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Canadians are losing their appetite for news — and trusting it less

A new report suggests Canadians are avoiding the news more and less willing to pay subscription fees. Shutterstock

REUTERS Digital News Report

Sébastien Charlton, Université Laval and Colette Brin, Université Laval

Canadians have less appetite for news and are less inclined to pay for news online, according to the latest findings from the 2023 Digital News Report survey by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford.

The Digital News Report, conducted by an international team of scholars, is one of the most comprehensive surveys about digital news consumption around the world. It’s based on a survey of over 90,000 online news consumers in 46 countries, including Canada — covering half of the world’s population.

The new data on Canadian news habits shows payment for online news or access to paid services (via a library, for example), which had been growing slowly in recent years, slipped by four percentage points — from 15 percent in 2022 to 11 percent in 2023. This is the first decline since 2016, when Canadian data was first collected, and the lowest result since 2019.

A graph that shows the percentage of Canadians who are paying for news from 2016-23
There was a drop in the number of Canadians who are paying for news in 2023.
Reuters Institute/Oxford University, Centre d’études sur les médias, CC BY

Canadians also seem less and less interested in the news: 80 percent say they’re interested in news in 2023, a drop of six percentage points since 2021. However, fewer say they actively avoid the news (63 percent) compared to 2022 (71 percent).

Social media less used for news

In this context of relative disinterest in news, and while Meta is reducing its platforms’ importance on news content, more Canadians say they did not access news via social media in the week preceding the survey. This share rose from 26 percent to 36 percent between 2022 and 2023 — the highest result since 2018.

All major social media platforms are down, with the exception of Twitter, which remains stable at 11 percent for this first survey since its acquisition by Tesla founder Elon Musk. Facebook remains the most used social media when interacting with the news, at 29 percent, but down 11 percentage points from 2022 (40 percent) and by far its lowest result since 2016.

A graph that shows a breakdown of news consumption by Canadians over several social media channels
Facebook remains Canadians’ most popular social media channel for news, although more people say they aren’t using it for news. Reuters Institute/Oxford University, Centre d’études sur les médias, CC BY

Still, one in four Canadians gets news primarily from social media. Television news shows remain the main source of information for the largest number of respondents (40 percent), followed by websites and news apps (27 percent). Those figures are the same as last year.

Mobile phones remain the most popular device for consulting news online, used by one in two people (52 percent) in the week preceding the survey. But this number is down nine percentage points from 2022. This is the lowest result since 2019, which seems consistent with declining interest in current affairs and less contact with news on social media.

Trust continues to decline

Trust in the news continues its slow descent among the country’s anglophones: 37 percent say they trust most news most of the time. For French-speaking Canadians, this confidence is higher (49 percent) and up slightly from a year ago (47 percent in 2022).

A graph measuring trust in media from 2016-23
Trust in news media is declining, although francophone Canadians trust French-speaking media more than Canadian anglophones. Reuters Institute/Oxford University, Centre d’études sur les médias, CC BY

Francophones more optimistic

As in previous years, Canadian francophones show an overall more positive view of their news ecosystem than anglophones, perhaps due to the language barrier and the francophone market being less oriented towards foreign media.

In addition to more generalized confidence in the news, one of many examples is the level of concern about the possibility of sorting out the truth from the false online. This concern is much less widespread among francophones (47 percent) than anglophones (65 percent). French-speaking Canadians are also more likely to rate both algorithms and news professionals favorably as intermediaries for news access.

The Digital News Report looks extensively into people’s perceptions of having social platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Google push news stories to readers based on their past habits. In Canada, 29 percent of francophones and 25 percent of anglophones find algorithms based on past consumption “a good way” to access news.

Canadians were slightly more skeptical about news stories selected by editors and journalists at media outlets — 26 percent of francophones and 19 percent of anglophones agree that having stories selected by editors and journalists is a good way to get news. All of these figures are down by around 10 percentage points since 2016.

Three pie charts which break down responses by all Canadians, as well as anglophone and francophone, to the question 'In your opinion, how important, or not, are publicly funded news services to society?'
Almost half of the Canadians surveyed felt publicly funded news services were important to society.
Reuters Institute/Oxford University, Centre d’études sur les médias, CC BY

In these challenging times for the country’s news ecosystem, publicly funded news services are not widely seen as part of the problem.

More than half of francophones (54 percent) and 45 percent of anglophones believe in the importance to society of publicly funded news outlets, such as CBC and Radio-Canada. Only 13 percent of francophones and 20 percent of anglophones feel they are not important, with the remainder either in between or refusing to comment.The Conversation

Sébastien Charlton, Lecturer, Department of Information and Communication, Université Laval and Colette Brin, Professor and Director, Centre d’études sur les médias, Université Laval

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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