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A Funding Model for Public Broadcasting

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Title: A Funding Model for Public Broadcasting


1
A Funding Model for Public Broadcasting
  • Presentation by
  • Professor Tawana Kupe
  • University of the Witwatersrand

2
The Impact of Funding
  • Funding financing in broadcasting ( media in
    general) are the key but not only determinant of
    types or forms of broadcasting.
  • It follows therefore that a form or type of
    broadcasting must be aligned with an appropriate
    funding model.
  • To be sure appropriateness does not mean you
    cannot use a mixed model to SOME degree achieve
    some of the mandates of the type of broadcasting
    that you want.

3
Public Broadcasting
  • The World Radio and Television Council (2000)
    defines
  • public service broadcasting thus
  • Neither commercial nor State-controlled, public
    broadcastings only raison d etre is public
    service.
  • It is the publics broadcasting organization it
    speaks to everyone as a citizen.
  • Public broadcasters encourage access to
    participation in public life.
  • They develop knowledge, broaden horizons enable
    people to better understand themselves by better
    understanding the world others.

4
Trends in Funding Financing
  • From the 1990s the major trend is to shift
    funding of public broadcasting from state funding
    to commercial sources.
  • This trend has coincided with a trend to operate
    other public services commercially.
  • It has also coincided with a rethink on public
    enterprises along the lines of commercialization
    and/or privatization.
  • Organizational structures in public broadcasting
    have changed to embrace the commercial emphasis
    e.g. CEOs as the leaders not Director Generals.

5
Trends in Funding Financing
  • These trends have often meant a significant
    reduction in state or public funding for public
    broadcasting.
  • Public broadcasters have been urged to improve on
    their commercial strategies to get more
    commercial funding.
  • Advertising commercial sponsorship have become
    key dominant sources of funding.
  • Equally strategies to collect the licence fee
    have been developed diversified to include
    coercive measures.

6
SABCs Sources of Funding
  • Over the last few years the sources of the
    SABCs
  • Funding are made of the following
  • Commercial activities
  • Dominant above 75
  • License revenue (below 30)
  • Other income from operations
  • 4. Government support under (5)

7
The SABCs broadened Mandate
  • Post 1994 the SABC has been given a broadened
    mandate to meet the demands of a transforming
    society.
  • It has had to itself transform from being a state
    broadcaster into a public broadcaster.
  • The language cultural mandates a politically
    independent role for a democratic dispensation,
    require huge resources that cannot simply be
    accessed from commercial sources without
    compromising the mandate.

8
A successful Year
  • However, the practicability and vast expense of
    multilingual broadcasting remain a major
    challenge.
  • .addressing the burgeoning black middle class
    is imperative for advertising and marketing
  • Language delivery is part of this, as is local
    content, and television lagged behind for too
    long in serving the diverse language and cultural
    groups
  • The impact of the regulatory change is yet to be
    established clearly. We do know, however, that it
    is bound to increase expenditure in terms of
    local content and language delivery.

9
Impact of Commercial Funding on SABC
  • Uneven delivery on the local content mandate
    especially the production of news bulletins
    current affairs in all the official languages.
  • In particular the unsatisfactory use of
    indigenous African languages has resulted in the
    retention of the colonial apartheid language
    status quo.
  • Access to information has therefore been
    somewhat curtailed for the large majority of
    people whose language of ease in communication is
    their mother tongue.

10
SABC 4 5?
  • SABC 4 SABC 5 can be seen as the expansion of
    public service channels a good development.
  • But they can also be seen as a dramatic example
    of how public service broadcasting in indigenous
    African languages cannot be funded commercially.
  • The channels will only take minimal advertising
    English will be restricted.
  • SABC 4 5 are the result of a realization that
    commercially driven public service broadcasting
    system is not able to accommodate the demands of
    cultural linguistic diversity.

11
Impact of Commercial Funding on SABC
  • Uneven development of local content across
    programme genres drama, comedy, music etc using
    all the languages especially the indigenous
    African languages.
  • The failure to diversify the films/entertainment
    shows on television the over reliance on old
    Hollywood fare of the blood, sex crime type and
    mindless shows.
  • Uneven development failure to diversify has
    undermined the mandate to develop SA and African
    culture and identity.

12
Impact of Commercial Funding on SABC
  • Consequently the SABC
  • Is not necessarily the first permanent choice
    of South Africans.
  • Is not sufficiently distinct from the commercial
    broadcasters.
  • Does not unequivocally set standards
    journalistically break news at all times. Has
    some excellent journalism.
  • Has not been able to invest in long term training
    development of staff including journalists
    producers.
  • Has not yet invested in new technologies to the
    extent it should have given the changing
    technological environment.

13
Impact of Commercial Funding on SABC
  • Overall therefore the SABCs identity as a public
    broadcaster has been compromised. Suffers an
    identity crisis of some sort.
  • Organizationally it has the hybrid structures of
    a commercial broadcaster those of a public
    broadcaster corporate management.
  • The compromised identity hybrid structure has
    in turn affected its transformative role the
    need to create an open public sphere for South
    Africans, who are first foremost citizens not
    consumers, whose access to media depends on
    socio-economic status.

14
No Three Tier System
  • The full implication of the impact of a
    predominantly commercial funding model is that we
    do not have a 3 tier system of broadcasting as
    our broadcasting policy demands.
  • Further it means we do not have a genuine public
    broadcaster this has implications for national
    unity cultural identities, democracy
    development our place/role in the global scheme
    of circulation of images and discourses.
  • Ultimately it has implications for who we are
    (identities) as South Africans what our
    aspirations are.

15
A New Model is Needed
  • A new funding model should enable the SABC to be
    a genuine public broadcaster dedicated to public
    service.
  • Such a model should ensure long term assured
    funding which enables the SABC to not only be
    sustainable but to be able to make long term
    plans.
  • Long term plans will include production
    strategies, human resource development at all
    levels, in-depth audience research adoption of
    new technologies to improve production
    transmission provide a universal service which
    ensures universal access.

16
The New Funding Model
  • It should have public funding at its centre as a
    dominant source that is insulated from policies
    of the government of the day. Need for a
    constitutional amendment!
  • Commercial sources but NOT as the dominant
    critical source should be allowed BUT not in
    programmes like news current affairs,
    educational childrens programming.
  • The license fee should continue but its
    collection should be linked to programmes that
    build up citizens sense of responsibility not
    coercision.
  • If the programming becomes predominantly public
    service licence fees could be easier to collect
    acceptable to citizens.

17
Options
  • Africa can best be described as a democratizing
    developing region in a globalizing world.
  • Its citizens require information communication
    channels that empower them to both know
    exercise the full range of their civil,
    political, socio-economic, cultural language
    rights as an indivisible whole.
  • Broadcasting is the closest to a mass media in
    African including in the more developed countries
    of the region including South Africa.
  • Building independent public service broadcasting
    institutions is part of the democratic
    development agenda as both part of building
    sustainable societies engaging processes of
    globalization.
  • Funding options need to strike a balance between
    running public service broadcasting institutions
    as a public good ensuring their sustainability
    in the context of largely market driven economic
    policies.

18
Social Market Option
  • A social market approach is the best option
    because it recognizes inequalities and seeks to
    narrow them either gradually or more radical
    revolutionary ways.
  • A social market allows of appropriate levels of
    market provision which are counter balanced by
    appropriate forms of public subsidy.
  • In broadcasting a mixed approach which has at its
    centre public funding that is long term, assured
    insulated from political control short term
    policy changes.
  • Light hearted entertainment should be funded
    through advertising.
  • But citizen orientated included that which is for
    entertainment programming should be free from the
    direct indirect influences of advertising.
  • Where possible the public should contribute
    according to ability.

19
Choices, consequences democratic struggles
  • The issue of options is ultimately implicated in
    democratic struggles.
  • Africas democratic struggles have never followed
    a linear pattern.
  • The apparent rapid democratization processes of
    the 1990s have often been characterized by lack
    of consolidation in some cases reversal.
  • Lack of democratic consolidation reversal has
    hampered transformation of state broadcasters
    into public broadcasters.
  • Contrary to some belief it is not only lack of
    full political democratization that has hampered
    transformation in broadcasting but also beliefs
    in market orthodoxy in countries which have
    skewed markets.
  • The quest for new options must therefore take
    full cognizance of the nature of democratic
    struggles.
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