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Government Policy To Subsidize The Print Media Is Wasteful And Point

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  • Government Policy To Subsidize The Print Media Is Wasteful And Point

    GOVERNMENT POLICY TO SUBSIDIZE THE PRINT MEDIA IS WASTEFUL AND POINTLESS
    Sara Petrosyan

    hetq
    17:51, October 18, 2012

    The annual cost to run one daily newspaper in Armenia is more than
    the 48 million AMD government 2012 subsidy to over 80 non-governmental
    news outlets.

    This "humanitarian" government program was launched in 1998, when
    struggling news outlet representatives petitioned the government to
    lift the burdensome VAT. The government decided to subsidize the media
    instead; including the regional, literary, children's and national
    minority media.

    Years later the list was expanded further to include everything but
    the periodic press. The subsidy list included professional magazines
    with a very restricted target audience, whose publishers were NGOs or
    state agencies, the organs of regional and compatriotic organizations,
    literary-cultural papers, etc.

    You can only reach one conclusion by looking at the list - whoever
    has a contact at the Ministry of Culture has been able to get their
    publication included in the subsidy list. The allocated amount wasn't
    increased but was split amongst the registered names.

    Directors of news outlets imagined the state assistance differently.

    The decades old argument between publishers and media distributors
    was never resolved and the government offered no help in this regard.

    Locations of the print media were not freely privatized and handed
    over to the publishers.

    Furthermore, locations and print houses were seized, and today, we
    have not one periodical approaching 100 years of operation that can
    celebrate that anniversary in appropriate style. In a word, the policy
    of state assistance is a policy of cajoling and gaining favour. The
    government wants to create the impression that, on the one hand,
    it is guaranteeing media diversity and diversity of opinion and,
    on the other, whilst they haven't solved an essential issue, with
    that list we can achieve the reputation of being a nation of lovers
    of reading within a circle of the uninformed.

    Due to this policy, the print media is free today but it has sacrificed
    its influence in return. National papers have regressed to becoming
    regional ones due to their limited circulation, mostly being sold
    in the capital. Regional papers, in turn, have become community
    papers. People's worldview has been restricted to the confines of
    the community and neighbourhood.

    You can't retain the media by spending 300-500,000 AMD annually,
    even though the majority receiving subsidies state that they survive
    because of the financial assistance. They just don't want to lose
    that assistance. The assistance allocated by the government works out
    to just one month's expenses for those papers. Most of them confess
    that they have no readers and that they distribute the papers and
    magazines for free. They have no sales or subscribers, except in
    cases when they force pensioners to buy papers with their pensions
    or when they are able to force a few community leaders to buy them.

    "To maintain papers in the regions, an administrative method is
    applied. There's no other way possible. In other words, the regional
    governor must contact the village mayor and say that he or she must
    subscribe to such and such a paper; for example 5-10 copies. If a paper
    has 5-6 subscribers in each village it can survive. But there are 6
    papers. Which one should a regional governor put in a good word for?"

    The above is a portion of an interview given to Hetq two years ago
    by Kanteghn Aragatzi Editor Artavazd Nazaryan (April 23, 2010). What
    issues can a newspaper, kept afloat by administrative methods and sold
    via the intercession of a regional governor, raise in its pages without
    meeting with the disapproval of said regional governor. In fact, given
    such self-censored content, can such papers and magazines be in demand?

    Given this manner of publishing the print media, we are also, perhaps,
    unique in the world - a subsidized press is published so that it can
    be distributed free of charge. There are well-known foreign papers
    that are distributed free of charge. They are unique to countries
    with a strong economy. They attract a great amount of advertising
    and their sales revenues aren't all that decisive. But what issues
    can be resolved with papers that are published a few times a year or
    quarterly magazines. What is their social-political significance? It's
    incomprehensible.

    Many news outlets included in the government subsidy list are one
    man/woman operations. The editor is also the reporter, proof reader,
    and computer operator and delivery person. There are newspapers that
    have no office or are family operations. (I won't call them businesses
    because a paper that costs 135 AMD to produce has been selling at
    100 AMD for the past 18 years). These are produced in someone's home,
    like lavash or some other household item. Here, we should the words of
    one of our talented reporters Valerie Aydinyan - "Beer bottle labels
    are also printed in the millions, but it isn't the press"

    A newspaper is the creation of collective work, where each contributes
    his/her small part. The editorial office is a defined environment
    which, especially in the regions, must bring together a certain
    intellectual and political potential. An editor and the staff must
    enjoy a respect and gravitas in the public sphere so that citizens
    can entrust them with their problems and concerns.

    The situation of many papers today reminds one of the private
    commercial banks of 15 years ago in which there were those with
    permission to expand the activities of the bank; those for whom the
    "bank" was their hand bag. The banker would meet with clients in a
    park somewhere, jot down numbers on a slip of paper about the thousands
    of dollars the client had deposited, and leave. The citizens, who had
    just entrusted the bank with thousands of dollars, wouldn't ask about
    the bank's capital reserves or if the deposit was insured. Later,
    when the bank "went under", thousands of scammed depositors would
    create a civic movement of "defrauded depositors".

    They would protest but get back nothing financially.

    In these days of crisis for the print media, when the print runs of
    the most influential and widely read papers are being cut, must we
    prolong the lives of papers, whose links with readers have long been
    cut, by providing artificial intravenous nourishment? Must government
    assistance to the press be restricted to such a method?

    In each province of Armenia, in each sector, there are 5-6 media that
    are being subsidized. Based on the amount of the allocated amount,
    500,000 AMD annually, we can state that this isn't being done to make
    information accessible to the populace.

    Most of these papers play no role in public life. They have no editors
    or editorial staff and residents have long forgotten about their
    existence. It's worthwhile to develop the regional media but based
    on a well drafted set of standards in order to at least transform
    one into a truly regional paper and not solely on a community level.

    Naturally, nothing can be accomplished with the paltry amounts now
    being allocated.

    In Europe they wanted to preserve the impact of the media through
    subsidies, given that their newspapers play a role in social and
    political life and they assisted with the business plans of established
    papers in order not to decrease the role of the media.

    In Armenia, there are only two factors necessary for government
    subsidies - that a paper be published once a month and that it print
    at least 500 copies.

    Such a policy is wasteful and pointless.

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