Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- PART I Introduction
- PART II International regulation of telecommunications services
- PART III International regulation of audio-visual services
- 7 Audio-visual policy: the stumbling block of trade liberalisation
- 8 Content regulation in the audio-visual sector and the WTO
- 9 International regulation of audio-visual services: networks, allocation of scarce resources and terminal equipment
- 10 Lack of clear regulatory framework on safeguards, government procurement and subsidies
- PART IV Towards convergence?
- Index
7 - Audio-visual policy: the stumbling block of trade liberalisation
from PART III - International regulation of audio-visual services
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- PART I Introduction
- PART II International regulation of telecommunications services
- PART III International regulation of audio-visual services
- 7 Audio-visual policy: the stumbling block of trade liberalisation
- 8 Content regulation in the audio-visual sector and the WTO
- 9 International regulation of audio-visual services: networks, allocation of scarce resources and terminal equipment
- 10 Lack of clear regulatory framework on safeguards, government procurement and subsidies
- PART IV Towards convergence?
- Index
Summary
A historical perspective
Observers of recent developments in international trade law may remember that audio-visual media was a hot issue at the end of the Uruguay Round in 1993. There was a dispute dividing two groups of countries. The first group was made up of governments conceiving audio-visual media as entertainment products, which do not differ from any other products. They wanted audio-visual media to be subject to the rules of trade liberalisation in the services sector. The second group consisted of countries conceiving audio-visual media as cultural products, i.e. as vectors of the fundamental values and ideas of a society. The slogan of this second group was the notorious ‘cultural exception’. The whole debate had the structure of an all-or-nothing issue and provoked highly emotional reactions in the media. The general impression was that of a wide gap dividing two completely different ways of conceiving audio-visual media without much hope for bridging it. In the very last moment of the negotiations, however, it was possible to find a compromise: while it was decided that audio-visual services are covered by the GATS, Members agreed on a flexible method of liberalisation allowing each country to refrain from making any specific commitments on market access and national treatment in relation to audio-visual services and to put measures related to film and television programmes on a list of exceptions to the general obligation of most-favoured nation treatment.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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