Germans value privacy to a degree that seems extreme to others. Google maps had a really hard time getting started there, for example. And cash is still widely used because it cannot be traced like card transactions.
Just because it may seem extreme to others doesn't mean we're wrong though! And also doesn't mean it should be that much harder to gather data like this.
the color coding for the amount of books is the wrong way around. The classification with the lowest percentage should also come first on the x-axis. Right now you have to mentally subtract to get the percentages for people that read 10 books.
Idk where Eurostat gets It's info from but I assume that if you go on the street and ask people about reading books, they'll lie.
70% reading several books, as in from start to finish, not just "read a few pages", in the past 12 months?
Either it's bullshit or the sampling is super biased. I'd believe those numbers of certain parts of the population, but in total? Nah.
I'd like to see how the data would've been affected if the interviewers had also tested that the people know what books they read and roughly what happened in them.
A whole vector for receiving new ideas, perspectives, expression, experiences.
Some stories can't easily be translated to another medium. House of Leaves, for example, is very much a Book, and trying to translate it to some other medium would result in a very different item.
It also helps improve communication skills in general. You'll see a variety of ways to put sentences and ideas together, and you can use that yourself. A lot of marketing and blog posts are targeting a 6th grade reading level. Authors there aren't typically aiming for complexity or richness of prose.
Different worldviews, new ways to reason about existing issues, raised awareness of other problems, cultures, people. And straight out more knowledge about many things (even if you read only fiction). Overall, you can move forward from a perhaps more simplistic version of the world.
Also, just the increased ability to read and understand stuff should not be underestimated. Many people can read, as in putting letters together to form words, but not read in the sense of understanding anything beyond the most basic of sentences. You’ll get scammed less often. get better deals, etc.
On one hand I get your point, but on another if you spend most of your time learning (but through other formats than books: through quality online articles or videos, and not eBooks) then it does not seem so bad to me.
I am reading nearly 24/7 but I complete a full actual book maybe once a year. Might be bigger if you count the books that have also (legally) been wholly posted online, but I often forget them because I read them just like an extra-long article: on my phone. I read peoples' original fiction that they post online so I'm not sure whether to count it or not.
I like longer articles but I do admit that I consume so much less long-form content than I did as a child. At least I avoid TikTok and Reels and the like? (Not to be elitist, but because I know I specifically would get addicted and waste my life. Very bad for my particular ADHD brain.) Also something something possible link between lower attention spans and only consuming short-form content. So I get the general gist of your idea and agree even if I do not particularly agree with the emphasis on the medium of books.
While with the internet at arm's reach I may not read books as I did before, not even in the past twelve months, I am using that same "mental quality time" to view long videos explaining concepts in relativity and quantum physics, the history of science and of art, ancient cultures and civilizations, the origins of the languages we speak today, how Cuneiform was used in the Bronze Age...
The scope of information - and quality presentation of said information - at our disposal today is mind-boggling, nothing short of astonishing when you start scratching even just YouTube.
I do both. I've recently picked up reading before bed as a healthy habit and I've been slowly working through the Discworld series at about 1 book every month or two. It's nice to not stare at a screen for a bit, although I do generally skip nights where I've stayed up too late staring at screens
I always thought these studies would show an inverse relationship to how good the country’s weather is. The colder it is outside, the more likely you’d be to stay inside and learn. But not sure that totally lines up here….
but this stat is also missing germany and uk for no reason so its weird to begin with, who knows really
OP should have posted the original source, but there's another comment with the actual Eurostat graph and it's for the EU. It says Germany had no data available and UK is left out because it is not in the EU.
The 0 books category is the empty space in the right side of the graph. The graph is about the percentage of people that read at least a book and then the colours say the different amount of books. Like if from 100 people 1 person read 12 books they would still count as only 1%. Their 1% would have a different colour tho. The people reading 0 books don't count towards the percentage of people having read a book.
IMHO books are the point of view of the writer and is just that, a book. So I prefer get the information from actual people by talking and from all kind of sources.
This gets brought up every time with Eurostat. The UK no longer shares data with Eurostat, but other non-EU countries like Switzerland and Norway do. (also Germany is missing here, for some reason)
Yes, having Norway and Switzerland included there shows that it's more about the UK not willing to share than the EU refusing to include them in Eurostat
It took me 10 seconds of Googling to see that Eurostat is funded through the EU.
I mean, with the EU average it was kinda obvious that it would either be from the EU, or from someone too stupid to know that the EU isn't Europe - but that's why we check.