IWA
Sefyliad Materion Cymreig
Institute of Welsh Affairs
Blog

Blog

Monday, June 30, 2008

The shareholder and the licence fee payer

The owner of the Western Mail, Wales’s sole national newspaper, is struggling. Yesterday Trinity Mirror's shares fell to around 105.75p at 4pm, down from the closing price of around 151.50p last Friday. The fall followed yesterday morning’s announcement that Trinity Mirror’s full-year operating profit would be about 10 per cent below expectations.

The reasons for Trinity Mirror’s troubles are numerous. As the IWA’s recent report, Media in Wales – Serving Public Values, showed circulations have fallen dramatically, even since the inception of the National Assembly in 1999. Its circulations continue to slide. Advertising is a regional newspaper’s lifeblood and in the case of Media Wales (Trinity Mirror's company in south Wales) it has been bleeding away thanks in part to the consumer slowdown affecting both classified and display advertising and to wider challenges, including technological developments. Central to its plight, however, is shareholder pressure - the pressure to grow profit every year. In television ITV plc is scaling back its regional output across the UK thanks again to the pressure of the shareholding model. Its shares have also taken a battering in recent years, falling from 115.0p a year ago to around 47.5p last Friday. As the financial screw tightens for ITV the decline of regional programming is accelerated.

The lesson to draw from the (mis)fortunes of Trinity Mirror and ITV plc is that the conventional shareholder model just does not seem appropriate for media organisations that have such an important public service role. Choice is important for the citizen: it can promote healthy competition and media plurality; and, most importantly, gives the citizen democratic power. Whatever system we have in place must allow the citizen democratic power to choose.

Yet, in recent years many in and around the media industry have have tended to focus - perhaps too much - on plurality of media ownership rather than plurality of output. At the moment only the BBC seems immune to shareholder cost pressures. The BBC stands as the exception, with its funding by the licence fee. In Wales the BBC is the only national radio service and, if ITV plc's decline continues, could be the only player in television media as well. This surely cannot be healthy for Welsh democracy.

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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Wales' media

The National Assembly has established a Broadcasting Committee to investigate and report on:

"The future of public service broadcasting in Wales in the English and Welsh languages; and the impact of digital switchover and the creation of new delivery platforms, on the production and availability of programming and digital content from Wales and in Wales."

The committee’s establishment (March 2008) anticipated the publication on April 10 of the second Ofcom review of public service broadcasting (PSB), which outlines the challenges facing PSB in the UK. Ofcom’s research shows the public value PSB highly but that the digital switchover and other funding pressures mean the current arrangements for PSB cannot continue for much longer. In fact, Ofcom estimates ITV1 Wales’ costs of holding a PSB licence could outweigh the benefits as early as 2009.

Coverage in UK-wide media of Ofcom’s report focused on the cost implications of sustaining PSB. Ofcom proposed four scenarios for ensuring funding for PSB is sustainable. Wales relies to a great extent on UK-wide media – in print especially – meaning Wales will be involved in this debate about funding. This is entirely appropriate. However, given Wales’ heavy reliance on UK-wide print media and ITV1 Wales’ precarious position there are extra issues – ensuring plurality and sustaining the Welsh language, for example. There are other important questions: will there be sufficiently plural PSB to help Wales’ debate about devolution? How can Wales cultivate PSB that is economically sustainable, plural and accessible? What is the role of the internet and other technologies? This list is not exhaustive but gives an idea of the scale of task.

Both Ofcom’s Phase 1 consultation (on the report published last week) and the Assembly committee’s work conclude early in the summer. The IWA will publish a Wales media audit in May, which is supported by a grant from the Assembly Government. The audit will provide an evidence base that will help people form their own judgements. Now more than ever we must use our democracy and the media resources available to Wales now to freely debate and encourage informed policy-making on this crucial issue.

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