The government has taken the first step to creating a bailout for its disastrous Bill C-18 by agreeing to News Media Canada demands to increase the support under the Labour Journalism Tax Credit. While the current system covers 25% of the journalist costs up to $55,000 per employee (or $13,750), the...
Bill C-18 is remarkably bad legislation. Figuring out this was the inevitable outcome of the legislation wasn't 4D chess. I don't care enough to track down the discussions on Reddit, but people were saying this right from the beginning: social media won't pay for links it doesn't need, so they'll block them; news media revenues will decline; this will lead to government bailouts for journalists.
I'm not sure I agree the government bailouts are a problem, though... We need journalists for a stable democracy, but citizens aren't willing to pay for news in large enough numbers to fund it. Like all things with public benefit that can't be funded privately, it then should be paid for by government spending.
but citizens aren’t willing to pay for news in large enough numbers to fund it
Because there hasn't been a domestic high quality news source for decades, it's all clickbait and opinions. Even the CBC's homepage is at least 1/3 clickbait titles and misleading thumbnails, CTV's homepage is worse, why would anyone want to pay to be so blatantly manipulated?
For Canadian news I will frequently use foreign news sources like the BBC, they have crappy clickbait articles as well but they have less skin in the game here and seem to put less of a bias on their Canadian reporting.
Government funded news are not inherently unbiased. But hypothetically let's say it is unbiased. The whole reason why a bailout is needed in the first place is because not enough people voluntarily watches these news. Is the next step to ban all other sources of news and make government news the only source of information? That doesn't sound like a great path to venture down to.
No, that's not a great path, but that's also not what's happening here.
The other side of that equation, given that the consumers of news aren't willing or able to fund it, is advertiser supported news, which is also not unbiased, and which has turned out to be an unmitigated disaster.
The public funding a public good, and private, international media companies not benefiting from it, is exactly where this needs to go.
The government’s fall economic statement announced an increase to the Canadian Journalism Tax Credit, a refundable tax credit allowing qualifying news outlets to claim up to 35 per cent of up to $85,000 in salary for a qualified employee.
That’s an increase from the credit’s initial allowance of 25 per cent of up to $55,000 in salary per employee.
Of course, as a news article from a news organization, it has quotes from someone in the business saying the change is good.