Let a hundred papers boom
Competition is breaking in China’s newspaper business
IT CERTAINLY is not Fleet Street, but the dictates of the market are increasingly forcing once tame and stodgy state-controlled publications in China to do something they once would never have dreamed of—appeal to their readers. Sometimes that means indulging in the kind of sensationalism once condemned as the preserve of the bourgeois press. Increasingly, too, it means waging war on competitors.
This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Let a hundred papers boom”
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