Reading for pleasure is going out of style
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Packing a few beach reads ahead of the holiday this weekend? You're one of a diminishing few.
- The share of Americans who read for pleasure has been falling for the past two decades, finds a new comprehensive analysis of Census Bureau data on time use.
Why it matters: Reading is pretty great — with benefits for literacy, logical reasoning, your job prospects and health, the researchers point out.
- Plus, it's fun.
By the numbers: 26% of those surveyed read for pleasure on an average day back in 2003.
- By 2023, the number had fallen 10 points to 16%.
Between the lines: There's a consistent gender gap — 18.6% of women read for pleasure in 2023 compared to 13.7% for men.
- Those with postgraduate degrees are more likely to be readers, as are people over age 66.
The intrigue: The researchers were somewhat surprised because the data defined reading to include books, magazines, newspapers, audiobooks and e-readers.
The bottom line: People only have so much leisure time, the researchers note. And in this "attention economy," books are taking a hit.
