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Reshaping Public Broadcasting: the New Zealand experience 1988-2003

Reshaping Public Broadcasting: the New Zealand experience 1988-2003. IPPR Seminar 2004 Paul Norris Head, NZ Broadcasting School, CPIT norrisp@cpit.ac.nz. Outline. Overview of deregulation NZoA – the contestable funding model Strengths and weaknesses Any lessons for UK?.

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Reshaping Public Broadcasting: the New Zealand experience 1988-2003

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  1. Reshaping Public Broadcasting:the New Zealand experience 1988-2003 IPPR Seminar 2004 Paul Norris Head, NZ Broadcasting School, CPIT norrisp@cpit.ac.nz

  2. Outline • Overview of deregulation • NZoA – the contestable funding model • Strengths and weaknesses • Any lessons for UK?

  3. Deregulation 1988 TV3 BCNZ RNZ Ltd TVNZ Ltd 2 non-commercial networks 41 commercial Stations TV One TV2

  4. BCNZ/TVNZ Funding Source: BCNZ & TVNZ Annual Reports

  5. Deregulation / competition • Frequencies auctioned to highest bidder • No programming requirements • Ownership controls relaxed, then abolished • Broadcasting Standards Authority to maintain programme standards

  6. Broadcasting Act 1989 NZ On Air required to: • Reflect & develop NZ identity & culture • Promote programmes about NZ interests • Promote Maori language & culture • Ensure a range of broadcasts is available for women, children, the disabled and minorities, including ethnic minorities

  7. Broadcasting Act 1989 Re TV, NZ On Air required to: • Ensure reasonable provision is made for the funding of television drama and documentaries Re funding, have regard to: • The level of contribution from the applicant • The potential size of the audience

  8. NZ On Air 1989 - 2004 • Mission is local content (NZ programmes) • Populist programmes in prime time eg Shortland St – medical soap • Minority programmes – off peak

  9. 100% 90% Special Interest/Others 80% 70% 60% NZoAir Funding Drama/Comedy 50% 40% 30% Children's 20% 10% Documentaries 0% 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 Television Funding by Genre 1990-2003 Source: NZoA Annual Reports

  10. Documentaries funded by NZoA Source: NZoA Annual Reports

  11. Documentaries Outputs: Range too narrow – commercial focus Impact: Ratings adequate for prime time 10-15% Value: Valued for finding out how others face and overcome problems and challenges, also for the opportunity to learn something new and to be challenged intellectually

  12. Children’s progs funded by NZoA Source: NZoA Annual Reports

  13. Children’s programmes Outputs: • Stand-alone programmes or kiwi links within global cartoons? Impact: • Cartoons win the ratings Value: • Valued for giving children a sense of NZ identity • Also for not being hyped

  14. Qualitative research by genre Source: Attitudes to NZoA Funded TV Programming 2002

  15. NZ model - strengths • Contestability and competition • Diversity of programming • Growth of independent sector • Significant impact for $60m

  16. NZ model -weaknesses • Broadcasters are gatekeepers • Range of programmes inadequate • Emphasis on local content, not quality • Subsidises private commercial interests • Dilutes concept of public broadcasting • Public broadcaster seen as cash cow by government

  17. TVNZ as SOE Source: TVNZ Annual Reports

  18. Reforms of 2000-2003 • TVNZ – from SOE to CrOC • TVNZ Charter from March 2003 • TVNZ – direct govt. funding $11-15m • NZoA – additional funding • Voluntary quotas for local content

  19. Lessons from New Zealand? Caveats: • Ecology of broadcasting in NZ very different to that in UK • NZoA has been public broadcasting • Quantum of public funding

  20. Public funding as % of GDP Source: Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage Report Jun 03

  21. Lessons from New Zealand? • Use multiple mechanisms • Funding agency must be proactive • Contestability + competition • Efficiency – competitive tendering keeps costs transparent and under control

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