A new study showed that the readership of newspapers in urban areas declined from 53 per cent in 2013 to 45 per cent in 2014, promoting the publications to integrate more new media targeting the growing number of people getting their news and entertainment online.
Also the number of Chinese regularly watching television declined from 82.2 per cent to 78.8 per cent, the state-run All-China Journalists Association said, citing Tsinghua University report.
The report said China now has 688 million Internet users, including 620 million who use mobile Internet. About 82 per cent of these users visit news sites on mobile phone.
With the massive growth of the internet, China's social media like Weibo, akin to Twitter, has over 600 million registered users.
The massive growth of the social media also made government to tighten controls by making it mandatory for the users to register with their identity.
While the official media in 2011-12 showed signs of expanding its editorial contours, it fell back to era of controls after President Xi Jinping took over, who during the tour of state media outlets in February, said journalists must give absolute loyalty to the Communist Party and "bear the surname of the Party".
The report said newspaper advertising expenditure shrunk year on year by 32.1 per cent in the first half of 2015, and TV advertising fell by 3.4 per cent, while the Internet advertising market netted 53.24 billion yuan (USD 8.24 billion) in the second quarter of 2015, a year-on-year increase of 42.7 per cent.
By 2015 end, 100 million people had downloaded Xinhua app.
