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(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen,
Greater Georgetown, Guyana) Last week Thursday,
Adrian Augier, co-Chair of the Caribbean Community
(CARICOM) Regional Task Force on Cultural
Industries, told a meeting of youth, culture and
sport ministers that the Caribbean Region had failed
to maximise its advantage in the creative cultural
industries and as such had forfeited significant
potential revenue which could be derived from their
top-earning artists and entrepreneurs.
Mr Augier said the urgent
response to this was the creation of an “enabling
enlightened, informed policy environment that was
consistently accessible to practitioners and
investors at national and regional levels.” This
environment, he said, was an imperative for the
cultural industries in CARICOM to thrive and
flourish.
The Saint Lucian born Poet and
Economist was delivering the feature address at the
opening ceremony of the 22nd Meeting of the Council
for Human and Social Development (COHSOD 22) in
Georgetown, Guyana, where he and his co-Chair,
Jamaica’s Culture guru Sydney Bartley presented on
behalf of their 20-memebr Task Force, the draft
Regional Development Strategy and Action Plan for
the Cultural Industries in CARICOM. This
comprehensive strategy has charted clear directions
for the Caribbean Community in harnessing the
potential of its Caribbean Cultural Industries.
Pointing to what he described as
the top ten priorities in the Strategy, Augier
presented compelling evidence to illustrate that
cultural and creative industries are currently among
the most dynamic sectors in world trade:
In 2008, the world financial
crisis precipitated a fall in global demand and a
contraction of 12 percent in international trade.
Despite this however, world exports of creative
goods and services continued to grow, reaching $593
billion in 2008; more than double their 2002 level,
realizing an annualized growth rate of 14% over six
consecutive years: This, according to the Creative
Economy Report (2010) by UNCTAD and UNESCO.
These statistics bear serious
consideration: Artists such as the late Bob Marley,
Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson and Selena have
increased in popularity and continue to generate
taxable income streams for individuals and
businesses involved in the management and commercial
exploitation of their multi-million dollar legacies.
Earnings from the creative
industries sector demonstrate significant resilience
to natural disasters, economic downturns, and in the
case of Buju Banton, even incarceration. Indeed, a
small initial investment in intellectual property -
be it digital image, lyrics, choreography or product
design - can produce an enduring revenue stream
without further continuous investment.
With this in mind, Augier
expressed concern that “in the absence of an
enabling environment, many Caribbean artists either
reside abroad, or have the major supporting elements
of the value chain of their businesses, based
outside our region.”
Augier stated that with the value
chain residing out of the Region, artistes such as
Rihanna, who is a billion dollar business, with
10-15,000 persons earning from her talent, had all
her “back-end support” including artist management,
administration, accounting, legal, marketing and
promotion, image and catalogue management, provided
by persons and companies based outside the region.
“Put plainly, the Government of
Barbados earns relatively little in taxes and other
revenue, from their number one global export,”
Augier asserted.
He noted that Rihanna was not
registered with the Barbados Copyright Society of
Composers Authors and Publishers (COSCOP), and that
neither Sean Paul, nor Beenie Man nor Shaggy was
registered with the Jamaican equivalent – Jamaican
Association of Composers Authors and Publishers (JACAP).
They were members of the US-based American Society
of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) or the
British equivalent, BMI.
According to Augier, the Region
could only benefit from the “lucrative value chain
that is available” only if it developed the relevant
infrastructure –particularly the Intellectual
Property (IP) Legislation - to support major
regional artists such as Machel, Junior Gong and
Anya Achong-Chee who recently won the highly visible
Project Runway Competition, and who should not have
to reside in New York to be commercially and
financially viable.
He added that the Region needed
to invest in our artists by creating the necessary
institutions, incentives and educational environment
to develop the right expertise. “We must not miss
this proverbial boat,” he concluded.
COHSOD 22, which focused on Youth
Culture and Sports, endorsed the draft Regional
Development Strategy and Action Plan for the
Cultural Industries in CARICOM and approved in
principle, the strategic directions presented,
conceding that there was a need to explore various
mechanisms to establish a public / private sector
fund for cultural industries. They further requested
the Council for Trade and Economic Development
(COTED) and the Council for Finance and Planning (COFAP)
to examine proposals to set up this financing
mechanism.
CONTACT:
caricom@piu.org
caricompublicinfo@gmail.com
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