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BEIJING, April 24 (Xinhua) -- A survey showed that
the number of Chinese reading at least one book a year has been declining
dramatically, as Internet draws more readers' attention from books.
The survey conducted every two years by the China
Publishing Research Center under the General Administration of Press and
Publication was released over the weekend to mark Sunday's 11th World Book and
Copyright Day.
Among 8,000 respondents to the poll undertaken last
year, less than 50 percent said that they read at least one book a year.
According to Monday's China Daily, the survey
conducted since 1999 found Chinese' inclination for reading went down year by
year. The reader ratio fell all the way down from 60.4 percent in 1999.
A lack of time has been cited by most respondents for
the reduction of reading. However, the time spent by Chinese on the Internet has
kept on increasing sharply from 3.7 percent in 1999 to 27.8 percent last year,
the survey showed.
Hao Zhenxing, director of the center said that
conventional reading could never be replaced by scanning the web media.
Statistics from the center suggested that more books
are at readers' choice now, as the number of books published swelled from14,987
varieties in 1978 to 208,294 in 2004. Enditem |