Poynter reporting:
My friend Alan Mutter wrote something startling this week in his always thought-provoking blog, Reflections of a Newsosaur: “The population of people reading newspaper has aged dramatically in the last three years.”
By Mutter’s analysis, roughly three-quarters of newspaper readers are now over age 45.
That, according to his calculations, is up dramatically from half in
2010 — a graying of newspaper readers by 50 percent in two years.
He based his analysis on data from the Pew Research Center that I was involved in producing from summer 2010 and summer 2012. (I left the Pew Research Center in December to take the helm of the American Press Institute).
The problem is, the analysis doesn’t reflect reality.
First, the numbers don’t track with any commensurate significant drop in newspaper readership in the Pew dataset. In the survey conducted in June 2012,
49 percent of adults said they read a newspaper “regularly,” the same
percentage as in 2010. If you take the narrower number, the percentage
of adults who read a newspaper “yesterday,” there is a slight change, a
drop from 31 percent in 2010 to 29 percent in 2012, but nothing that
would support the kind of dramatic structural shift Mutter estimates.
Nor do recent circulation figures suggest it.
Mutter attempted to estimate the percentage of print newspaper
readers by age cohort by comparing the Pew Research data with Census
data. But the Pew data was a sample of adults. He compared that to the
population overall, including children. So his percentages are not
comparing the same populations.
The market research firm Scarborough Research produces analysis that
covers the ground Mutter was trying to walk — the percentage of
newspaper readers by age group. Scarborough’s data, which is based on a
large sample of some 200,000 people, also find, like Pew Research’s
data, relatively minor change in two years. According to that
Scarborough data, 68 percent of the people who said they read a print
newspaper “yesterday” were over 45, compared with 66 percent in 2010, a
slight drop but also not an irrelevant one given long-term trends. (On
the Newspaper Association of America site, where this data is publicly
available, the numbers are broken out into slightly different age groupings.
http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/mediawire/201042/newspaper-readers-are-not-graying-as-quickly-as-reported/
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