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Television across Europe: regulation, policy and independence

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Whilst TV news is a growing industry, other strands of programming that provide analysis and information about political or current affairs are marginal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Television across Europe: regulation, policy and independence


1
Television across Europe regulation, policy and
independence
2
Television main source of information
  • TV maintains a dominant position despite rise of
    new communication technologies
  • TV the most influential medium in forming public
    opinion
  • TV viewing time steady increase over recent
    years in spite of internet new platforms

3
TV viewing time
  • Individual television viewing time (2003)
  • Ranked by viewing time, Average viewing time for
    adults, Monday-Sunday (minutes per day)
  • 1. Serbia and Montenegro 278 11. Turkey 224
  • 2. Hungary 274 12. Germany 217
  • 3. Macedonia 259 13. Czech Republic 214
  • 4. Croatia 254 14. France 213
  • 5. Poland 250 15. Lithuania 210
  • 6. Italy 245 16. Latvia 207
  • 7. Estonia 239 17. Bulgaria 185
  • 8. UK 239 18. Slovenia 178
  • 9. Slovakia 235 19. Albania NA
  • 10. Romania 235 20. Bosnia and Herzegovina NA
  • Average (18 countries) 219
  • Source IP International Marketing Committee

4
Broadcasting regulation
  • No single (EUROPEAN) model of broadcasting
    regulation gt yet DUAL system in place
    considered integral part of European political
    and cultural identity!
  • Political and commercial pressures on regulators
    remain
  • However, generally accepted principles such as
    strict separation of state or private owners from
    political control over broadcasters

5
Public service broadcasting -ongoing debate
  • Close political ties between PSB and governments
    and political parties - autonomy of PSB can be
    easily eroded
  • Financing for socially desirable programmes to
    private broadcasters could achieve similar
    results but more cost-effective than by PSB
  • Increasingly commercialised content in PSBs
    struggle to keep up with commercial stations
  • Effects of digitalisation

6
Principles of PSB
  • CoE Parliamentary Assembly 2004 PSB is a vital
    element of democracy in Europe because of its
    specific remit to provide the whole of society
    with
  • Information (access to a broad range of views
    opinions to enable citizens to make an informed
    choice)
  • Culture
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • gt PSB enhances social, political and cultural
    citizenship and stimulates cohesion of society!

7
Public service broadcasting -ongoing debate
  • Close political ties between PSB and governments
    and political parties - autonomy of PSB can be
    easily eroded
  • Financing for socially desirable programmes to
    private broadcasters could achieve similar
    results but more cost-effective than by PSB
  • Increasingly commercialised content PSB struggle
    to keep up with commercial stations gt differences
    vanish
  • Effects of digitalisation /multiplatform
    world/the licence fee is becoming harder to
    justify when fewer citizens value the product

8
PSB in countries of transition
  • Chronically undercapitalised technically
    backward but overstaffed
  • Unable to regain credibility
  • Pathetic attempts to compete with commercial
    rivals little distinctive content of social
    value
  • Devolution from state control slow and unfinished
    so that PSB often still subject to political
    dominance by ruling parties, particularly before
    elections times of crises

9
Concentration of television markets
  • Television markets extremely concentrated in
    terms of ownership and viewership
  • Despite legislation against formation of dominant
    positions, concentration of ownership has
    continued
  • Low degree of transparency of media ownership and
    interests
  • Increased presence of transnational investors in
    the broadcasting sector

10
Concentration of ownership
  • Main investors in television in Central and
    Eastern Europe

11
Concentration of television markets
  • The advertising pie
  • France (largest three channels over 75)
  • Italy (Mediaset RAI almost 80)
  • Germany (RTL, ProSiebenSat.1 around 70)
  • Slovakia (Markiza TV 76)
  • Czech Republic (TV Nova 66)

12
Television programming
  • Scarce diversity
  • Commercialisation
  • Minority programming and investigative reporting
    scarce commodities on television
  • Blurred distinction between PSB and commercial
    broadcasters

Lisola dei famosi (RAI2)
Slovensko hladá Superstar (STV1)
Surprize, surprize TVR1
Wild Anastasia (STV1)
13
Content diversity in the context of concentration
of media markets a new study commissioned by
the COE Media Division (Croatia, Italy, Norway,
UK)
  • Growing separation of broadcasters into three
    clusters
  • PSB
  • Established commercial broadcasters with some
    high social value programming
  • Commercial broadcasters whose schedules are
    essentially entertainment and import based
  • Whilst TV news is a growing industry, other
    strands of programming that provide analysis and
    information about political or current affairs
    are marginal
  • Where commercial broadcasters have minimum or no
    positive regulatory obligations there is a
    distinct lack of programming of high social value
    and an absence of domestic investment in
    programming with a heavy reliance on imported
    (US) programmes
  • There is a marked difference between PSB and
    commercial channels in terms of programming
    investment in areas that do not attract large
    audiences as well as domestic production

14
Conclusions
  • Television
  • scarce diversity and pluralism
  • subject to economic and political pressures
  • Public service television
  • in search of identity
  • Lost in transition in many CEE SEE countries
  • needs reform and protection
  • Commercial television
  • non-transparent ownership
  • concentration of ownership
  • need for policy to boost diversity and pluralism
    in TV

15
International level recommendations
  • The European Commission should initiate
    legislation to ensure transparency of ownership
    in the broadcasting sector.
  • The EU should establish an independent agency
    with the mandate of monitoring media markets and
    media concentration in the EU and on global
    markets.
  • The EU should lead efforts to enhance
    coordination between EU member governments, the
    CoE, and international and national media
    organisations, in order to avoid redundant
    projects and to increase the effectiveness and
    impact of implemented media projects and
    programmes.
  • The EU should coordinate, and eventually
    integrate, existing measures in support of media
    development within the EU, with programmes to
    support media in the countries covered by the
    EUs European Neighbourhood Policy and
    Stabilisation and Association Process, in order
    to develop synergies and improve efficiency and
    quality.

16
National level recommendations-1
  • Governments should include in their national
    media policies strategies for the development of
    local television stations and community media.
    Such stations and media should have fair access
    to the frequency spectrum, and should, where a
    reasonable showing of need has been made, benefit
    from support to start-up their operations.
  • Governments and Parliaments should provide for
    broad public consultations about media policy and
    media legislation. Public authorities,
    particularly in transition countries, should pay
    particular attention to involve civil society
    representatives including from consumers
    groups, media rights organisations and NGOs,
    professional organisations, academia, and other
    civic partners in media policy and legislation.
  • In particular, such civil society representatives
    should be consulted on measures to ensure that
    broadcast regulators, and the broadcasters
    themselves, are fully independent digitalisation
    and other technological developments relating to
    broadcasting measures to ensure that the public
    interest is served by broadcasters monitoring
    for compliance of broadcasters with their
    legislative and licence obligations.
  • Broadcasting regulators should ensure that
    digital licences are distributed to a diverse
    range of operators, in order to ensure that the
    current dominant positions in the analogue
    broadcasting are not perpetuated.

17
National level recommendations - 2
  • Governments or regulators, as applicable, should
    provide financial and other support to producers
    who create programming for ethnic, linguistic and
    other minorities, and for broadcasters which
    broadcast such content. At the same time,
    regulators should recognise the fundamental
    importance of such content in the licence
    granting process.
  • Governments and regulators should either impose
    basic public service obligations for commercial
    broadcasters, as a necessary and desirable
    instrument of broadcasting regulation, or should
    encourage commercial broadcasters to broadcast
    public interest content, through appropriate
    incentives.
  • Governments should adopt and implement
    legislation ensuring transparency of ownership of
    all media outlets, including external investors.
  • Governments should, where such legislation is not
    in place, adopt to ensure social and labour
    protection for media professionals employed in
    commercial broadcasters and in public service
    broadcasters.
  • Broadcasting regulators should ensure that
    digital licences are distributed to a diverse
    range of operators, in order to ensure that the
    current dominant positions in the analogue
    broadcasting are not perpetuated.

18
Television across Europe regulation, policy and
independence
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