17 Mass Media
17 Mass Media
17 Mass Media
Newspapers
According to the Japan Newspaper Publishers and Editors Association, in 2006 there were 120 daily newspapers in Japan. Five general-interest national dailies publish different editions across the country, which carry the same political, economic, and cultural reports but vary in their local news coverage and advertising. Four of the regional newspapers, namely the Chunichi Shimbun, Hokkaido Shimbun, NishiNippon Shimbun, and Tokyo Shimbun, are targeted at readers in more than one prefecture, while other local papers cover one specific prefecture. Four of the five national dailies and many of the regional papers publish both morning and evening editions. Subscriptions meant that 94.3% of Japan's papers were delivered to subscribers in 2006. Home delivery has advantages both for the subscriber, who gets a newspaper delivered daily at a price slightly lower than the newsstand price, and for the newspaper publisher, who can enjoy stable circulation. In fiscal 2005 newspaper sales were estimated to account for 51.9% of revenue, and advertising for 30.8%. Foreign newspapers printed in Japan are the International Herald Tribune, Asian Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, and USA Today. Japanese newspapers printed abroadin Asia, Europe, and the United Statesare the Yomiuri Shimbun, Asahi Shimbun, and The Nikkei. Currently three major English-language dailies are published in Japan, the International Herald Tribune/Asahi Shimbun, Daily Yomiuri, and Japan Times. With the rapid increase of Internet users in Japan, most Japanese newspapers and wire services have gone online. A survey conducted by the Japan Newspaper Publishers and Editors Association found that 105 newspapers and news agencies operated 169 news websites and 63 provided news through mobile phones and fixed terminals as of January 2006. According to the Japan Free Newspapers Association, 950 companies published a total of 1,200 free papers throughout Japan as of October 2005. Slightly less than 60% of those are newspaper style and 30% are magazine style.
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Mass Media
155
Source: Japan Newspaper Publishers and Editors Association. a. The most recent year in which a survey was conducted. b. 2004.
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Broadcasting
In Japan, broadcasting services are provided by the publicly supported NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) and a number of commercial broadcasting stations. NHK is financed by subscription fees paid by TV owners under a mandatory contract with the corporation. As of the end of March 2006, the number of NHK subscribers was about 37.5 million. As of the end of March 2006, there were 127 commercial terrestrial TV broadcasters across the nation. Five Tokyo-based TV stations have built up national networks: TBS with 27 local stations, Fuji Television 27, Nippon Television 29, Television Asahi 23, and Television Tokyo 5. The number of cable television subscribers is steadily growing. As of the end of March 2006, about 27.4 million households were subscribing to a cable television service, a 5.3% increase over the previous year. Satellite broadcasting began in August 1989 when NHK commenced programming on its two broadcast satellite (BS) stations, followed by the private channel WOWOW. PerfecTV, which began operations in October 1996 as the first digital communications satellite (CS) broadcaster in Japan, merged with JSkyB in May 1998 to form SKYPerfecTV. In March 2000 it was announced that SKY's only competitor, DirecTV, would discontinue its service by the end of that year and help its subscribers to transfer to SKYPerfecTV. Full-scale BS digital broadcasting was started in December 2000 by NHK and several other newly established private BS broadcasters. Digitization of ground-based TV broadcasting also began in December 2003, initially in three major cities and their neighboring areas, while all analog broadcasting services, both ground-based and satellite, are expected to be terminated by 2011. As of the end of February 2006, there were 47 AM and 241 FM commercial radio broadcasters in Japan. Of the 241 FM operators, 188 are community stations. NHK operates one FM and two AM channels.
(% of air time)
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12.6
5.8 11.3
Mass Media
Source: NHK; National Association of Commercial Broadcasters in Japan. Note: NHK figures are for fiscal 2005. Those for commercial broadcasters are averages for October 2005March 2006.
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News Agencies
There are two major news agencies in Japan: Kyodo News and Jiji Press. Kyodo News is a nonprofit cooperative news service established in November 1945 that provides news in Japanese, English, and Chinese. It supplies news not only to its 57 member companies, which publish 76 newspapers in total, but also to 12 other newspapers and 121 broadcasting stations. Kyodo News has 52 bureaus in Japan and 41 overseas. It had an operational budget of 43 billion in fiscal 2007 and 1,723 employees as of March 2007. Jiji Press Ltd. was also founded in November 1945 and currently has a capitalization of 495 million. It provides news in Japanese, English, and Spanish to about 140 contracting newspaper companies and broadcasters. Jiji Press has 1,081 employees at its headquarters, bureaus, and branches in 81 locations in Japan and 28 bureaus overseas.
Advertising
According to Dentsu Inc., Japan's largest advertising agency, Japan's total advertising expenditure in 2006 increased 0.6% to 5,995.4 billion, marking a rise for the third consecutive year, helped by such factors as the recovery of the Japanese economy, the 2005 World Exposition, Aichi, Japan, the Torino 2006 Winter Olympics, and the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany. Expenditure decreased in all the four main media: newspapers, magazines, radio, and television. Thanks to the diffusion of broadband Internet, Internet advertising continued to grow in 2006 to 363.0 billion, a jump of 29.3% over the previous year, far exceeding the expenditure in radio and 158
fast approaching that in magazines. Particularly notable is advertising linked with search engines (93.0 billion) and advertising for mobile phones (39.0 billion).
( billion)
TV 261.8 ( 4.1) 172.7 ( 7.8) 204.0 ( 1.9) 90.2 (6.9) 209.5 ( 1.6) 156.6 (1.3) 104.3 ( 2.1) 143.6 ( 1.9) 2,016.1 ( 1.2)
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Mass Media
Source: Dentsu Inc., 2006 Advertising Expenditures in Japan. Note: Figures in parentheses show percentage change from the previous year.
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Source: Foreign Press Center/Japan. Note: Figures are for holders of a foreign press registration card issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.
Source: Japan Newspaper Publishers and Editors Association, Nihon shimbun nenkan (Japanese Newspaper Annual), 20062007.
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