Napi Gazdaság Explained

Type:Daily newspaper
Owners:Századvég Gazdaságkutató
Chiefeditor:György Barcza
Maneditor:Péter Keresztesi
Foundation:17 September 1991
Language:Hungarian
Ceased Publication:31 August 2015
Headquarters:Budapest
Publishing Country:Hungary

Napi Gazdaság (Hungarian: Daily Economy)[1] was a Budapest-based daily newspaper published from 1991 to 2015. The daily focused on financial and business news. It was succeeded by Magyar Idők, a conservative political daily on 1 September 2015.[2]

History and profile

Napi Gazdaság was based in Budapest.[3] In the late 1990s the owner of the daily bankrupted, and a group of young investors bought it. During this period the paper was independent and covered investigative reports. The Central European Media and Publishing Co. (CEMP) acquired 50% of the daily in 2007.[4] It was owned by CEMP until August 2013 when it was sold to the think tank and research center Századvég Economic Research Inc. (Századvég Gazdaságkutató in Hungarian).[5] [6] The think tank is linked to Fidesz, a conservative political party.[6] The website of the daily, Napi.hu, remained in possession of CEMP. The last editor-in-chief of the daily was György Barcza, and its managing director was Péter Keresztesi.[5]

Napi Gazdaság provided mostly financial news and was one of two business newspapers in the country.[7] [8] The other business newspaper in the country is Világgazdaság.[8]

The daily occasionally published supplements one of which was about Polish economy and in Polish.[9] On 31 August 2015 the paper ceased publication.[2]

Circulation

In 1998 Napi Gazdaság sold 14,000 copies.[10] Its circulation was 15,000 copies in 1999.[11] The audited readership per day was 33,000 in 2012.[12]

Controversy

In November 2013, English language news website specializing in current events taking place in Hungary, The Budapest Beacon, reported that both Napi Gazdaság daily edition and its website were fined by the National Bank of Hungary for illegally manipulating the market.[13] [14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Napi.hu. Publicitas. 6 December 2013.
  2. Web site: Keddtől Magyar Idők néven jelenik meg a Napi Gazdaság. 30 September 2015. 1 September 2015. hu. mandiner.hu.
  3. http://www.hotnewspapers.com/hungary-newspapers/napi-gazdasag/2324/ Hungary Newspapers
  4. http://cemp.hu/download/53/CEMP_presentation_090421_en.pdf CEMP presentation
  5. News: Krisztián Kummer. Napi Gazdaság: The think tank newspaper. 6 December 2013. Budapest Business Journal. 9 September 2013.
  6. Web site: Fidesz-linked firm buys national economic daily. Hungarian Media Monitor. 6 December 2013. 13 August 2013.
  7. Web site: Hungary. Reuters Institute. 6 December 2013. dead. 15 December 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131215002245/https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/fileadmin/documents/Media_Landscapes/Hungary.pdf.
  8. Web site: Communicating Europe: Hungary Manual. European Stability Initiative. 26 November 2014. December 2010.
  9. Web site: Polish supplement. Kislow. 6 December 2013.
  10. Web site: Marina Popescu. Gábor Tóka. Campaign Effects in the 1994 and 1998 Parliamentary Elections in Hungary. European Consortium for Political Research. 26 November 2014. April 2000.
  11. Rita M. Csapo-Sweet. Ildiko Kaposi. Mass Media in Post-Communist Hungary. International Communications Bulletin. Spring 1999. 34. 1–2.
  12. Web site: Media offer 2013. Napi. 6 December 2013.
  13. News: Richard Field. Hungarian Central Bank fines newspaper for "influencing the market in a prohibited manner". 6 December 2013. The Budapest Beacon. 25 November 2013.
  14. News: National Bank of Hungary Fined Napi Gazdaság and Napi.hu for Illegal Market Manipulation. 6 December 2013. XpatLoop. 27 November 2013.