Over the last 10 months, there has been a significant shift in public attitudes towards online news, the survey of 11,000 internet users across nine countries has found.
The online polls commissioned by Oxford University's Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (RISJ) were conducted in the UK, US, Denmark, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, urban Brazil and Japan.
The report identified 25-34 year olds as the age group most willing to pay for online news across all nine countries surveyed.
Of those who are not currently paying, across all the countries more than one in 10 (14 per cent), on average, said they were very likely or somewhat likely to pay for digital news in the future. This compares with just 5 per cent of those surveyed in the UK. By contrast, in Brazil the figure was a striking 58 per cent.
Of those in the UK who had not already paid for online news, nearly one quarter (23 per cent) said the main reason for paying for the service in future was if news outlets started to charge rather than provide free news sites.
"We're starting to see significant shifts in public attitudes to online news, with more people starting to pay for digital news or seeming to accept that in future they will probably have to pay for a service that they currently get for free," study author Nic Newman, a research associate at the RISJ and digital strategist, said.
The survey also revealed that for many, the mobile phone is the main way of accessing news when they are on the move. In Denmark, people using public transport are twice as likely to get news on their mobile phone (63 per cent) than read a printed newspaper (33 per cent).
In the UK, on public transport almost half (48 per cent) of those surveyed said they used their mobile phones for news, with one third (34 per cent) preferring to read newspapers and 6 per cent using tablets.
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