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Ailing US newspapers feel new pain from tariffs

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US newspapers have taken a hit from a shift to digital news and a sharp loss of advertising, but a round of tariffs on Canadian newsprint is pushing some publications to the brink.


The Commerce Department earlier this year slapped preliminary tariffs of up to 30 per cent on newsprint from Canada — the largest source for US newspapers — in response to a complaint from Washington state-based North Pacific Paper Co.


Tariffs have heightened the economic woes for the US industry, notably for small dailies and weeklies facing the prospect of belt-tightening that may including cutting back print editions or slashing staff.


As newspapers reel from the current economic landscape, many have already been making hefty newsroom cuts, including a 50-per cent reduction at the storied New York Daily News.


Andrew Johnson, publisher of three Wisconsin weeklies and President of the National Newspaper Association of 2,300 local community newspapers, said the tariffs are imperiling many news organisations.


“I lost some subscribers over the years. I cannot pass along another increase now without damaging my business,” Johnson told a July 17 hearing of the US International Trade Commission, the quasi-judicial agency reviewing the tariffs.


Johnson said many newspapers “are freezing all hiring and trying to cut pages or page sizes,” and that if the tariffs remain in place, some may have to shut down or sell.


Penelope Abernathy, a University of North Carolina professor who studies media economics, said many small dailies and weeklies still bring in most of their money from print, with digital subscription and ad revenues largely disappointing.


Abernathy said that since 2004, around 60 dailies and more than 1,800 weeklies have shut down in the United States, creating “news deserts” with a dearth of local coverage.


The new tariffs could lead to even more papers disappearing, she said.


“When you add on tariffs, that’s going to be the death knell for a lot of smaller newspapers that still rely on the print edition,” said Abernathy.


Several members of Congress criticised the tariffs at the ITC hearing as counterproductive and urged the panel to overturn the findings.


“The tariffs will harm the US paper industry because they will cause permanent harm to newspapers, printers, and book publishers, shrinking the US paper industry’s customer base,” said Senator Susan Collins of Maine.


Paul Tash, President and Chief Executive at the Tampa Bay Times newspaper, said if the tariffs remain in place it will cost his organisation $3.5 million a year, “an extra cost we simply cannot absorb.”


“After payroll, newsprint is our single biggest expense, and we are cutting back there too,” Tash told the hearing.


Newspaper industry employment in the US fell from more than 400,000 in 2001 to 173,000 in 2016, according to government data, highlighting the troubles faced by the shift to digital.


Forbes Media Chairman Steve Forbes, writing in The Wall Street Journal last month, said, “The killing of local newspapers by the imposition of tariffs would gut the nation’s free press.”


Craig Anneberg, CEO of North Pacific Paper, defended the tariffs that resulted from his company’s complaint, claiming unfairly subsidised imports take away US jobs.


Since the tariffs went into effect, he told the ITC, “our production is up, our capacity utilisation is higher, our shipments are increasing and our profitability is up.”


Anneberg said the tariffs helped the company restart one mill and hire back 60 employees who had been laid off. — AFP


Rob Lever


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