and consumer power means the industry has a bright future.”

Better with age

Victor Visot, chief executive of Hachette Filipacchi Medias Asia Pacific, a global consumer magazine publishing group, is also optimistic and said that, like a fine wine,China’s magazine market needs to mature.

“The Chinese market is rather new … compared to other parts of the world,” he said.

“But it’s growing because … it is sustained by the overall growth of the economy.”

Chen Zhong, editor-in-chief of Nanfengchuang, agreed that the decade-old market for news magazines is on a lifting track and is still far from reaching a saturation point.

“Take news magazines for example. You could count on both hands almost every popular title in the country,” he said.

A total of 9,851 registered magazine titles published more than 3 billion copies in 2009, generating a combined operating revenue of 14.6 billion yuan (2.1 billion),according to figures from the General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP).

However, the statistics, which show the number of printed copies soared from just 558 million in 1978 to 2.5 billion in 1985, suggest the industry experienced a plateau for the last 25 years.

Shi Feng, chairman of the China Periodicals Association and former deputy director of the GAPP, blamed the problem on a “bottleneck” in the administration.

In recent years, applications for standard serial numbers were rarely approved by the GAPP, which licensed just 383 new titles between 2006 and 2009.

Of all the titles registered today, said Shi, just 1,000 are magazines that can be found at newsstands and in bookstores. The rest is mainly research periodicals, academic journals and brochures produced by government departments.

“There is a bottleneck … and until it is solved many other problems will remain,” hesaid.

Even if a magazine has stopped running, owners refuse to cancel their registration and some transfer or rent serial numbers for huge sums of money, which is against the regulations.

“Magazines should keep flowing, with new titles coming out and old ones dying off,”said Shi. “Without an elimination system (to reclaim unused serial numbers), this pool of running water has turned stagnant.”

Electronic revolution

In terms of consumption capacity and reading habits, analysts say new media is yet to have a major impact on the well-educated middle-class that has begun to form in China’s cities, allowing magazines to build up and maintain loyal readerships.

“As an emerging market economy, China is lagging behind the US,” said Zhu. “We’re following in its footsteps but at a slower rhythm.

“With the surge in mobile and wireless devices, the Chinese magazine market still has room for growth in a foreseeable future, although that room is relatively limited compared to five years ago,” he added.

However, Li Hongping, executive publisher of Vista, who is developing an electronic edition of the magazine that will be available on the iPhone, predicts the impact of new media on the industry will be huge.

“All editors will need to figure out what to do in three to five years,” he said.