CAIRO (AFP) – Newspaper sellers were once a dime a dozen on Cairo’s bustling streets, but now the vendors hawking hot-off-the-press editions have fallen almost silent.
As elsewhere in the world, Egypt’s print media has been in sharp decline as news has moved mostly online and readers tend to stay up-to-date via their smartphones.
In Egypt, a country of 103 million people, the trend has been especially stark since the government, which publishes most newspapers, has also raised their prices.
“No one buys newspapers anymore, especially since they got more expensive,” said a vendor in her 50s known as Umm Mohammed, wearing a woollen shawl against the winter chill.
Critics also bemoan the homogeneity of the press in a country tightly ruled by army-marshall-turned-President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, where censorship and self-censorship
are common.
The stacks of newspapers and magazines before Umm Mohammed have hardly shrunk all morning, she said, sitting at her kiosk in Cairo’s western Dokki district.
Between 6am and 3 pm, she said she had earned just EGP15 pounds, or about USD1.
The government three years ago raised prices of dailies from two to three pounds, and of weeklies from three to four pounds, citing costlier raw materials and dwindling subscriptions. This dampened print circulation in the Arab world’s largest country, where the average family income is around EGP6,000 per month.
Sales collapsed further last July when the government scrapped evening newspaper print editions.
“People used to come by to get the evening paper and then pick up a couple of other issues on the way,” said Umm Mohammed. “Now we don’t even have that.”
“It’s mobile phones everywhere. People passing my kiosk often ask: ‘Oh, people are still selling these, even with everything online?’
“That really upsets me. This is our livelihood. What are we supposed to do?”
Microbus driver Tareq Mahmud, 44, stopping near the kiosk, said he hadn’t bought a newspaper in 11 years.
“I stopped when I realised that the journalists I was reading in the paper every morning were the same ones I had watched on television” the previous evening, he told AFP.
“And I think there are many like me who stopped around then.”
According to official statistics, Mahmud is right: Egypt in 2019 published 67 titles – public, private or linked to political parties – down from 142 in 2010. Circulation roughly halved from more than one million copies to 539,000 over the decade.
Editor-in-chief of the Rose al-Youssef weekly Ahmad al-Taheri, a staple of Egyptian journalism for almost a century, said media need to innovate, including in their distribution.
“We need to find new outlets,” he told AFP, suggesting new pandemic-era sales points:
“Why not pharmacies?”
This is hardly a solution for Umm Mohamed, who after 18 years in the business is planning for her retirement.
In the absence of a trade union or other support system, she, like other vendors, recently signed up to a modest pension scheme with state-run publisher the Ahram Foundation.
But even this pension is not guaranteed.
Head of the National Press Authority Abdul Sadiq el-Shorbagy told Parliament in January that the state press is indebted, owing over USD573 million in taxes and insurance payments.
Press outlets are bleeding cash as going online has yet to turn a profit for them, with most content offered for free and advertising revenue proving insufficient.
Editor-in-chief of the private daily Al-Shorouk Imad Eddine Hussein, bemoaned the “sorry state” of the press in Egypt.
All front pages tend to look almost identical, reporting on the same presidential speeches or ministerial announcements.
“It’s all the same, across every newspaper, so readers are turning away from them,” said Hussein. “If it continues like this, it’s not just the state press that’s going to disappear, private newspapers will too.”