Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    1/48

    Chapter Seven

    Globalisation, International Trade Agreements and

    Australian Media Policy

    Globalisation and International Trade Agreements

    Globalisation is a complex and multi-faceted concept. It has been argued in this

    thesis that it incorporates elements such as: international flows of goods, services

    and capital; international movements of people; international communications

    flows; the global circulation of images, ideas and cultural forms; the development

    of regional and multinational economic groupings; the growth of international

    non-government agencies; and the growing significance of international law and

    treaties to the activities of national governments. It is the latter issue, which has

    also been termed the internationalisation of domestic law, that will be the focus of

    this chapter, with particular reference to the significance of international trade

    treaties to forms of national media and cultural policy in Australia. The

    internationalisation of domestic law involves a process whereby the traditional

    sovereignty of nation-states to determine the legal rules operative within their

    own territory is increasingly subject to trends towards the national adoption of

    31

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    2/48

    rules and regulatory regimes formulated by supra-national institutions for

    adoption by nation-states (Mason 1996: 1).

    Globalisation can be understood both as a way of describing a substantive

    series of trends towards greater international movements of economic, human and

    cultural forms, and as a discourse that constructs a particular relationship between

    nation-states, national policies and these international movements.

    Communications media have a particular significance in relation to processes of

    globalisation, since they constitute the technologies and service delivery platforms

    through which international flows are transacted. Moreover, converging media

    industries have been leaders in the push towards global expansion and integration,

    and the global media provide informational content and images of the world

    through which people seek to make sense of events in distant places.

    The globalisation of communications media also has an important impact

    upon the ways in which media is conceived of as both a cultural form and an

    object of policy. In particular, since the globalisation of communications media is

    tied up with the growing international trade in media as commodities, it tends to

    accentuate the degree to which questions concerning media are framed within

    economic discourses, and challenges alternative conceptions of media, such as

    those which stress its role in the formation of a distinctive national culture. In the

    previous chapter, it was observed how the reform of broadcasting legislation in

    Australia in the early 1990s became increasingly tied up with the agenda of

    32

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    3/48

    microeconomic reform, as communications networks were perceived as

    increasingly central to national economic performance. It also became

    increasingly tied up with international treaty obligations, such as those arising

    from Section 160(d) of theBroadcasting Services Act1992.

    While globalisation draws attention to the acceleration of international

    economic and cultural flows, there is a need to avoid seeing such developments as

    being without historical precedent, or as destroying the decision-making capacity

    of nation-states. There is also a need for caution in associating such trends with a

    move from national to post-national cultures, or to accept a singular logic to the

    trajectory of globalisation. The case of Australian broadcasting is significant in

    this regard, since in some respects Australian broadcast media were more national

    in terms of their content in the late 1990s than they were 30 years ago. Such a

    nationalising of Australian broadcast television content was a result of

    intersections between the local production industry, network programming

    strategies, competition from imported material, and national cultural policies such

    as the Australian content quotas for commercial free-to-air television. This notion

    of a regulated national cultural space for Australian broadcasting is, however,

    challenged by new delivery technologies such as cable, satellites and the Internet,

    new services such as pay television, and by the application of international laws to

    national regulations. It is also challenged by the rise of policy discourses that

    stress the virtues of openness to international competition and the dangers of

    regulatory approaches that minimise exposure to outside influences. These trends

    33

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    4/48

    intersect with developments in international trade law such as the demand for

    liberalisation of trade in services, as well as the opening up through national

    competition policy of sectors that have traditionally had some degree of

    protection from international competition.

    Globalisation and Citizenship: Concerns about International

    Trade Agreements

    In terms of citizenship discourses, and their relationship to cultural policy,

    international trade agreements present three issues of particular concern. First,

    there are concerns that the processes which lead to the adoption of binding

    multilateral rules, and the creation of regulatory regimes that are transnational in

    character, erode national sovereignty and exclude the majority of the national

    community from decisions which materially affect them. Second, there are

    concerns about the treatment of culture as a commodity, to be bought and sold

    internationally like any other industrial product, and whether the creation of a

    regime promoting free trade in cultural goods and services is antithetical to the

    maintenance of distinctive national cultures. Finally, there is the critique of

    cultural domination, which recognises the symbolic dimension of audiovisual

    product and its relationship to the formation of national identities, and argues that

    national sovereignty over this audiovisual space is threatened by the soft power

    of material exported by the US media and cultural industries.

    34

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    5/48

    In the second and third cases, economic and cultural issues overlap around

    the concern that the United States can use its economic advantages and political

    power in the audiovisual sector to undermine national cultural industries and

    cultural policy. This was a major animating concern of the European Community

    in negotiations leading up to the signing of the General Agreement on Trade in

    Services (GATS), that was a part of the Uruguay Round of GATT negotiations

    concluded in Marrakesh in 1994 and continues to be an important element of

    GATS negotiations. Marc Raboy has expressed concern that the globalisation of

    communication policy is:

    a harbinger of both a certain global regulatory system in communication

    and a future system of world governance. It is an imperial project, with

    enormous implications for the future of democracy, insofar as it is based

    on political decision making at a level where there is no accountability, the

    recognised autonomy of private capital, and the formal exclusion of the

    institutions of civil society (Raboy 1999: 300).

    Sir Anthony Mason, Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia, has

    observed that the very nature of negotiating processes concerning international

    treaties often precludes open consultation processes, since:

    No government engaged in a negotiation relishes the prospect of

    making public its objectives and intentions; to do so deprives it of

    35

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    6/48

    flexibility to manoeuvre and may inhibit its ability to assemble a coalition

    of forces among nations with very different interests. (Mason 1996: 26)

    Such a trend generates the danger of what Anthony Giddens (1998: 71) has

    termed a democratic deficit:

    The movement towards international regulatory regimes presents a

    practical challenge not only to national sovereignty and autonomy but also

    to democratic values. If critical decisions on major questions having an

    important impact on domestic affairs are to be made by supra-national

    institutions or in supra-national forums, national democratic processes will

    be distanced from the decision-making procedures. (Mason 1996: 13)

    Mason argues that national interest arguments presented by bureaucratic

    negotiators in multilateral forums cannot be allowed to prevail over democratic

    imperatives, as they have produced a negotiating culture that focuses upon the

    desire to see Australia as a significant actor on the international stage, without

    giving close attention to all the ramifications a treaty may have for sectional

    interests in Australia (Mason 1996: 27). The issues raised are similar to those

    observed by Stephen Korbin (1998) around the clash of globalisations, between

    those who see multilateral agreements as providing simplification and greater

    certainty to transactions in an already globalised economy, and those who see

    36

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    7/48

    such arrangmenets as a major and immediate threat to democracy, sovereignty,

    the environment, human rights, and economic development (Korbin 1998: 98).

    Concerns about the treatment of culture as a commodity, to be bought and

    sold internationally like any other industrial product, have been a recurrent theme

    in debates about globalisation and international trade negotiations in the cultural

    sphere. As the concept of culture has been democratised to incorporate all aspects

    of a way of life, including popular cultural forms such as film and broadcast

    media, the concept of cultural industries has been used less in a pejorative sense,

    as in the original formulation of the term by Adorno and Horkheimer (1977), and

    more in the descriptive sense defined by Garnham as:

    the production and circulation of symbolic meaning, as a material process

    of production and exchange, part of, and in significant ways determined

    by, the wider economic processes of society with which it shares many

    common features. (Garnham 1987: 25)

    The audiovisual sector is, by this definition, the ideal type cultural

    industry (Sinclair 1996: 38) since, as Schlesinger points out, the audiovisual is

    both a symbolic arena and an economic one (Schlesinger 1987: 228). This does

    not prevent periodic appeals in debates about international cultural trade to

    sacred injunctions of culture as something that is necessarily above commerce

    (Schlesinger 1991a; Klamer 1996). More commonly, concerns about the treatment

    37

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    8/48

    of culture as a commodity in international trade agreements have mixed an

    awareness of the dual nature of culture with a concern about unfair United States

    advantage in international audiovisual markets. Knight defines the dual nature of

    culture in these terms:

    On the one hand, a nations culture is the expression of its values, beliefs

    and perspectives and is necessary for the preservation of a healthy

    democratic community. On the other hand, culture and entertainment are

    big business. This business is increasingly export-oriented and is wrapped

    up in issues surrounding the liberalisation of trade. (Knight 1999: 169)

    The growing presence of cultural industries among the areas subject to the

    disciplines of international trade liberalisation can be seen as marking a shift in

    the focus of cultural policy away from non-economic defences of the value of

    cultural industries, to a focus on content industries as drivers of growth in the

    new economy. In the early 1980s, UNESCO defined the purpose of cultural

    policy as being to establish conditions conducive to improving the means for the

    expression and participation of the population in cultural life (UNESCO 1982: 9).

    In the late 1990s, by contrast, the OECD was focusing on the implications of

    content as a growth industry, where policy-makers must:

    focus on how the network-based production and delivery of audiovisual

    content will affect the regulatory issues traditionally attached to these

    38

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    9/48

    services within the context of their policy commitment to expanding

    markets for network-based content markets on the Global Information

    Infrastructure (OECD 1998: 4).

    Concerns about a turn from culture to industry in national audiovisual

    policies are intensified, for their critics, by the fact that such discursive shifts are

    part of a strategy to extend the United States economic domination of world

    audiovisual markets. In particular, critics refer to the capacity of the United States

    to exercise cultural hegemony on a global scale through the soft power attached

    to US media and cultural exports. Joseph Nye, Assistant Secretary of Defence for

    International Affairs in the Clinton Administration, defined soft power as:

    The ability to achieve desired outcomes in international affairs through

    attraction rather than coercion. It works by convincing others to follow, or

    getting them to agree to norms and institutions that produce the desired

    behaviour. Soft power can rest upon the appeal of ones ideas or the ability

    to set the agenda in ways that shape the preferences of others. (quoted in

    Thussu 1998: 66-67)

    Such cultural concerns have been amplified by a sense that the global audiovisual

    playing field is not level, but is rather tilted towards the interests of its dominant

    player, the United States. In his comprehensive overview of factors underlying the

    international popularity of Hollywood cinema, Tom ORegan has noted that US

    39

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    10/48

    dominance of the international film markets arises from two related economic

    factors: the cumulative competitive advantages that arise from developing a

    streamlined industrial system based upon the large-volume production and

    distribution; and the combination of distribution and foreign policy that would

    promote structural and economic arrangements [that] facilitate international

    circulation of Hollywood films (ORegan 1992: 309). Footer and Graber (2000)

    observe that the capacity of members of the Motion Picture Association of

    America (MPAA) to control the marketing and distribution of films in the United

    States and in a large number of countries in Europe, the Americas and the Asia-

    Pacific (including Australia) may constitute an instance of anti-competitive

    behaviour in the cultural industries that is not currently addressed by international

    trade rules. The latter point is a reminder of what Miller (1996: 79) terms the

    contingent moralisms that constitute framing devices for the negotiating

    positions taken by competing parties in the process of developing binding

    international agreements.

    The General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) and the

    United States/Europe Audiovisual Trade Dispute

    The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was a multilateral

    agreement signed by 23 countries in 1948, including Australia, and was one of a

    series of international economic institutions and agreements put together under

    US leadership after the end of World War II.1The principle underpinning these

    40

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    11/48

    post-World War II international economic institutions was that international

    economic disorder had contributed to World War II, and that global economic

    coordination, implicitly under US leadership, was a condition for minimising the

    prospects for future conflicts. While the GATT did not eliminate trade barriers, it

    established a set of mechanisms that would enable their progressive reduction

    over time. It did this partly through a series of global trade rounds, where GATT

    members would meet and reach agreement to reduce tariffs and other trade

    barriers through bilateral and multilateral negotiations. The GATT also set in

    place a momentum for trade liberalisation by establishing a set of guiding

    principles for trade policy:

    Reciprocity: if one country lowers its tariffs against anothers exports,

    it can expect the other country to lower its tariffs in return;

    Non-discrimination: countries should not grant one nation or group of

    nations preferential trade treatment over others (also known as the

    Most Favoured Nation principle);

    Transparency: countries are urged to replace non-tariff barriers with

    tariffs, or taxes placed upon imports, and to agree to bind the tariff, or

    not to increase it further;

    National treatment: foreign suppliers are to be treated no less

    favourably than domestic suppliers once acquiring market access.

    41

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    12/48

    The GATT is regarded by many as a contributing factor to post-1945

    world economic growth, with an expansion of world trade of 500 per cent

    between 1950 and 1975 (compared with growth in world economic output of 220

    per cent), and a decline in the average tariff on manufactured goods in member

    countries from 40 per cent in 1947 to 5 per cent by 1990 (The Economist1990: 7).

    Particularly important elements of the GATT have been the way in which

    incentives to reduce protection over time are built into the framework, and that the

    multilateral framework allows smaller trading nations to benefit from agreements

    established between the major trading powers. At the same time, international

    services trade had not been a part of the original GATT framework, and when the

    Uruguay Round of multilateral negotiations commenced in 1986, it was not on the

    agenda for discussion. It emerged as a new issue for GATT negotiations in 1987,

    alongside trade-related intellectual property rights (TRIPS) and trade-related

    investment measures (TRIMS). With world services exports totalling about $US1

    trillion in 1992, accounting for one-fifth of world exports, and with an annual rate

    of export growth of 15 per cent between 1982 and 1992, compared with annual

    growth of 9.8 per cent for merchandise exports over the same period, it was

    apparent that any commitment to trade liberalisation would have to incorporate

    international trade in services. Schott and Buurman (1994: 99) observed that the

    United States was the demandeurof the services negotiations in the GATT, since

    it was the worlds leading exporter of services, with exports in 1992 totaling

    US$162 billion and imports US$108 billion in 1993.

    42

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    13/48

    The services sector was undergoing rapid changes during the 1980s and

    1990s, particularly in areas such as finance and communications, with the

    development of new technologies and new services, and government policies

    designed to make the sectors more internationalised and market-oriented.2In the

    communications services sector, the telecommunications sector was the primary

    driver of change, with strong pressures worldwide to move from a system

    characterised by national regulations to manage competition in order to meet

    public service obligations, towards a system based upon trade liberalisation,

    value-added services, open access to networks, and competition between national

    and international service providers. Alan Oxley observes that a domestic

    regulatory framework that was compatible with the trade liberalisation principles

    of the GATT would need to: encourage new entrants into the sector; reduce the

    number of activities subject to regulatory constraint; achieve greater transparency

    in the provision of universal service obligations; and ensure that incumbent

    service providers did not engage in anti-competitive practices in providing access

    to the network for new service providers (Oxley 1991). The need for new rules

    and regulations for international telecommunications trade was driven not only by

    the pace of growth and change in the sector, but also by the growing significance

    of information networks and facilities as a strategic resource in information-based

    economies, reflecting the dual role of telecommunications as both a traded

    product and service in its own right, and as a facilitator of trade in other products

    and services.

    43

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    14/48

    Extension of these trade liberalisation principles to audiovisual services

    would, however, prove to be one of the major areas of disagreement in

    multilateral negotiations leading to the GATS. Unlike telecommunications,

    national regulations in broadcasting and related areas, such as film, have been

    concerned with content as well as market structure and infrastructure and, unlike

    most areas covered by the GATT, have possessed a cultural and informational

    dimension. The question of whether a cultural exception should exist for films

    and television programs has a long history in the GATT,3 and has been a

    particularly significant area of conflict between the United States and European

    nations, most notably France. In its initial drafting in 1948, Annex IV of the

    General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade was included at the request of nations

    with domestic film quotas. It stated that For cultural reasons, systems of aid to

    the production of printed films for cinema exhibition may be maintained provided

    they do not significantly distort international competition in export markets.

    Attempts by the United States in 1962 to use the GATT to address barriers to

    trade in television programming were rejected by the GATT, on the grounds that

    even where television was not State owned, government had quite properly taken

    a special interest because of televisions importance as a cultural and

    informational medium (GATT 1962).

    The key elements of the GATS that would have an impact upon the

    conduct of domestic audiovisual policies were:

    44

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    15/48

    Article II Most-favoured-nation treatment, whereby Members are

    required to accord immediately and unconditionally to services and

    service suppliers of any other Member treatment no less favourable

    than that it accords to like services and service suppliers of any other

    country; 4

    Article XVI Market Access, which requires that each Member shall

    accord services and service suppliers of any other Member treatment

    no less favourable than that provided for under the terms, limitations

    and conditions agreed and specified in its Schedule. This Article also

    requires that, if the cross-border movement of capital is an essential

    part of the service, the Member is required to permit such capital

    movements;

    Article XVII National Treatment, which requires that each Member

    shall accord to services and service suppliers of any other Member, in

    respect of all measures affecting the supply of services, treatment no

    less favourable than it accords to its own like services and service

    suppliers.

    Other areas of the GATS that were of potential significance included Article VI

    Domestic Regulation, which limits the capacity to set technical standards or

    licensing requirements in ways that restricted the capacity of other Member states

    to supply a service into a Member country; Article VIIRecognition, requiring that

    forms of education and experience acquired in order to supply a particular service

    45

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    16/48

    in one country should be recognised in that of another, through common

    international standards where possible; and Article XV Subsidies, seeking to

    minimise the trade-distortive effects of domestic subsidies on the capacity of

    suppliers from other Member states to compete in that countrys service markets.

    The EC member states led the campaign to restrict the impact of the GATS

    on audiovisual services in the Uruguay Round. European concerns with the

    potential impact of free trade in audiovisual product on domestic industries and

    national cultures are multifaceted. In 1995, the United States had a surplus of $6.3

    billion in its audiovisual trade with the European Commission, and US films

    accounted for between 60 and 90 percent of market share in EC member nations

    (Schlesinger 1997; OECD 1998). Cultural and linguistic barriers between EC

    member states have constituted a barrier to intra-European audiovisual trade,

    which would give member states the economies of scale to compete with high-

    budget US product. It is estimated that, in 1990, less than 10 per cent of

    programming made in one EC nation was viewed in another member state

    (Kaplan 1994: 304), in spite of various EC-initiated attempts to develop pan-

    European television networks and audiovisual content (Collins 1998). In such an

    environment, as Toby Miller notes, US content has established itself as an

    entertainment other alluring precisely because it has the weight of Europe

    against it, and benefiting from competition that would not be present without the

    subsidised screen (Miller 1996: 80).

    46

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    17/48

    The issues are wider than those of industry viability, and incorporate

    important elements of political and cultural sovereignty. It has been argued by the

    Europeans that their audiovisual media ecology is distinctive, as it is based around

    public service broadcasting, state cultural policy initiatives to cater for cultural

    and linguistic diversity within the nation-state, and a formative role for media in

    the development of citizens (EC 1998). In some European nations, most notably

    France, cultural concerns run much deeper. For the French, the hegemony of

    Hollywood is seen as constituting a mechanism whereby the significance of

    French language and culture is being diluted, both within France and

    internationally. The idea that the United States was using international trade

    forums to promote free trade in audiovisual services is seen as the latest

    manifestation of American cultural imperialism (Palmer 1996: 36). Former

    French President Francois Mitterand argued in the early 1990s: Who can be blind

    today to the threat of a world gradually invaded by an identical culture, Anglo-

    Saxon culture, under the cover of economic liberalism?. Similarly, the French

    Minister for Culture under the Mitterand government, Jack Lang, had called for

    genuine cultural resistance to financial and intellectual imperialism (quoted

    in Miller 1996: 72).

    Such European concerns culminated in the European Communitys

    Television Without Frontiers Directive of 1989, which set a European works

    program content quota of 50 per cent, binding upon all EC members. Through the

    Television Without Frontiers doctrine, the EC sought to liberalise audiovisual

    47

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    18/48

    trade and Europeanise audiovisual content among the EC member states, while

    strengthening barriers to content from outside of the EC, most notably the United

    States. US trade negotiators considered the Directive to be nothing more than

    economic protectionism couched in cultural language (quoted in Kaplan 1994:

    302), and sought to have the Directive struck down as contrary to the non-

    discrimination principles of the GATT. EC negotiators responded, first, by arguing

    that television was a service and not a good and, second, as services increasingly

    came within the GATT framework, for a cultural exception to be granted to

    audiovisual services. The EC negotiators drew upon the North American Free

    Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and the exclusion of cultural industries that Canada

    had negotiated under Article 2005 of the Agreement (Acheson and Maule 1998).

    In order to save the GATT from collapse, in late 1993 US negotiators agreed to

    disagree with the EC on whether the status of films and television programs was

    primarily commercial or cultural, leading to exclusion of audiovisual services

    from the GATTs rules governing transparency and non-discrimination, and

    extending this to new communications technologies as well as existing media, at

    the conclusion of the Uruguay Round in Marrakesh in 1994.

    This outcome was seen as a major political and ideological victory for the

    EC, and for other participants in the GATS negotiations, including Australia, who

    adopted the European understanding of films and television programs as integral

    parts of a national and regional culture, rather than primarily as tradeable

    economic commodities (Grant 1994; Footer and Graber 2000). It was achievable

    48

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    19/48

    in part because, paradoxically, the member states of the EC acted as a collective

    diplomatic entity, using arguments in defence of the Directive that extended the

    claims of audiovisual content as central to the maintenance of a national culture

    from the level of member states to that of Europe as a putative supranational

    cultural entity. In this respect, it marks out a distinctive element in the

    development of regional trade agreements and their relationship to cultural policy.

    There has been a dramatic growth in regional trade agreements since 1985,

    with 33 regional trading agreements being reached between 1990 and 1994

    (Frankel 1997). In a survey of cultural industries policies in regional trading

    blocs, Hernan Galperin (1999a) found that variations in treatment of audiovisual

    industries within the regional trading agreement were shaped by:

    Their industrial profile, or the distribution of economic and political

    resources among the trading partners audiovisual industries;

    Theirdomestic communications policies, or the regulatory framework

    governing communications industries, and including audiovisual,

    telecommunications and cultural policies;

    The degree of cultural distance among member states, including

    similarities/differences in language, audiovisual consumption habits,

    and genre preferences. A relevant issue is also the degree of cultural

    distance between those nations and other nations, most notably the

    United States as the worlds leading audiovisual services exporter. For

    49

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    20/48

    example, it is often noted that Great Britain is culturally closer to the

    United States than to the nations of continental Europe.

    In the case of NAFTA, Canada sought to exclude cultural industries from its

    agreement with the United States, as an indicator of the relatively weak position

    of its audiovisual producers in the English-language Canadian market, their

    dependence upon proactive national cultural policy, and their very high levels of

    exposure to US product. By contrast, Mexico has strong domestic broadcasters,

    significant linguistic and cultural barriers to US material, and an audiovisual

    policy increasingly oriented towards expanding exports into the Spanish-speaking

    world, including Spanish speakers in the United States; it had no comparable

    interest in a cultural exception.

    The EC audiovisual strategy is based upon the possibility of creating a

    single European market, enabling European producers to develop economies of

    scale and scope comparable to those that provide US producers with a major

    competitive advantage in international audiovisual trade. The strategy of

    developing a unified European audiovisual space is problematic in light of the

    significant cultural and linguistic barriers, or what Galperin terms the cultural

    distance, that exists between the EC member nations. Schlesinger (1997) notes

    four problems with the notion of a pan-European audiovisual or cultural space.

    First, it is a product of official Europe, which is worried about America and

    Americanisation [while] peoples Europe is not (Schlesinger 1997: 373).

    50

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    21/48

    Second, the claim that European television programming is about culture in

    contrast to American entertainment is questionable in light of the economic

    strategies that underpin the creation of a European single market, and the fact that

    European commercial broadcasting is no less about entertainment than that of the

    United States. Third, in spite of claims to be promoting cultural diversity within

    Europe, Schlesinger doubts that such policies will adequately service the

    identities and meet the interests of cultural and ethnic minorities within EC

    member states. Finally, identification with Europe as a supranational entity lacks

    popular appeal within EC member states because, at least in part, European

    political culture is thin, widely perceived among European citizens as being

    characterised by elite brokerage, bureaucratism and legalism. As a result, Euro-

    citizenship will struggle to overcome the seductive pull of the national [and]

    the undoubted power of non-rationalistic elements of political and national culture

    that confer a wider, non-deliberative sense of solidarity and belonging

    (Schlesinger 1997: 387).

    Two implications arise from these observations for the likelihood of a

    cultural exemption being sustained by the EC member states, and other nations

    with similar concerns about their cultural industries, such as Canada. The first is

    that definitions of audiovisual media as a form of culture that is distinct from

    other marketable commodities will be more difficult to sustain in a global media

    environment characterised by strategies to make national media systems more

    internationally competitive, and the extension of the WTO framework from goods

    51

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    22/48

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    23/48

    television industries rather than a distinctively national aesthetic. Galperin

    (1999b) has noted that the European audiovisual policy has fostered industrial

    concentration while failing to democratise access to cultural resources within

    European nations. Galperin has argued that the debate needs to shift from the pros

    and cons of trade liberalisation in cultural industries, which he views as not

    necessarily evil, to the relationship between the institutional structures of cultural

    production and distribution and the normative goals of cultural policy and cultural

    development:

    Cultural development calls for new forms of government intervention in

    the cultural arena, aimed not at protecting producers but at democratising

    the use of communication resources. The real debate is not between

    foreign versus local audiovisual products, but rather between a regulatory

    regime for audiovisual markets based on the tenets of corporate liberalism

    and the global competitiveness logic versus audiovisual policies aimed at

    creating diverse and inclusionary cultural spaces within and across nation-

    states. (Galperin 1999b: 73)

    The GATS Debate in Australia

    The debate in Australia about the inclusion of audiovisual services into the GATT

    provides revealing insights into the different policy and debate cultures that exist

    in Australian media policy, particularly in relation to matters of international

    53

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    24/48

    treaty negotiations and trade policy. The Australian federal government, those

    government departments concerned with international trade and economic

    performance, and Australias trade negotiators at the GATT took to the

    international trade in services negotiations in the Uruguay Round of the GATT

    with enthusiasm. The development of multilateral rules promoting services trade

    liberalisation was seen as consistent with Australian economic priorities to expand

    trade, diversify exports and open up new sectors of the domestic economy to

    greater international competition. As international trade in services emerged as a

    significant policy issue in the late 1980s, the Industries Assistance Commission

    was arguing that: If Australias domestic barriers to services trade are significant,

    the gains from removing them could be quite large (IAC 1989a: 41), and that

    Australia would benefit from the unilateral reduction of trade barriers [and]

    should pursue a trade liberalisation course irrespective of the actions of other

    nations (IAC 1989b: 86). The IAC and the Department of Foreign Affairs and

    Trade (DFAT) were also flagging areas in Australian film and television where

    policies to support the local production industry would contravene the principles

    of the GATT, including local content quotas for broadcasting, local content

    requirements for television drama, local content requirements for television

    advertising, tax concessions for investment in Australian films, and direct

    financial assistance available to Australian film producers through the Film

    Finance Corporation (IAC 1989a: 40-41).

    54

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    25/48

    For many in the film and broadcasting sector, this was a profoundly odd,

    alienating and threatening discourse. In the area of cultural industries, Australia

    had a deficit of about $1.25 billion in 1992-93 (Mableson 1995: 69), and a deficit

    in trade in television programs that was $150 million in 1987-88 and $200 million

    in 1997-98 (Productivity Commission 2000: 163). More important than the

    figures, however, was a sense that the development of an Australian film and

    television production sector had been a product of proactive regulation to promote

    local production, and that this had been a significant milestone in Australian

    cultural policy. The growing interest among some academics and analysts in

    understanding media as cultural industries meant that an informed response to the

    GATS round could be developed, that did not simply rest upon cultural

    nationalism or dichotomies between economics and culture. One example of this

    was the argument that local content regulations and subsidy arrangements for

    Australian television were not primarily about defence of a national culture

    through economic protectionism, but rather about ensuring the existence of a

    limited local presence alongside the Hollywood product (ORegan 1992: 91), or a

    safety net for local content (Cunningham and Jacka 1996: 224). ORegan also

    argued that local content quotas for Australian commercial television did not

    constitute a substantive barrier to the import of US programming, but were a

    means of ensuring limited local production in import-competing genres such as

    drama, where linguistic and cultural proximity to the United States made

    Australian television one of the least protected and cosseted of international

    television industries (ORegan 1993: 76). Australias situation in international

    55

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    26/48

    television trade was therefore presented as being closer to that of English-

    speaking Canada than France and other continental European nations.

    Such arguments provided useful counters to the deregulatory and anti-

    protectionist thrust which the GATT negotiations promoted in Australian

    broadcast media policy debates. In particular, they strengthened the case for

    Australian GATT negotiators seeking to exempt audiovisual services from the

    conditions of the final GATS agreement. Jock Given, who was Policy Advisor to

    the Australian Film Commission during this period and actively involved in these

    negotiations, notes the importance of such hard intellectual work for the sector

    to work out its common position, to accompany the easy rhetorical line of not

    selling out to the Americans.5 This was important for two reasons. One was that

    it enabled those in the film and television production sector to establish their

    credentials in discussions with the Australian GATT negotiators, reflecting the

    professionalisation of participation in a particularly arcane and remote field of

    policy, but one with important practical consequences. As Given recalls:

    The danger was always going down and talking to these people. You need

    to be able to engage with where they were at, you needed to be able to talk

    about sectoral annotations and MFN derogations, and all that sort of stuff

    Their temptation was always to say, This is a really complicated and

    difficult business, you really dont understand how difficult it is, and

    weve heard you and thank you. You let us professionals go off and do it,

    56

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    27/48

    it is a very complicated and difficult international negotiating job, I have

    to be on a plane to Geneva in two hours, why dont you leave it to us. 6

    The second reason why such hard intellectual work was valuable was

    that it enabled a case to be made for exempting audiovisual services from

    Australias final GATS commitments without rejecting the GATT framework

    entirely, or presenting a case that smacked of special pleading. As Given notes,

    Australian producers as a whole, including Australian audiovisual producers, have

    an interest in the GATT framework of multilateral trade negotiations and trade

    liberalisation. There was a need to acknowledge the viewpoint of the federal

    government and Australian GATT negotiators that Australias interests would be

    best served by a successful overall resolution of the Uruguay Round of GATT

    negotiations, but this needed to occur in ways that keep the rules of the

    agreement tough but allow flexibility in the extent to which countries are required

    to apply the rules immediately.7 Given puts this point in the following terms:

    We need the metropolis of the GATT. Its contribution to our economic

    prosperity will be important not least because it is that prosperity which

    pays the bills for cultural subsidy. We also need the GATT because, as a

    small country, we are less vulnerable in an environment of multilaterally

    endorsed trading rules than we are in the dog-eat-dog world of bilateral

    trade wars. Especially in audiovisual services where its not so much dog-

    eat-dog as T-Rex-eats-pups. (Given 1993: 4)

    57

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    28/48

    Australia was among the majority of countries that did not make a

    commitment to the GATS agreement in the audiovisual services sector, in effect

    aligning itself with the EC, led by France, against the United States. It is

    important to be aware, however, that it did not do so for the same reasons as the

    EC countries. Whereas the European position was driven primarily by the desire

    to protect and defend national cultural industries as pillars of a strong and

    historically grounded sense of national cultural citizenship and identity, countries

    like Australia were driven far more by the need for communicative boundary

    maintenance and the existence of a local supplement alongside an assumed and

    predominant import profile, and a culture [that] tends to be thought of as

    emergent rather than as fully constituted (ORegan 1992: 91). Moreover,

    countries such as Australia and Canada enter into such arrangements as exporters

    as well as importers of audiovisual product, with a strong historical awareness of

    the dynamics of trade in the global cultural economy. Such distinctions tend to be

    lost in multilateral diplomatic forums such as the GATT, where countries as

    diverse as Australia, Canada, France and Japan will line up together and speak in

    the same broad cultural sovereignty terms against US pressures for audio-visual

    trade liberalisation and an end to state production subsidization (ORegan 1992:

    91). The distinction is important, however, when the interests of Australian film

    and television producers are considered in the international political economy of

    trade liberalisation. Given has argued that the cultural task of Australian content

    regulation is not primarily to defend national culture from globalisation, but rather

    58

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    29/48

    as our part of a global cultural intervention to maintain and enhance difference

    and creative opportunity everywhere (Given 1993: 4).

    Australias policy position towards local content rules to safeguard local

    production and culture was inconsistent in the context of international

    negotiations around liberalising trade in audiovisual services. In the late 1980s,

    when international rules governing trade in services emerged as an item in the

    Uruguay Round agenda, the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal was completing an

    extensive inquiry that would support the necessity of Australian content

    regulations for commercial broadcast television. At the same time, other arms of

    government, such as the IAC and DFAT, were questioning the necessity or

    desirability of such policies as a means of achieving the nations overall economic

    and political objectives. More generally, Australias approach to the negotiation of

    international trade treaties has been that of a high-profile free trade nation. As a

    leading exporter of agricultural goods, the Australian government was

    instrumental in establishing the 14-country grouping known as the Cairns Group

    in 1986, promoting trade liberalisation in agriculture as part of the Uruguay

    Round of GATT negotiations, and the Australian government welcomed the

    development of a non-discriminatory, multilateral framework for international

    trade in services.

    Opposition to protectionism has been a dominant motifamong Australias

    economic policy agencies since the 1970s, and a commitment to trade

    59

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    30/48

    liberalisation has been politically bipartisan during this period, and in fact pursued

    with most vigour by the Whitlam, Hawke and Keating Labor governments. Trade

    liberalisation had become an area of policy activism among economists within

    government, as well as among academic economists and in the financial media.

    The influence of such arguments can be seen in the impact of domestic economic

    policies that saw effective rates of assistance for manufacturing and agriculture

    fall from relatively high levels in the early 1970s to near-zero levels by the end of

    the century (see Table 7.1):

    Table 7.1

    Effective Rates of Assistance for Manufacturing and Agriculture in Australia

    Year Manufacturing Agriculture

    1970-71 36 281976-77 27 91986-87 19 191991-92 13 11

    1996-97 6 n/a

    Source: Snape et. al. (1998: 13).

    This commitment was an unwavering characteristic of the Hawke and

    Keating Labor governments in the 1983-96 period. They saw the Banana

    Republic crisis of the early 1980s as requiring policies of microeconomic reform

    and trade liberalisation, aimed at promoting an open, competitive and outward-

    looking Australian economy. In the March 1991 industry policy statement,

    Building a Competitive Australia, Prime Minister Bob Hawke argued that

    60

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    31/48

    Australias self-interest is served by a steadfast refusal to return to the days of

    protectionism (Hawke 1991), while Treasurer Paul Keating claimed that by the

    end of the 1990s, Australia will have renounced once and for all the fallacious

    doctrine that prosperity can be found behind the insular wall of protection

    (Keating 1991).

    Such statements received ample support from academic economists such

    as Ross Garnaut and Kym Anderson (1987), who argued: (1) as a small economy

    with a high dependence upon export revenues and capital inflow, Australia had a

    strong prima facie interest in free trade; (2) that demands for assistance were

    manifestations of a political market for protection, whereby organised interest

    groups in import-competing manufacturing sectors could pursue sectional

    interests through political lobbying, to the detriment of Australian consumers,

    export industries and, over time, the national economy; and (3) that domestic

    trade liberalisation would enable Australia to benefit from the economic boom

    occurring in the Asia-Pacific, as Australian industries became more outward-

    looking and export-oriented.8 Such gains, moreover, would be more than simply

    economic. The influential report Australia and the Northeast Asian Ascendancy

    (also known as the Garnaut Report) argues that relations with the countries of

    Northeast Asia are of substantial importance politically and culturally as well

    (Garnaut 1990: 6). For those involved in broadcast media and other cultural

    industries, this dominant policy culture would introduce a new dimension to

    61

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    32/48

    media policy discourse, and would require an understanding to be developed of

    largely unfamiliar legal and policy areas such as international trade law.

    Australian broadcasting had been founded on a Fordist regime of

    monopolistic regulation (Aglietta 1987; De Vroey 1984), characterised by

    relatively stable industry structures and corporate profit rates, and the primary

    orientation of producers towards national economies. It had developed a political

    economy, policy system and policy culture that were relatively stable and

    routinised among the major institutional agents. The social contract between

    commercial broadcasters, state regulators and production industry and public

    interest groups, involving the redistribution of surplus profits through regulations

    such as Australian content rules, was based upon the stable and highly profitable

    distribution structure of the overall system. The question of how to respond to

    international trade agreements was bound up with the issue of whether there

    would be a shift in Australian broadcasting from a Fordist system, characterised

    by universal access to all services, limited channel free-to-air broadcasting and

    broad appeal programming, towards a new model, which has been termed post-

    Fordist, of user pays and differentiated access, multichannel and converged

    media services, and increasing specialisation and demographic targeting of

    programming. In the absence of a significant constituency for change, as

    illustrated by the belated introduction of pay TV, the drive for policy reform came

    from the bureaucracy itself. The resulting incoherence and reluctance to be open

    about policy settings was illustrated in the Project Blue Sky case, and the role

    62

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    33/48

    played by the Broadcasting Services Act1992, drafted by DOTAC, in allowing

    New Zealand programming to be classified as Australian content, under the terms

    of the Closer Economic Relationship.

    The Project Blue Sky Case: Bilateral Trade Agreements and

    Australia-New Zealand Audiovisual Trade

    The Australia New Zealand Closer Economic Relations (CER) Trade Agreement

    came into force in 1983, although a more limited free trade agreement has been in

    place since 1965. The CER required the gradual elimination of tariffs on all goods

    not otherwise specified in an annex to the agreement (the negative list) within

    five years, and a commitment to liberalise all import quotas and eliminate export

    subsidies on goods traded between the two countries. A review of the CER in

    1988 led to the signing of a Protocol on Trade in Services between the two

    countries, which aimed to liberalise barriers to trade in services between the two

    member states, expand trans-Tasman trade in services, and establish a rules-based

    system to govern trade in services compatible with the rules of the GATT. The

    Australian CER representatives listed limits on foreign ownership of broadcasting

    and television as part of the negative list and thus exempt, but not, significantly,

    Australian content rules for commercial free-to-air television.

    This had the potential to place the Television Program Standard (TPS) 14

    in jeopardy, and it pointed to a tension between the ABAs requirement under

    Section 122 (2)(b) of the Broadcasting Services Act1992 to develop a standard

    63

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    34/48

    for commercial television broadcasting licensees relating to the Australian

    content of programs and the requirement under Section 160(d) that the ABA is

    to perform its functions in a manner consistent with Australias obligations

    under any convention to which Australia is a party or any agreement between

    Australia and a foreign country. An Australian content standard that did not

    include New Zealand content could be in breach of Article 5 of the Protocol on

    Trade in Services to the Australia New Zealand Closer Economic Relations- Trade

    Agreement, which required that Each Member State shall accord to persons of

    the other Member State and services provided by them treatment no less

    favourable than that accorded in like circumstances to its persons and services

    provided by them.

    What followed was an acrimonious series of legal actions in the Australian

    Federal and High Courts, initiated by sections of the New Zealand audiovisual

    industry, which established Project Blue Sky in 1993 in order to argue that

    Australian content regulations contravened both Section 160(d) of the

    Broadcasting Services Act1992 and the CER. The initial judgment in the Federal

    Court by Justice Davies found in favour of Project Blue Sky, finding that the 1995

    Australian Content Standard set by the ABA had contravened Section 160(d) of

    theBroadcasting Services Act 1992, by being in breach of the Protocol of Trade in

    Services of the CER.9The ABA successfully appealed this finding before the Full

    Federal Court in 1996, with the majority judgment of Justices Wilcox and Finn

    determining that the ABA faced an impossible task in reconciling the specific

    64

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    35/48

    requirement of Section 122 (2)(b) and Section 160(d) of the Broadcasting

    Services Act 1992, and that a New Zealand program is not an Australian

    program, since Australian content [was] something particular to this

    country.10 This finding was overturned in an appeal to the High Court of

    Australia, which found in favour of Project Blue Sky, and required the ABA to

    modify the Australian Content Standard accordingly, on the basis that Sections

    122 and 160 are interlocking rather than conflicting provisions, and that the

    power conferred by Section 122 must therefore be exercised within the

    framework imposed by Section 160.

    11

    An interesting element of the finding was

    Chief Justice Brennans argument that the Australian content of a program was

    the matter in which Australian ideas find expression, and that this was not in

    itself guaranteed by the provenance of the program, or its being under Australian

    creative control, which reopened issues about whether regulatory agencies should

    set laws to guarantee the Australianness of a programs content (Leiboff 2000).

    This thesis will not dwell upon the validity of the High Court of

    Australias legal judgment, other than to note, with Leiboff (1998, 2000), that the

    judgment is an adverse one for those seeking to argue in law in favour of cultural

    arguments where they are potentially in conflict with economic understandings of

    the nature of a service. The failure to include Australian content rules for

    broadcasting on the negative list of the Protocol on Trade in Services to the

    Australia New Zealand Closer Economic Relations Trade Agreement, despite the

    clear preferences of the local production industry for such an exemption, has been

    65

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    36/48

    viewed with great suspicion by some within the media production sector. Both

    Anne Britton and Christina Spurgeon have claimed in interviews with the author

    that they had received guarantees that broadcasting services would be exempt

    from CER provisions, and that s. 160(d) of the Broadcasting Services Actwas

    intended to address different kinds of treaty obligations, such as human rights,

    labour or environmental standards. Both believe that members of the Department

    of Transport and Communications were sneaky in claiming that there would be

    an exemption for broadcasting services to industry and public interest

    representatives, but then claiming that it was not included due to an oversight, or a

    bureaucratic stuff-up.12 The extent of uncertainty in the legislation about

    whether the CER had primacy over the Australian Content standard was indicated

    by the so-called riding instructions given by the Minister for Transport and

    Communications, Bob Collins, to the then ABA Chair, Brian Johns, asking him to

    look at the treatment of New Zealand programs under the new Act as a matter of

    priority (Given and York 1996: 18).

    The other major question arising from the Project Blue Sky case involves

    the merits of the arguments put by Australian representatives for exemption of

    broadcasting services from CER provisions, and the case put by New Zealand

    representatives for their inclusion. Gareth Grainger, Deputy Chair of the

    Australian Broadcasting Authority, argued that the Australian Content standard

    existed as part of the obligations of the ABA under Object 3(e) of the

    Broadcasting Services Act to promote the role of broadcasting services in

    66

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    37/48

    reflecting a sense of Australian identity, character and cultural diversity, and that

    this objective should have primacy over obligations under international trade

    agreements:

    Cultural protection measures are based upon an assumption that local

    industries foster local creativity and indigenous talent which may

    otherwise have no expression. Such expression enriches the cultural life of

    the nation as a whole. National identity, character and cultural diversity

    are thus expressed in a material form: such expression would not

    necessarily occur without specific measures designed to promote it and

    ensure that it has access to local audiences. (Grainger 1998: 11)

    The alliance of Australian production industry groups, known as Project True

    Blue, were concerned that relatively small amounts of New Zealand programming

    would erode the local content quotas for drama, childrens and documentary

    programs, and that New Zealand producers could take advantage of the CER to

    dump low-cost programming in Australia (Britton 1997).13 There was also a

    concern that recognition of the capacity of the CER to override local content

    quotas could, in an era of the GATS and the World Trade Organisation, be the

    thin end of the wedge for the abolition of all forms of cultural protection in order

    to comply with international trade and other treaty obligations (Fell 1998).

    Advocates of theProject Blue Sky case, such as Jo Tyndall, Executive Director of

    the Screen Producers and Directors Association of New Zealand, believed that

    67

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    38/48

    these concerns were overstated, and that opportunities existed for the two

    countries to develop a more recognisably equitable integrated market, and

    increase the range of issues on which Australia and New Zealand arts lobbies

    have similar interests (Art & Law 1998: 6). Other New Zealand observers, such

    as academic Geoff Lealand, believed that the issue was not money but equity

    between the two trading partners (Lealand 1997: 48), even if he was elsewhere

    sympathetic to the emotional and cultural logic behind the Australian desire to

    protect the local industry by opposing the Project Blue Sky case (Lealand 1996:

    227).

    Using Galperins (1999) framework for assessing the impact of regional

    trade agreements on cultural industries policy, it is apparent that the CER

    agreement between Australia and New Zealand has both similarities and

    differences with the NAFTA and EC cases. As in the NAFTA relationship

    between the US and Canada, both Australia and New Zealand share English as a

    common language, and both have significant cultural and historical similarities.

    Both countries share with the EC nations a concern about high levels of US

    audiovisual import penetration and its capacity to undermine the local production

    industry and elements of a distinctive national culture but, in contrast to EC

    nations such as France and Germany, neither Australia nor New Zealand has

    historically possessed a strong sense of national cultural sovereignty underpinned

    by its cultural industries. Both cultures have historically been very open to

    external influences, and the governments of both countries have been committed

    68

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    39/48

    since the 1980s to reducing levels of protection and regulation in order to be more

    oriented towards international markets, as well as being supportive of

    international moves towards trade liberalisation.

    Audiovisual trade between the two countries is dominated by Australia,

    with Australian programming accounting for 12.9 per cent of programs on New

    Zealand television in 1993, and it is estimated that Australia earned NZ $13

    million annually from program sales to New Zealand, while New Zealand earned

    NZ$300 000 a year from trans-Tasman program sales (Lealand 1996: 218, 226).

    In an interesting contrast to the United States/Canada relationship, it was Australia

    as the dominant partner in the regional trade agreement that was hostile to

    liberalisation of audiovisual trade within the trading bloc. The potential impact of

    New Zealand imports on the amount of Australian material broadcast seems to

    have been quite minimal. While the MEAA has argued that the amount of New

    Zealand material supported through subsidy from New Zealand On Air could

    potentially meet up to 70 per cent of the Australian drama quota (Britton 1997),

    such aggregate figures do not address the question of whether Australian

    commercial television networks would find such material suitable for broadcast,

    or would attract sufficient Australian audiences to be commercially viable. The

    failure of the Grundys-produced Shortland Street, New Zealands most popular

    serial drama, to attract a significant audience when it screened on SBS in

    Australia in 1994 is often cited as a case in point. Franco Papandrea (1998) has

    estimated that the impact of including New Zealand programs in the schedule of

    69

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    40/48

    Australian drama and documentary programs would be likely to be minimal, even

    where New Zealand imports have a cost advantage over local programs, since

    there is no evidence of significant Australian audience preference for New

    Zealand content, compared with high preference for Australian content in both of

    these program categories.

    Where the Australian and New Zealand broadcasting systems differ

    significantly is in their degree of regulation. While both countries were committed

    to a general program of deregulation in the 1980s, this went much further in New

    Zealand in the broadcasting sector. It can be argued that much of the Australian

    opposition toProject Blue Sky stems from the concern that deregulation went too

    far in New Zealand, and that comparable developments in Australia would mean

    the end for local content quotas, as part of the race to the bottom thesis that

    globalisation leads to competitive downgrading of regulatory standards

    (Bratihwaite and Drahos 2000). New Zealand has no local content quotas, relying

    instead upon the public authority New Zealand On Air (NZOA) to fund local

    production in the areas of drama, documentaries, childrens and special interest

    programming, in contrast to the use of local content quotas in Australia, with

    specific requirements for drama, childrens and documentary programming. In

    contrast to Australia, where the Australian government funds the ABC as a non-

    commercial public broadcaster and the SBS as a specialist multicultural

    broadcaster, New Zealands publicly owned TVNZ, as a State-Owned Enterprise,

    is required to operate on a largely commercial basis. As a result, local content

    70

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    41/48

    levels in New Zealand are among the lowest in the world at 24 per cent in 1998,

    compared with the 55 per cent transmission quota for Australian commercial

    television and local content on the ABC at 58 per cent (Norris et. al. 1999; cf.

    NZOA 1998). 14

    Given such regulatory disparities, the CER provisions are seen by critics

    as a battering ram for enforcing conformity with GATS and other provisions

    stipulated by international trade bodies such as the World Trade Organisation. The

    Australian view has been that New Zealand should strengthen its own local

    content provisions, rather than seek to dismantle the Australian local content

    quotas. This position has some support in New Zealand, particularly since the

    election of a Labour government in 2000, which has become increasingly

    concerned that Australian TV producers may be the principal beneficiaries of

    application of the CER to audiovisual services regulation (Lealand 2000). A

    consequence of the protracted and quite bitter legal disputes has, however, been

    that consideration of the desirability of a trans-Tasman audiovisual space, or the

    benefits of free trade within geographical regions as a basis for expanding scale

    economies and building more unified geolinguistic regions in the face of global

    competition, has never been on the policy agenda. In Australia, such propositions

    have been constructed as the thin end of the wedge, towards the total

    dismantling of policy support for the local audiovisual production industry. In this

    respect, the Australian arguments against including audiovisual services in the

    CER are very different to those of the EC negotiators defending Television

    71

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    42/48

    Without Frontiers in the face of US opposition, even though both draw upon

    similar concerns about globalisation and the dangers of US domination of world

    audiovisual markets.

    The Millennium Round of the WTO

    The World Trade Organisation commenced the Millennium Round of

    negotiations concerning trade liberalisation in Seattle in November 1999, amid

    protests from over 1000 non-government organisations and several thousand

    protestors.15While WTO negotiations are currently in a degree of limbo after the

    Seattle protests, they are continuing nonetheless, with renegotiation of the General

    Agreement of Trade in Services being central to the new round of multilateral

    trade negotiations. It has been argued that the GATS Agreement reached at the

    end of the Uruguay Round was flawed, by virtue of the quasi-voluntary nature of

    the national commitments process, or what Hoekman and Kostecki (1995: 142)

    describe as the a la carte approach to trade liberalisation. US negotiators

    demanded a stronger commitment on the part of WTO member states to trade

    liberalisation in services, believing that the current approach had allowed many

    members to essentially preserve thestatus quo, and had failed to meet the stated

    objective of progressive trade liberalisation (WTO 1999). It has been proposed

    that the GATS framework would better promote the goal of progressive trade

    liberalisation in services if the current Round was based upon across-the-board

    (horizontal) rather than sectoral approaches to regulatory liberalisation, and a

    72

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    43/48

    negative list approach, where any area where an exemption has not been listed

    by a member is covered by the disciplines of the GATS, rather than the approach

    taken at the Uruguay Round where members nominated areas where they would

    commit themselves to the disciplines of the GATS (Watson et. al., 1999: 288-

    290).

    The audiovisual sector was an area where a large number of WTO

    member nations sought exemptions from the GATS during the Uruguay Round.

    The WTO has observed in its Background Notes that 40 member countries

    (counting the European Community as a single entity), including Australia, had

    taken 33 exemptions from the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) clause of the GATS

    (Article II) in the areas of co-production agreements for film and television

    productions, and National Treatment status (Article XVII) in terms of eligibility

    for financial assistance, tax benefits and entry procedures for natural persons.

    Moreover, restrictions were sought in areas such as limits on foreign

    shareholding, local content quotas, and exclusion from national treatment in

    relation to domestic producers. Perhaps most significantly, the WTO notes that:

    Audiovisual industry representatives in a number of member countries

    suggested that the cinema and broadcasting sectors should be excluded

    form the Agreement in order to protect national industries and cultures

    from being overwhelmed by foreign products. (WTO 1998: 8)

    73

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    44/48

    In what appears likely to be a repeat of debates that occurred during the

    Uruguay Round of GATS negotiations, as well as the NAFTA and United States-

    Canada Free Trade Agreements negotiations, the European Commission and

    Canada have flagged their concerns about subjecting cultural industries to the full

    range of GATS obligations. The EC is concerned that the specificity of content

    and legitimacy of public policy objectives, based on cultural diversity and

    pluralism of expression, is recognised in international trade negotiations (EC

    1998). To this end, it proposes that the specificity of the audiovisual sector be

    registered through the application of a cultural exception, to be registered as a

    general exception under Article XIV of the GATS on General Exceptions, that

    currently includes public order, safety and national security provision. The

    Canadian government has registered similar concerns about the GATS, but prefers

    the development of a new international instrument on cultural diversity to a broad

    cultural exemption, that allow member states to utilise specified domestic cultural

    measures to safeguard cultural sovereignty and cultural diversity (CISAGIT

    1999). Knight has noted that such a position moves beyond national protectionism

    by identifying the distinctiveness of cultures as a principle that has universal

    validity:

    Far from being a parochial or simply national concern, the protection of

    local culture is of global concern. Without national governments

    providing counterweight to the overwhelming and growing presence of

    74

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    45/48

    (mainly American) entertainment culture, cultural diversity will be swept

    away in an era of globalisation. (Knight 1999: 169)

    There is at this stage not a clearly defined Australian position on the WTO

    and trade in audiovisual services. At a general level, Australia supports

    progressive trade liberalisation in the services sector. In a 1999 speech to the

    Australian Coalition of Service Industries, the Minister for Trade, Tim Fischer,

    reiterated Australias support for extension of the GATS framework, as providing

    a secure and stable framework for managing our trade, and providing the

    capacity to expand access into new export markets (DFAT 1999). In some services

    sectors, such as education where Australia is the worlds sixth largest exporter of

    education services (Cunningham et. al. 2000), support for further trade

    liberalisation is readily understandable. At the same time, and in apparent

    contrast, the Australian audiovisual sector was opposed to further trade

    liberalisation through the GATS, arguing that the sector is already highly

    internationalised, and that further trade liberalisation would jeopardise current

    assistance arrangements, and thereby threaten local culture and Australian

    democracy (AVPIG 1999). Moreover, it was argued that such a position had the

    support of the Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the

    Arts, as indicated by the decision to amend Section 160(d) of the Broadcasting

    Services Act in order to quarantine the international treaty obligations to only

    cover the CER between Australia and New Zealand.

    75

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    46/48

    Conclusion

    It has been observed in this chapter that, while Australias overall

    negotiating position in relation to the WTO and the GATS has been a highly

    supportive one, the Australian audiovisual production sector has tended to see its

    future as being threatened by further trade liberalisation as required under the

    GATS. The concerns in the Australian audiovisual sector are reflective of a wider

    range of concerns about the impact of globalisation and international trade

    agreements on political citizenship, national cultures and cultural sovereignty.

    Such concerns have been played out in a variety offora, from the opposition of

    the European Community to free trade in audiovisual services, to mass

    demonstrations against the WTO negotiations in Seattle. On a more local scale,

    the Project Blue Sky case, and the issue raised about whether television programs

    produced in New Zealand should count as Australian content under the CER

    agreement, revealed concerns in the Australian audiovisual industry that such an

    agreement was the thin end of the wedge towards dismantling local content

    quotas, even if the actual threat of material produced in New Zealand was

    minimal. Such debates are bound up with wider questions about television as a

    cultural industry, and whether claims about its cultural distinctiveness and

    contribution to national cultural development, as opposed to understanding

    television as a services industry, remain tenable in an era of globalisation,

    technological convergence and trade agreements such as the GATS.

    76

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    47/48

    77

  • 8/14/2019 Chapter Seven_PhD_Terry Flew

    48/48

    1 Other international economic institutions established after World War II included the International MonetaryFund, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank), and the Bretton Woods monetarysystem.

    2 The GATT negotiators in the Uruguay Round did not agree on a singular definition of services industries, butrather identified twelve sectors that included: business, financial, communications, tourism, health, construction,distribution, education, environmental, recreational, transport and other services. The category of communication servicesincluded postal services, courier services, telecommunication services (including on-line services) and audiovisual services.

    3 Until the establishment of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 1995, at the conclusion of the Uruguay Round

    of the GATT, the GATT had described both the trade treaty and the institutional framework through which it wasadministered.

    4 This Article has a special provision that MFN provisions can be exempted if listed in an Annex on Article IIexemptions. Prior to the conclusion of the Uruguay Round, a range of MFN exemptions were taken out by Member states,including Australia, in the area of audiovisual services, primarily to insulate co-production agreements from MFNprovisions.

    5 Interview with Jock Given, 18 November 1997.6Ibid.7Ibid.8 Anderson and Garnaut drew attention to a league table of industrial countries showing that growth rates in Gross

    Domestic Product (GDP) per capita were lower in Australia over the 1870-1976 period than any other industrial country,and that that Australias GDP per capita had fallen from the 3rd highest in the world in 1950 to 7th in 1970 and 14th in 1980(Garnaut and Anderson 1987: 16-17). They attributed this decline to political interventions that had locked up resources in

    less internationally competitive industries that had not been required to innovate, as protectionism had been an alternative toeconomic restructuring.

    9Project Blue Sky Inc. & Others v Australian Broadcasting Authority, No NG 807 of 1995.10Australian Broadcasting Authority v Project Blue Sky and Others, No. NG753 of 1996, per Wilcox and Finn JJ.11Project Blue Sky Inc. & Others v Australian Broadcasting Authority [1998] HCA 28, 28 April 1998, S41/1997,

    perMcHugh, Gummow, Kirby and Hayne JJ.12 Interview with Anne Britton, 28 September 1998; interview with Christina Spurgeon, 28 October 1997.13 The amici curiae in the High Court case were: Australian Film Commission, Australian Film Finance

    Corporation, Australian Childrens Television Foundation, Screen Producers Association of Australia, Australian WritersGuild, Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance, Australian Screen Directors Association, Susan Lyons, Graham Thorburn,Denise Morgan and Jonathon M. Shiff Productions.

    14 Australia also experimented with an NZOA-type arrangement with the Commercial Television Production Fund(CTVPF), established in 1995 as an initiative of the Keating Labor government as part of its 1994 Creative Nation cultural

    policy statement. The CTVPF was provided with $60 million over three years to fund high-quality commercial TVproductions that could attract private capital. Productions supported under the CTVPF would not be eligible for Australiancontent quota points, so that the direct subsidy was additional to quota. The CTVPF led directly to an additional 81.5 hoursof local content over three years, and indirectly to a further 186 hours of local drama production, as six CTVPF-fundedpilots were subsequently developed into drama series (ACTPF 1998).

    15 This round of WTO negotiations was preceded by the failure to implement toe Multilateral Agreement onInvestment (MAI). The Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) was an initiative developed through the OECD in1995, as a response in part to the failure to liberalisation of foreign investment rules in the Uruguay Round of GATTnegotiations. It would have allowed foreign corporations to prosecute national governments under international law if theybelieved that national policy actions had contravened the MAI, by establishing investor-to-state as well as state-to-statedispute resolution mechanisms. While the Director-General of the World Trade Organisation, Renato Ruggieri, describeddeveloping the MAI as writing the constitution of a single global economy (quoted in Goodman 1999: 34), the MAI struckmajor opposition worldwide. The adverse implications for national sovereignty were widespread, as it was believed thatnational regulations in areas such as the environment, labour standards, product safety and anti-competitive behaviour wereunder threat from the MAI (Joint NGO Statement1997). Negotiations on the draft MAI ceased in October 1998, as a resultof growing international political opposition. For its critics, this was seen as the first time [that] an autonomousinternational campaign had forced the worlds most powerful states to reconsider a major economic agreement (Goodman1998: 36). Concern with the MAI in Australia can be gauged from the Parliamentary Joint Standing Committee on Treatiesreceiving over 900 submissions to its inquiry into the potential consequences of the MAI for Australia (Parliament of theCommonwealth of Australia 1999)