NY Times gains in otherwise grim newspaper sector

The headquarters of The New York Times is pictured on April 21, 2011 in New York City
The headquarters of The New York Times is pictured on April 21, 2011 in New York City. The New York Times, boosted by gains in digital readers, rose to the number two spot among US daily newspapers in a sector still struggling with falling print circulation, industry figures showed Tuesday.

The New York Times, boosted by gains in digital readers, rose to the number two spot among US daily newspapers in a sector still struggling with falling print circulation, industry figures showed Tuesday.

Overall circulation for 593 US newspapers for the period to March 31 fell 0.7 percent from a year earlier, and Sunday circulation for 519 newspapers surveyed dropped 1.4 percent, according to the Alliance for Audited Media.

The industry group, previously known as the Audit Bureau of Circulations, last year revised its reporting to reflect both print and digital readers.

Digital readership, which includes access on and websites, made further gains in the past year and now accounts for 19.3 percent of US daily , from 14.2 percent in March 2012, AAM said.

The remained the number one daily with a total print and digital circulation of 2.38 million, the figures showed. That reflects a drop of some 86,000 in print and a gain of more than 300,000 digital readers.

The moved ahead of USA Today to the number two position, with a combined circulation of more than 1.8 million. That included the addition of some 325,000 digital readers, lifting the total to over one million. That offset a loss of nearly 50,000 in print from a year ago, according to AAM.

, with a total circulation of 1.67 million, doubled the number of digital readers to nearly 250,000 but lost more than 275,000 in print.

The rest of the industry showed a continuation of the trend in recent years of declining print and some gains in digital, which generally produces less revenue.

More than 300 US dailies now have some type of paywall, while many allow some free or "metered" content, according to recent surveys.

The Washington Post, one of the last major US newspapers to offer its content free of charge online, is set to begin its paywall later this year.

AAM said The remained the number four US daily with a combined circulation of 653,000, followed by the New York Daily News (516,000), New York Post (500,000), (474,000) and Chicago Sun-Times (470,000).

The number nine daily was the Denver Post (416,000) and tenth was the Chicago Tribune (414,000).

AAM said it was studying a proposal to eliminate the five-day average for print circulation to be able to include newspapers which have cut their print editions. Several have reduced home delivery options of print just three days a week.

The New York Times remained the top Sunday newspaper with total average circulation of just over 2.3 million, including more than one million digital readers, according to AAM.

© 2013 AFP

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