“…In 1970, according to Editor & Publisher International Year Book, there were 62.1 million weekday newspapers in circulationabout 0.3 papers per person. Since 1990, circulation has declined steadily, and in 2006 there were just 52.3 million weekday papersabout 0.17 per person. In January 1994, forty-nine per cent of respondents told the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press that they had read a newspaper the day before. In 2006, only forty-three per cent said so, including those who read online. Book sales, meanwhile, have stagnated. The Book Industry Study Group estimates that sales fell from 8.27 books per person in 2001 to 7.93 in 2006. According to the Department of Labor, American households spent an average of a hundred and sixty-three dollars on reading in 1995 and a hundred and twenty-six dollars in 2005. In To Read or Not to Read, the N.E.A. reports that American households spending on books, adjusted for inflation, is near its twenty-year low, even as the average price of a new book has increased. More alarming are indications that Americans are losing not just the will to read but even the ability. According to the Department of Education, between 1992 and 2003 the average adults skill in reading prose slipped one point on a five-hundred-point scale, and the proportion who were proficientcapable of such tasks as comparing viewpoints in two editorialsdeclined from fifteen per cent to thirteen.”
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