"This report explores the recent trajectory of South African news with a specific focus on the economic sustainability of news media. Digital news consumption on mobile phone, and especially via Social Media on Smart Phones (SMSP) is fracturing audiences and reducing traditional sources of revenue. Printed newspapers in particular are starting to close and will be closing, this report suggests, at an accelerated rate, and while the past two or three years have seen a revival in important national-level political reporting, local and community media is increasingly losing the struggle to survive. Dozens of community papers have closed in 2015-2017, some after many decades of publishing. The Times in Johannesburg closed in January 2018. Many others will follow. In addition, as this report explores, much of the best current journalism produced in South Africa is currently financed by grants and donations from international foundations. The disruption of the news industry by digital technology has, in South Africa, been exacerbated by political manipulation of news media, including, as this report explores, a multi-pronged attack on media coordinated by what the report describes as the Zuma-centred power elite (after the 2017 PARI report “How South Africa is being Stolen”)." (Executive summary)
1 Introduction: The sustainability of the news industry and journalism in South Africa, 2
2 Key Issues in Media Economics, 10
3 Audience and Access: The context and specificities of South African journalism and the current audiences, 26
4 The South African news industry’s business models and income strategies, 38
5 Developing New Revenue Streams: An overview of recent experimentation in South Africa, 60
6 Understanding the mechanisms and financial impact of media capture in South Africa, 78
Conclusion, 80