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#19 - JRL 2006-133 - JRL Home
From: "William Dunkerley" <wd@publishinghelp.com>
Subject: How Press Freedom Can Grow in Russia
Date: Thu, 8 Jun 2006
How Press Freedom Can Grow in Russia
Commentary presented before the World Association of Newspapers,
Annual Congress, Moscow, June 4-7, 2006
By William Dunkerley*
Freedom of the press is an implicit and essential right of the people. It is
not just freedom of speech for journalists. If a democracy is going to work,
citizens have got to make informed political choices. The media are the people's
primary means for keeping informed.
Many believe that press freedom exists if the media are free of governmental
control and that pluralism prevails. That view misses the main point. A good
share of the media has got to be free to serve the people.
Why hasn't Russia been able to achieve this? I've seen how propaganda
masquerading as news is so prevalent here. It is paid for by oligarchs and other
business concerns, by mayors, governors, and other politicians, and even by
natural resource monopolies controlled by the presidential administration.
They've conscripted newspapers to advance their own interests.
Is it possible that the press could be both subjugated and free at the same
time? Of course not. That is oxymoronic.
So, how could this perplexing state of the media have come about? I know that
right from the start of the Russian Federation, the constitution has said that
there shall be press freedom. But then you get down into the tax laws. They said
that the press shall not have the financial independence to be free. They
prescribed disincentives to the ad market developing enough strength to support
the media. What�s more, newspapers weren't allowed to carry enough advertising
to be truly profitable. That's what thrust the media into the clutches of those
who want to pay to color the news. Euphemistically, this is called hidden
advertising.
Someone once said that with freedom of the press, the people own the news.
It's not owned by the government, nor by the powerful elite. But, in Russia,
most of the media are beholden to financial overlords. They own the news.
There's a Russian expression, kto platit, tot zakazivaet muzuku; he who pays,
calls the tune.
Russian consumers are so outraged over the state of the media that most favor
imposing censorship to end the nonsense. The level of dissatisfaction has
reached as high as 76 percent. There is little doubt that the current media
sector is an abject failure in consumer terms.
If the news is to serve the people, the people have got to pay for the news.
Then, they will own the news. But if they were to pay the full cost, it would
probably be ten times the present price of a newspaper. People aren't going to
pay that. For most of the world, that's why we've got advertising in newspapers.
Indeed, in the West, almost 60% of newspaper content is advertising.
Post-communist countries that have made the greatest strides in press freedom
are ones where the commercial success of newspapers is assured by sufficient
advertising. I mean legitimate, display advertising, not phony, paid-for
stories.
The Russian Media Fund, a private sector initiative, and Sreda magazine
successfully advocated for the removal of the constraining tax regulations.
Russia�s ad market now is booming. Newspapers can carry enough ad content to be
profitable. But, most existing media companies have been unable to respond to
the new media landscape. They remain mired in corrupt alliances with financial
overlords. As a result, there is little value placed on developing
consumer-responsive news and information products.
Pity the unfortunate readers. Pity also the advertisers! They are getting
short-changed by the current system, too. The people who pay to distort the news
want to reach voters. Advertisers need to reach buyers. These two audiences are
not one in the same. Presently, only around a third of the population has the
financial means to buy that which is advertised. Pensioners have perhaps the
lowest disposable income. But, they have a high propensity to vote. Newspapers
actively seek them as readers. The consumer base is not being targeted.
There's a Russian saying that always makes me laugh. It goes, pivo bez vodky,
dengi na vyeter; beer without vodka is money to the wind. For advertisers, two
thirds of the money they spend in Russia is money to the wind. It's even worse
than that. Advertising works best when it is presented within a framework of
trust. Russians are smart, literate people. They know the media is trying to
bamboozle them with all the paid-for stories. That's no way to create trust.
If things are to change, the hidden advertising has got to go. To me, the
persistence of this system is actually astonishing. It embodies an enormous
cognitive disconnect. It is the idea that misleading the people is a good way of
influencing them, even though the people know they are being misled.
I realize that my remarks may sound quite negative. But, actually, I believe
that the Russian media market now offers enormous promise. Indeed, foreign
publishers are flocking to the market, companies like Sanoma, News Corp.,
Naspers, and others.
Russia itself has a lot of very capable, intelligent, and honest newspaper
managers and journalists. Some of them have been successful in choosing a path
away from the hidden advertising system. But not enough of them. Not enough to
move the entire media industry in a different direction. The growth of press
freedom in Russia depends on these people. I hope that more will find the
strength to choose a new course.
*William Dunkerley
(wd@publishinghelp.com) is a media business consultant who works extensively
in Russia and other emerging media markets. He is based in New Britain ,
Connecticut, USA. An expanded version of his WAN commentary is obtainable at
www.russianmediamarket.com in a report entitled, "The Russian Media Market."
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