When I came to know
from SAJA (South Asian Journalists Association) forum that a new business
daily is coming soon, I thought how India is changing?
There is no wonder US
president George Bush commented on the growth of Indian middle class
recently. Foreign media giants are planning to invest in India. One couldn't
have imagined this in the past. But now the scenario has changed. In
America, newspapers are falling apart; an American journalist recently
commented that journalism "appears to be a dying business.”
A recent study by
Reporter Jennifer Saba reveals that the top US papers have lost a collective
1.4 million in daily circulation. But in India, print or broadcast,
newspaper or magazine, are all growing. The change is exciting as far as a
journalist is concerned.
In America there is
one major national business daily. In India, that number is at six. The
sixth one is coming soon. Pearson PLC, the UK publisher of the Financial
Times news paper, is planning to start a daily business newspaper and join
hands with a local partner Network 18 Media & Investments Ltd, the
controller of India's largest business news television channel, CNBC-TV18.
India's growing
affluent middle class is the business target of this daily too according to
sources. It is a paradox that in developed countries, newspaper industry is
struggling and in India it is growing.
Indian law permits
only 26% stake by foreign media. However, foreign media houses have an eye
for their business in India. The collaboration of two familiar brands of
newspapers would help in beating competitors, according to Pearson.
Hindustan Times Media Ltd.'s business daily "Mint” also has a special
arranged content contract with the ‘Wall Street Journal’, owned by News
Corporation which is a tough competitor of Pearson. This is the general
trend within the Indian media industry.
But when we analyse
an in-depth study by a Fulbright scholar James Mutti on Indian media,
democracy and press, still there are many unpleasant things to discuss.
According to Mutti, Media is not playing a significant public service role.
He suggests a new media model is needed, one which balances its profit
motive with coverage of issues relevant to the poorer, weaker, voting
classes. He believes that this could serve as a model for the developing
world.
Centre for the Study
of Developing Societies (CSDS) had conducted a survey in 2006 in which 26%
of respondents reported regularly watching news on TV but 38 % reported they
never had. 22% read newspaper regularly. 47% never did read newspaper.
When media is not
focusing on issues that effects poorer and weaker sections of society, how
can the democratic process be successful?
The researcher points
out that the assembly election event in Uttar Pradesh last year. He said BSP
of Mayawati didn’t get much media coverage. The party didn't advertise too.
Still, the party won in that election (2004 Loksabha election). This means
majority of politically active citizens are out of the media influence.
A similar instance is
the election verdict of Gujarat. Even Tehelka disclosure of Gujarat riot
didn’t influence the electorate. Narendra Modi became CM again with a huge
majority. These are the instances of the media losing influential opinion
maker power.
Many serious issues
related with hunger, agriculture, rural health care, education, and
unemployment are untouched by major media and they go behind sensational
issues and glamour because the readers are middle class and they are not
interested in these serious issues.
When one examines the
proportion of news coverage in major media, the sufferings of poor or
downtrodden people are low and the glitz and glamour of the beauty
pageantries, billionaires and Bollywood are far ahead.
In a democratic
nation, the press stands as the strong pillars. Being the fourth estate,
Indian media has a great role to assure public good.
Poor and downtrodden
people should get justice. Their problems should be highlighted than
entertaining the middle class readers. When media is becoming more and more
infotainment, many serious issues are ignored. Vinod Shukla, the 67 year old
Lucknow editor of India’s largest newspaper, the Hindi-language Dainik
Jagran, opined that media too often abdicates its role as an educator in
favor of being an entertainer. Balancing is the need of the hour. Media
should stand for public good.
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By Rajesh
Kumar for CalicutNet.com