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Regulation of Media Industries

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Title: Regulation of Media Industries


1
Regulation of Media Industries
2
Regulation
  • Generally speaking, why does the government
    regulate businesses and industries?
  • Ensure free markets

3
Regulation of media
  • How are media regulations different from those of
    most other businesses?
  • Public interest provisions

4
Early Regulation
  • Radio Act of 1927
  • Created Federal Radio Commission (FRC) with power
    to grant federal licenses to stations for
    broadcasting over airwaves
  • Required stations to serve the public interest,
    convenience and necessity
  • Licenses given to for-profit broadcasters (not
    educational institutions)

5
FRC continued
  • FRC classified stations assigned frequencies
  • made rules to prevent interference
  • established power and location of transmitters
  • established coverage areas

6
Communications Act of 1934
  • Created Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
    to replace FRC
  • Recodified many features of earlier radio act
  • Left public interest undefined
  • Directed FCC to provide
  • rapid, efficient communication service
  • adequate facilities at reasonable charges
  • distribution of service to all states and
    communities

7
  • Allocated radio spectrum
  • assigned licenses (taking into account economic
    factors).
  • NOTE license renewal increasingly a formality
  • 1983 new section encouraged provision of new
    technologies and favoring more competition in the
    marketplace to serve the public good

8
Examples of Media Regulation
  • Anti-trust action FTC, Justice Department, FCC
    e.g. break up of motion picture monopoly in the
    1940s
  • Fairness Doctrine (1949-1987) required
    commitment to different opposing positions on
    public issues of interest and importance
  • Provision of childrens programming
  • Fin-syn rules (1970-1993) prevented
    television stations owning their own programming

9
Key concepts
  • common carrier
  • natural monopoly
  • public interest regulation

10
Common Carrier
  • Akin to a public utility
  • access to communication should be
    non-discriminatory
  • rates should be just and reasonable
  • control over content separate from control over
    networks

11
Natural Monopoly
  • One firm can provide product/service at lower
    cost than 2 or more
  • A result of
  • economies of scale
  • single technology specifications
  • cheaper to achieve universal service

12
Problems with Natural Monopoly
  • Rural areas often served by small independents,
    which lose access
  • Natural monopoly often outcome of special
    interest predatory policies
  • 1880s Western Union Bell
  • 1926 ATT General Electric, Western Union etc.

13
Public interest
  • Vaguely defined by regulators
  • Over time, increasingly defined, informally, as
    economic interest
  • E.g., whats good for the television industry is
    good for the public

14
Main Provisions of 1996 Telecommunication Act
  • telecommunications
  • broadcast services
  • cable
  • regulation
  • obscenity and violence

15
Broadcast Services
  • Broadcasters may add to existing licensed
    spectrum to develop digital service,
  • Spectrum taken away from low-power TV license
    holders, land mobile services and other small
    broadcasters.
  • Broadcasters get their additional spectrum for
    free. But have to spend millions to outfit for
    digital
  • Analog spectrum must eventually be returned.

16
Radio
  • All national ownership restrictions removed
  • Local ownership restrictions relaxed according to
    the size of the market
  • One owner cannot own more than half the local
    radio spectrum

17
TV
  • Single owner may buy stations that reach up to
    35 of the national audience
  • In 50 largest markets
  • may own more than one TV station or a radio and a
    TV station
  • may own a TV station and a cable TV system in the
    same place
  • may own more than one network (except biggest
    existing networks).

18
  • Virtually guarantees license renewal
  • protects broadcasters from public scrutiny and
    from enforcement of public trustee obligations
  • Cannot challenge incumbent's license unless FCC
    has already found the licensee unfit
  • FCC can no longer find licensees unfit because of
    failure of public trusteeship

19
  • But for violence, broadcasters required to append
    to license renewals any written comments from
    listeners or viewers

20
Cable
  • Incentives for establishing cross-platform
    competition among services
  • e.g. cable into telephony, phone companies into
    video service
  • Permits network businesses to enter the cable
    environment.

21
  • Cable still has public interest obligations
  • required local carriage of local broadcast
    signals
  • franchise obligations imposed by local
    authorities.

22
  • All rate regulation for non-basic tier services
    is abolished
  • This benefits large existing cable companies.

23
  • Bans mergers, joint ventures, and
    greater-than-10-percent investments between cable
    and phone companies that serve the same market.
  • A number of exceptions encourage competition
    among existing large players, and do not
    encourage entrants.

24
Regulatory Reform
  • Explicitly equates competitive environment and
    public interest

25
Obscenity and Violence
  • Reemphasizes existing law requiring cable
    operators to block programming subscribers did
    not opt for, upon request
  • Requires blocking or scrambling sexually explicit
    programming.

26
  • FCC to create a rating system, if the industry
    fails to do so within a year
  • FCC to set standards for and to require TV sets
    to include a V chip that can receive signals
    labeling shows with
  • Controls socially negative programming, not a
    tool to give TV viewers more choice in
    programming.

27
Some Outcomes
  • Local telephone markets quickly consolidated from
    7 to only 4 Baby Bells (BellSouth, Qwest, SBC and
    Verizon)
  • E.g., CA has only 2 major providers of local
    land lines SBC and Verizon

28
  • Cable rates have increased significantly faster
    than consumer price index
  • Satellite still controls only a small segment of
    the market
  • Satellite by only 2 companies, one of which is
    News Corp.

29
  • Triggered a wave of mergers, mainly to protect
    against competition
  • Greater concentration in radio
  • In cable, the top 10 account for 75 of the
    industry

30
  • Greater commercialism many radio stations offer
    no local news at all.
  • In some markets not a single station offers
    public affairs programming
  • Overall, public affairs programming accounts for
    far less than 1 of content.
  • Decline in minority ownership by 15

31
June 2003 FCC ruling
  • Regulations Relaxed
  • Newspaper/television Cross-Ownership
  • National television Ownership Cap
  • 35 to 45
  • Local Radio Ownership Rule
  • Duopoly Rule
  • Regulation Maintained
  • Dual Network Rule

32
Concerns about FCC changes
  • Lead to greater consolidation
  • Monopolies non-competitive
  • Mergers limit number of independent voices in
    media
  • Localism community
  • Corporate accountability
  • Facilitates censorship

33
  • 2003 FCC changes currently on hold (not
    implemented)
  • Citizen complaints
  • Congressional scrutiny
  • Cases currently in the court

34
Public Concerns
  • Public input into FCC decisions generally lacking
  • Few public hearings, poorly advertised
  • Current controversy over hidden reports
  • Activist groups continue to pressure Congress and
    FCC
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