:
I have the papers that have been asked for, the translation.
[Translation]
Mr. Chair, I am very pleased to be here today to speak on behalf of the SODRAC. Thank you for inviting me to participate in your review of the Canadian music industry.
A copyright collective society like ours is first and foremost an economic advocacy tool used collectively by authors, composers and publishers. Royalties collected by copyright collective societies in Canada and everywhere else in the world for exercising the rights granted to creators by the various copyright laws are often their sole source of income. It cannot be said too often that these royalties make up their revenue. They represent their sole income.
Representatives of professional music associations whose members are the main beneficiaries of government support programs will no doubt be in a much better position than we are to answer your questions about how well government support objectives have been met. However, the fact that the government has confirmed that its industry support programs will continue is very good news. My remarks today therefore will focus more on the effects of technological changes on the creation, distribution and consumption of music in Canada, as well as their effects on the authors, composers and publishers we represent.
First, here are a few statistics that describe the industry's situation and issues. As you know, more than 10 years ago, the music industry—more specifically the recorded music industry—was the first to be affected by the global digital transition and it suffered the most. Canada was no exception. According to Music Canada statistics, for the period 2001 to 2012, published by the International Federation of the Phonograph Industry, or IFPI, revenue for physical recorded music went from $765 million in 2001 to $217 million in 2012. That decrease represents a cumulative lost revenue of over $3.147 billion.
The digital industry only truly started generating revenue in 2004, and reached $196 million in 2012, with cumulative revenue of $787 million. The Canadian recorded music market therefore suffered a net loss of $2.380 billion from 2001 to 2012. The decrease was similar for the francophone market in Quebec, proportionally speaking, although the decrease in sales began a few years later.
In 2012 Canada ranked 7th on the international recorded music market with a total value of $454 million. That amount broke down as follows: physical recorded music, 48%, digital, 43%, performing rights, 7% and synchronization rights, 2%. Globally, according to the Digital Music Report 2014 that the IFPI has just published, recorded music sales increased by 0.8% in 2013, and digital sales increased by 4.3%, reaching 39% of the industry's overall revenues. In fact, currently digital sales represent more than 50% of sales in only 3 of the 10 largest international markets. In terms of digital sales in 2013, 67% resulted from downloading and 33% represented streaming.
What does the market look like in Canada over the next few years? Statistics tell us that in 2010 the recorded music market reached its lowest level in Canada and that after more than a decade of declining sales its value started to increase. In a study published in 2013, Futuresource Consulting estimated that that increase would continue until 2014 and then fall by 1% to 2% per year until 2017. At that point, digital sales will represent 78% of all sales and physical recorded music will represent 22%. One can see that digital technology has resulted in dramatic changes for the music industry. Consumers now have a multitude of choices in terms of distribution methods, however, in the current market, the sources of royalties that used to provide adequate support for many creators are no longer sufficient.
In terms of new kinds of digital distribution, we now know that downloading will not compensate for the decrease in physical recorded music sales.
We also know that in terms of online distribution methods, the revenue that is generated comes from subscriptions or advertising, which do not constitute sustainable economic models for creators.
The current unprecedented access to musical works provided by digital services and technology is a key factor in the wealth of choices for consumers and the prosperity of intermediaries, made up of hosting providers, Internet access providers, search engines, etc. Yet, even though these intermediaries owe their economic success to the access to works that they provide, the chain of financial benefits does not ensure a fair share for the creators whose royalties continue to decrease. Fair compensation for the exercise of copyright is essential for our culture because it sustains the creative process. This must continue within a digital environment.
We therefore believe that a real balance now has to be struck between creators, digital intermediaries, and consumers. When new measures are taken to foster creation, economic development and the distribution of musical works within a digital environment, it is essential to provide a concrete acknowledgement of the importance of the role and value of creation. In order to do that, creators have to be fully integrated into a sustainable ecosystem where they can continue to be drivers for our culture and our economy, just as they have always done.
Here are some suggestions for strengthening support for creators and entrepreneurs in the Canadian music industry.
The recognition of the value of the creative process and of authors must happen socially through educational measures that will help everyone understand how creators and rights holders are compensated.
In the digital environment, consumers and the general public have greater and greater access and instant access to creative works. We must remind everyone, through repeated information campaigns, that the vitality of our culture depends first and foremost on creators and that access to their works is a privilege that must be sustainable.
It is also important to better understand who profits and how from the value that is generated by access to these works. Specific funding should be set aside for studies that will give us a better understanding of how economic models have evolved and how the value of creative works is shared.
We have to increase the awareness of the various participants in the digital economy who provide Canadian consumers with easy access to musical works so that there is a fairer sharing of the value generated by their activities.
It is important to review regulations dealing with digital services intermediaries in order to ensure that their activities take place under conditions that are comparable to other sectors of the economy.
We need to positively rethink and update the private copying regime under the Copyright Act.
It is also important to create new incentives, tax incentives or other—
:
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today. My name is Victoria Shepherd. I am here on behalf of Connect Music Licensing, which represents over 1,800 rights holder members. Our members own the vast majority of sound recordings and music videos listened to and watched in Canada. Our members include major and independent record companies and many independent artists.
The Copyright Act provides that no one may copy sound recordings or copy and broadcast music videos without the rights holder's permission. These are referred to as exclusive rights. Directly negotiating licences to use each individual sound recording and music video can be complicated and time consuming for both rights holders and music users. For example, if I wish to broadcast a single video on my television station, such as Hedley's Invincible, I need to approach the label to obtain permission and negotiate an appropriate fee. If a broadcaster wishes to broadcast many videos, this process of licensing on a case-by-case basis would place an onerous administrative burden on both rights holders and music users.
Connect Music Licensing was founded 30 years ago, as the AVLA Audio-Video Licensing Agency, as a group of rights holders banding together to help the marketplace to work more efficiently. If a broadcaster wishes to broadcast many music videos, a single licence from Connect Music Licensing grants access to all of the repertoire owned by our members. A single payment and report of use is provided to Connect Music Licensing, and funds are distributed to our members. There's no cost to join. We only deduct the cost of doing business, and our cost is among the lowest in the world.
We think it is vitally important to ensure that rights holders generate revenue from their work. We have identified three areas where we think the government can help: educate the marketplace, provide additional resources to the Copyright Board, and ensure that every government institution that uses music is licensed.
The Government of Canada has created important rights for creators that puts money in the pockets of recording artists and record companies. We need to make sure the marketplace is informed of its obligation in regard to these rights.
MusicWorks in the United Kingdom has conducted studies showing the positive effect of music on branding, sales, and productivity. Some of the findings from their 2012 study include the following: 80% of pubs and bars believe that customers and staff would complain if music was shut off; 86% think music increases the anticipation of the crowd when played before an event; 83% say silence makes a place feel unfriendly and unwelcoming.
The Service Canada website provides helpful information about starting a business. It would seem to be consistent with government objectives to also provide information as it relates to the use of music in businesses in Canada. Noting the positive contribution music can make to business success, Service Canada could provide the information businesses need in order to ensure they are compensating rights holders for that contribution.
The Canada Music Fund offers an opportunity to ensure that rights holders are aware of the various revenue streams associated with their music. One method of doing this would be to introduce, on each application for funding, a section about the various revenue streams available to creators. A component of the application could include the applicant's confirmation of understanding of the various revenue streams available, and confirming either membership in, or anticipated membership in the organizations that can help them access this revenue should the funding application be approved. Even in cases where funding applications are unsuccessful, rights holders will have had the benefit of this information. We must ensure that no rights holder revenue is untapped simply due to a lack of awareness.
In addition to the exclusive rights administered by Connect Music Licensing, the Copyright Act provides that there are also rights that bind the music user to pay for use, but that do not entitle the rights holder to authorize or prohibit use. These are referred to as remunerative rights, such as the right to perform or communicate sound recordings to the public. The Copyright Board is the tribunal that sets rates and terms with respect to remunerative rights.
The Copyright Board provides an invaluable service to rights holders and music users. It ensures payment for use and offers marketplace certainty. However, due to lack of resources, the process is very time consuming. It can take two years for the board to reach a decision for a given licence. This can leave rights holders in a position where they are not receiving compensation for new uses of their music, and it leaves music users without any certainty regarding payment obligations for the use of music.
The Government of Canada has committed itself to the development of an efficient digital marketplace. The Copyright Board of Canada should not be seen as a barrier to business or as an impediment. Rather, it should be considered a business development office. It needs resources to ensure it can render decisions at the pace of technological development. In order to attract new digital services to Canada, it is imperative that these services know what their payment obligations will be.
The Recording Industry Association of America reported that in 2013, streaming revenue contributed 21% to total industry revenue. In Canada that number is under 7%. Imagine if you were an investor who wanted to open a new music service in Canada but were told you would not know your costs for two years. A well-resourced efficient Copyright Board will help attract new digital businesses to Canada.
The third way the government can help is to ensure that any government institution that uses music is licensed. This example will reiterate the importance of licensing music use to music users. Connect Music Licensing would be delighted to work with you to facilitate this.
We believe marketplace education will generate increased revenue for rights holders and help music users comply with their legal obligations. Allocating additional resources at the Copyright Board will permit it to function effectively as a business development office, attracting new revenue for rights holders. Ensuring all music uses are licensed in government institutions will serve as a benchmark to other music users.
Thank you.
:
Good morning to everyone.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members.
I am the director of ACTRA's Performers' Rights Society and its division, the ACTRA Recording Artists' Collecting Society, or what we call RACS for short.
I want to thank the committee for inviting us to participate in these important discussions. l'm pleased that we were able to bring with us one of Canada's most celebrated recording artists, Dave Faber, of the band Faber Drive. Dave will be speaking about some of the realities of working in Canada as a professional recording artist.
First, I want to give you some background and perspective on what RACS does. RACS collects and distributes public performance and private copying royalties to recording artists who have earned that money. We represent over 3,500 recording artists domestically and thousands of others throughout the world through reciprocal agreements with other collective management organizations like RACS.
Since 1998, RACS has distributed over $35 million to recording artists, which represents a significant income stream for thousands of Canadian musicians. It's important to note that our presentation and comments today are supported by the Canadian Federation of Musicians and its 15,000 members.
Despite the various statures of our artists, our members share the common circumstance of being dependent on a number of different copyright royalty streams to make a living from their art. The overwhelming majority of people we represent are small business owners who don't live on a single paycheque from a single employer, but who instead rely on exploiting their copyrights for royalties domestically and abroad, which in many cases are the cornerstones of building their professional careers.
We are concerned about recent changes to the Copyright Act that have served in many cases to weaken those rights, and consequently, the Canadian music industry. As this committee studies the Canadian music industry, we'd like you to consider a couple of major issues that impact our members' ability to earn a sustainable income and thus their ability to make and distribute Canadian music.
The first is the harm that has come to performers from Canada's failure to modernize its private copying regime. The second issue, which my friend Dave will talk to you about, is the income volatility performers experience from year to year in their careers.
The private copying levy has long served as an effective balanced mechanism supporting the Canadian music industry. On the one hand, consumers are able to make copies for personal use, and on the other hand, creators are fairly compensated for those private copies.
Ten years ago, $35.6 million per year was available for distribution to rights holders in the Canadian music industry for the private copying of their works onto blank CDs. Today that amount has dropped to significantly less than $10 million per year, as the nature of private copying has shifted away from increasingly obsolete audio recording media to digital audio recorders.
It is not fair that the artists who have created the recorded music are not compensated for the use of their music on these devices. We note that the Canadian government's decision to not extend the private copying levy to digital audio recorders runs counter to the direction of one of Canada's largest trading partners and the position they have taken with respect to their music industries.
Just last month the European Parliament adopted a resolution on the preservation of private copying levies in the European Union. The main principles upon which the resolution was passed by the European Parliament are worth reading and are referenced in the document that was circulated to the committee clerk this morning. I would note that at the heart of the resolution and its plan for action is a fundamental understanding of the harm that would result to their music industries if private copying levies were simply abandoned in Europe. We're afraid that such simple abandonment is exactly what has recently occurred in Canada. We believe the ill effects of this decision will continue to unfold in the coming years.
Accordingly, we encourage the Canadian government and all parties to revisit how the private copying regime may be modernized to reflect the way in which consumers currently make digital private copies. Our European trading partner is taking a leadership role in looking for solutions, and so should we. We strongly recommend that the Canadian government modernize the private copying part of the Copyright Act as part of its next section 92 review.
At this point, I'm going to turn it over to Dave for some perspective on the impact on recording artists. By way of introduction, Dave's band, Faber Drive, has had two gold and two platinum singles. They're the recipients of a SOCAN number one song award and a Canadian Radio Music Award, and were nominated for a Juno for best new group. They're currently signed to 604 Records, owned by Chad Kroeger of Nickelback fame. Dave is one of Canada's most successful recording artists.
Like other self-employed people working in Canada's cultural industries, recording artists like me tend to experience sharp swings in our annual income. Our earnings spike when we release an album and tour in support of it, but between recording projects, revenue drops significantly. Unlike people who are employees, as self-employed people we don't have access to many of the supports, such as employment insurance, that other Canadians can count on to help them make it through the transition between jobs.
My band has worked hard and has been blessed by God to see some success, but it's been a tough road to get here. The reality is that even today, like many career musicians, I have to pick up other work to pay the bills. When we first started out, I quit my day job to focus on this opportunity, but that meant going to the food bank and borrowing money from friends and family, which is not uncommon for many musicians trying to make it in a competitive and demanding industry.
That was when we started eight years ago. Fast-forward to today and three albums later, and I still receive support from family to allow me the ability to be a professional musician in this country. Now with a family to support, including a beautiful wife and four amazing children, I have a job pouring concrete to keep us going while working on our fourth album. As well, two of my three band members are working full-time day jobs too, which in turn means that our next album will take a lot longer than expected to get finished.
Our profession is really not that different from any other profession. It takes years of practice, dedication, and risk to make music.
I'm not alone. I've seen countless bands come and go over the years because they just didn't have proper support. I have many friends currently on radio here in Canada who depend on RACS cheques and every single revenue stream to pay the basics such as rent, gas, and food.
Receiving fair compensation for the use of our work is essential. The royalty cheques we receive from RACS help to pay basic bills, knowing that when your song is played on the radio there will be a small payment back to the artist. Like I just said, those little payments are often the difference that help to pay rent, buy food, and get gas.
But there is more that could be done. Right now artists have to pay high marginal tax rates for one-off successful years. To address this issue, ACTRA RACS and other creator organizations have asked the government to support the reintroduction of income averaging for artists under Canadian tax law. Under such a tax measure, the performer's fluctuating earnings are averaged over a period of years to permit a preferential taxation rate in an occasional year where income is higher.
Several European Union countries, including the United Kingdom, have introduced this approach. It works. It smooths out those income peaks and valleys. In so doing it lends a measure of tax predictability to performers' creative endeavours, which in turn makes it easier for our cultural industries to thrive and for our overall economy to benefit.
RACS also supports the creation of a federal tax exemption on the first $10,000 of royalty income that performers earn on their artistic work. Such an exemption would be in keeping with the royalty income deduction that Quebec has had in place since 1995.
:
I think Brad spoke in detail a little bit more about the private copying that we're involved in. Brad and I are both on the Copyright Board as members of the board.
As I mentioned, private copying is one issue that is really being looked at in Europe, not being weakened but being stronger for the Europeans that we work with, and the value of the private copying for the creators, performers, songwriters, and record labels as well, because it brings money directly into the hands of those who have created the works. That part is very important. That's the first thing about Bill .
The second thing is the law has to pass, obviously, the one that came into force in 2012. It's sad that in the last 15 years we had minority governments and all that and it didn't go. I has to pass. Is it 100% good? No. But the problem that we're facing right now with Bill is the fact that we're facing a lot of cases in front of the court in the next coming years. I'm involved in two or three of the decisions of the Copyright Board. We will have to go in front of the Supreme Court as well because new concepts are coming with Bill , and we will face that obviously.
Some of the exemptions that were brought up in Bill did not facilitate our work. Especially with the broadcasters, it brought out a situation where the revenues can decrease in the future. This is something we have to face. In the next five years it's supposed to be reviewed. I hope the decision will be there and that the target will be looked at within those next five years. I think we will have to adjust a lot of things. Especially, as I said, we have to put back in the equation the value of the music and have an équilibre with the revenues that are coming from the...in the pockets of the performers and the creators. That's mainly the problem we have right now.
I have 6,000 members who are creators and who are publishers and they have exactly the same thing. The first question I ask them is whether they are living off their music. There aren't that many people living off their music nowadays. Back then they could live because their market was larger. As I explained, the problem is with the development of technology. We can't go in the past. We have to go in the future, except that the revenues that are coming from new services, the business model that is related to creators—and when I say “creators”, it's all of us—even though there will be more income coming from digital in the future with streaming services and all that, the level of revenue that will end up in the pockets of the songwriters or the performers is not high enough in that kind of business model.
My colleague is correct in saying that this is a subject we care deeply about, particularly in my case. I would like to thank all four of you for being here today.
Mr. Faber, I have certainly taken note of your message about income averaging. This is a measure we have always supported. It seems like a very practical approach for dealing with artists' revenues, which are not so much annual as cyclical in nature. Such a measure would certainly ease their circumstances.
The witnesses' perspectives are always quite relevant, for those of us seeking to better understand the various issues with which an industry has to deal, but I must tell you, Mr. Faber, that yours seems particularly so. Your career was marked by major success in 2008 and 2009. You were hit full-force by a changing business model which literally pillaged your sales after that.
You said that your group's members have full-time jobs; that's fantastic. We have among us an artist who is part of our heritage and yet must supplement his income. Given that you are the main author of your own works, you have had access to more revenues, but your musicians have to work full-time.
We discussed all kinds of issues with respect to the recording industry, but someone here is obviously afflicted with the creators' malaise and can no longer survive by creating. This is a clear example and we must discuss it.
Mr. Lauzon, you are a member of the Copyright Board. In fact, you are not a member, but of course you deal with them. My question is for all of you. What recommendations do you feel should go into our report?
Well, I think in terms of educating the marketplace, on the two initial solutions proposed while I was speaking this morning, I don't think they're incredibly costly in terms of making sure there's space on a website: Service Canada, how do I start my business? Here are all the forms you need to fill out, here are the taxes you need to pay, and then here's a section on entertainment in your venue.
Similarly, on the Canada Music Fund, when interested parties are applying for money and they want to have money to create music, let's have a section for them saying that once they've created their music, they can make money from it that's not just from sales and touring, and tell them about all the rights. Again, that's an information piece which I'm certain rights holders and Connect Music Licensing would be delighted to facilitate and work with the government on.
I don't have an answer for funding of additional resources at the Copyright Board, but I strongly feel that if we can enhance its presence as a business development office, then new revenue coming in would possibly create a bucket that would help pay for those resources.
The third piece, the notion of licensing in institutions, that is an offshoot of education and facilitation, and Connect Music Licensing is here for you if you want that assistance.
:
We're going to call this meeting back to order.
First of all, we are having a little bit of difficulty with the translation, but it is all there. The English and the French are being swapped at certain times. If you find that the audio is in the language you don't want it to be in, just try to flip over. We're trying to fix this right now. We are being broadcast in both French and English, but it may not be on the correct channel.
We now are going to move to our second panel.
We have with us today, from the Association québécoise de l'industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo, Solange Drouin, the vice-president of public affairs and executive director.
From the Canadian Independent Music Association, we have Stuart Johnston, the president, and Shauna de Cartier, the chair.
By video conference from Vancouver, British Columbia, from Music BC Industry Association, we have Robert D'Eith.
We are going to start with Ms. Drouin. You have eight minutes.
[Translation]
My name is Solange Drouin and I am the Vice-President of Public Affairs and the Executive Director of ADISQ.
First of all, I would like to thank you for having invited us to participate in the review that you have begun of the Canadian music industry, including its funding.
To begin, I'd like to say a few words about our association. ADISQ is a professional association that represents disk, performance and video producers working mainly in Canada's French-language market.
Our association is over 35 years old, and we are active in every field that involves our members' interests: workforce training, labour relations, funding businesses, broadcasting and telecommunications, as well as collective promotion.
To truly understand the reality of both Canadian markets, francophone and anglophone, let us briefly review the organization of this sector at an international level.
Throughout the world, three companies share 80% of the market. These companies, you already know. They are Warner, Universal and Sony. The other 20% of the world's market is shared by a multitude of small, independent businesses whose proportion and weight in a given market vary significantly from one country to the next.
[Translation]
My name is Solange Drouin and I am the Vice-President of Public Affairs and the Executive Director of ADISQ.
First of all, I would like to thank you for having invited us to participate in the review that you have begun of the Canadian music industry, including its funding.
To begin, I'd like to say a few words about our association. ADISQ is a professional association that represents disk, performance and video producers working mainly in Canada's French language market.
Our association is over 35 years old, and we are active in every field that involves our members' interests: workforce training, labour relations, funding businesses, broadcasting and telecommunications, as well as collective promotion.
To truly understand the reality of both Canadian markets, francophone and anglophone, let us briefly review the organization of this sector at an international level.
Throughout the world, three companies share 80% of the market. These companies, you already know. They are Warner, Universal and Sony. The other 20% of the world's market is shared by a multitude of small, independent businesses whose proportion and weight in a given market vary significantly from one country to the next.
There exists a significant distinction between the practices of these three large groups and those of independent companies. The majors focus their efforts on developing the career of a limited number of artists to cover as large a market as possible. For their part, the independents, represented by the CIMA and the ADISQ, focus mostly on developing the careers of local artists, first and foremost for local markets.
In Canada, this logic of development is used, with a very important nuance for Quebec. In 2011, when the majors were putting out only 13% of Canadian artists' albums, the independents, represented by the CIMA and the ADISQ, were responsible for putting out 87% of our artists' albums.
However, the majors grabbed about 70% of the Canadian industry's total revenue, mostly through the distribution of international artists. This means that distribution activities done by the majors for international artists are very important, which often leaves very little room for local artists on their own markets.
In the Canadian francophone market, the situation is not the same. The number of local artists associated with the majors is minimal, even trivial. Independent companies are responsible for more than 95% of local artists' albums, and those artists represent, in both good years and bad, between 40% and 50% of total sales in Quebec.
That being said, even though the market share results are very different for the Canadian anglophone and francophone markets, it is clear that those who are largely responsible for developing the careers of local artists are the independents, which we represent, and not multinational corporations.
I would therefore warn you about those who claim to represent the Canadian music sector as a whole, when the majority of their revenues come from distributing international artists.
When it comes to public funding of the Canada music sector, what does this all mean? The Canadian government's goal in terms of public funding of music is, and always has been, to ensure that the Canadian public has access to a sustainable reservoir of music from here, while promoting those who are largely responsible for these productions, which are businesses and Canadian artists. This funding has increased over the years, and is now at $25 million.
Furthermore, in the last federal budget, this entire amount was made permanent, and we were very pleased by that. This amount has been managed by a limited number of administrators, namely Musicaction, FACTOR and Canadian Heritage. These organizations and this department's programs have reached an admirable degree of maturity, developed with a logical theory of intervention that meets the needs expressed by the Canadian music scene.
That being said, does public funding meet all of the industry's needs? Of course not. However, at its current level, it still plays, though not as easily, its role as an essential lever to maintain a certain degree of national musical content production, resulting in an adequate level of outreach. But how long will this last?
I am sure you know that the music industry has undergone significant changes since the rapid development of digital technologies. I could mention—and I am sure you have heard of this—the dramatic drop in the number of disk sales. All of the markets in the world have seen drops of between 30% to 60%. In some cases, digital sales have mitigated the reduction, but they have not slowed it down.
In Quebec, for example—this is an important figure—while we sold 13 million albums in 2005, we sold only 6 million in 2013. However, that is not the only major change affecting our industry.
In a report published last week, the International Federation of Phonographic Industry, or IFPI, was very clear. Our industry is clearly headed toward a future where music is consumed through online music services that provide access to a very large music repertoire. These include services such as DEEZER, Spotify, rdio, Beatsmusic and Google play.
According to the IFPI, such services are currently providing the public with access to 38 million songs. This new reality is completely transforming the amount and type of income that all of the partners in the musical content creation process can receive. While selling a CD generates a certain number of dollars that can be divided between the partners, legal online music services generate a multitude of micro-incomes for every song transaction. This leads us to a paradox which is difficult to explain.
While music has never before been so widely available and consumed, the income it generates for content and production partners has never been so low. Of course, there is income and it is significant. However, it is other players outside of the music world who are able to seize and keep that income. It is strange to think that an important sector of our economy is largely using a product, in this case music, to sell its own service—I could mention Google or an Internet service provider—without compensating the owners of the product it is using to sell its service.
For example, could you imagine, in the agricultural world, if the wheat producers were not compensated because the distributors argued that they were making the wheat accessible to the public and that they had to support their distribution network? That would be unthinkable.
The Canadian government and some of its agencies have several tools at their disposal which they could use to correct this imbalance in the music industry. For example, they have skills in copyright law, broadcasting regulation, international taxation, funding, and so on. The longer the Canadian government waits to use these tools, the more it will become necessary to invest public money in the Canadian music industry to ensure that Canadians have access to their music.
In my opinion, it would be unfair for the government to place a larger burden on the shoulders of Canadian taxpayers to help our industry develop, when it would be possible instead to make the main consumers of our music, who in many cases are foreign companies, contribute.
This is why we are asking the committee to pay particular attention to identifying priorities and actions that can be taken quickly vis à vis these large music users. This will promote long-term access to our music, with all its richness and diversity, for the Canadian public.
:
Good afternoon. I am president of the Canadian Independent Music Association. Joining me today is Shauna de Cartier, owner of Toronto-based record label and management company, Six Shooter Records, and the current chair of my organization's board of directors.
Thank you very much for the opportunity to speak to you today.
Each and every one of you plays an important role in the success of the Canadian music industry, and for that we sincerely thank you. We would be remiss if we did not also thank the federal government for not only renewing the Canada Music Fund but also renewing it essentially in perpetuity. It certainly sends a strong signal to the business community that such support will be there for the years to come, a particularly important point considering the three- to five-year planning window of our music companies.
It is important to understand that the Canadian music industry is not homogenous. It is a community of Canadian-owned small businesses, half of which are sole proprietors, in which the top 10% earn more than $500,000 annually. These are the entrepreneurs and artists who work hard every day earning a living doing what they are passionate about.
My organization is the not-for-profit national trade organization representing the English language Canadian-owned sector of the independent music industry, whose primary mandate is advocating for, supporting, and promoting the business of music, both domestically and around the world. We have over 220 members located in every province plus one territory. Together, our members directly employ almost 2,200 people and collectively represent more than 5,100 artists. CIMA's membership is involved in every aspect of the music and music-related industries, including record labels, producers, managers, and others professionally involved in the sound recording and music video industries.
In the aggregate, the domestic English language music sector truly punches above its weight, annually contributing at least $303 million to Canada's GDP and employing more than 13,000 people. An important economic indicator for any industry is the measure of its intensity ratio, or how much of its economic activity sticks to the Canadian economy. According to CIMA's research, for every $10 million of revenues earned the independent industry adds $8.2 million to the Canadian economy, an 82% return.
From a tax perspective alone, Canada's federal and provincial governments annually receive a healthy rate of return from the Canadian-owned music sector. In 2011, English language independents paid $93.2 million in taxes to the provincial and federal governments. On average, for every dollar of public support it received through programs like the Canada Music Fund the music industry generated $1.22 in taxes across Canada to the net benefit of our governments.
:
All right, no problem. Thanks.
However, our industry is not without its challenges. As small businesses that discover and develop Canadian artists, create and commercialize music, access to capital is our number one issue. Banks by and large do not lend money to the music industry. Our product is intellectual property. Our songs are ephemeral. That is why governments are important partners. You provide some of the seed capital that enables commercial success, economic benefits, and job creation in our industry.
Competition, both global and domestic, is an ongoing challenge. For example, as Solange mentioned, the multinational major record labels, Sony, Warner, Universal, are both our strong business partners as well as our competition. How can they be both? About 85% of the independents such as Shauna's company are distributed in Canada by one of the majors, or have marketing and promotion agreements with them. In many ways it is a symbiotic relationship and it works very well for all parties.
On a broader level, though, our small businesses still struggle for market share and shelf space, be it physical or digital, in the marketplace. For example, Universal, since its acquisition of Britain's EMI label, owns close to half of the overall market. Last year, over 76% of all album sales in Canada were by major label international artists like Beyoncé and Lady Gaga. Canadian artists owned 23% of the domestic market last year, over 14% of which was sold by independent artists in both English and French markets. The upside is that 60% of all Canadian artists' sales in Canada were from artists signed to CIMA's or ADISQ's members. Forty per cent of Canadian sales were by artists signed to the major labels.
Still, it is a struggle for individual Canadian companies like Shauna's to compete one on one with the relatively deep pockets and international marketing heft of the major labels. This is why continued support for production, marketing and promotion is so important to our domestic companies.
Technological changes over the past decade have significantly impacted the industry. While digital piracy and file sharing were rampant for most of the past decade, technology has also influenced consumer behaviour. Whereas before it was an album market, now consumers purchase singles or they stream music, which is otherwise known as renting music. This has dramatically impacted the revenue model of the industry. Unit sales and per unit revenues have dramatically declined. Therefore there is a stronger reliance on diversifying revenues from a multitude of sources, be they public, private, and broadcasting dollars through the CRTC-mandated CCD fund.
Digital technology advancements have both helped and hindered the industry. It has never been easier to record and distribute music globally. Communicating with fans is more direct and interactive. However, while relatively inexpensive on the lower end, professional recording is increasingly more expensive and there is a stratification of production costs. It is increasingly difficult to gain market attention, and it's hard to rise above the noise. Resources in this area are a priority.
Technology alone cannot ensure that an artist's work is heard or discovered. Music is also a global market. Music has no borders, which means we must be anywhere and everywhere to commercialize our music, engage with our fans, and showcase our artists. Therefore, exporting is a key component of our global strategy. Unlike many of Canada's major competitors, Canada does not have a formal music export office. In recent years, CIMA has acted as a de facto export office with the support and partnership of industry partners like ADISQ, Music BC, and other music industry associations. This is an area where government is and should continue to be a key partner as we collectively explore opportunities to commercially exploit foreign markets.
Shauna.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
My name is Bob D'Eith, I'm the executive director of Music BC. I'm also the acting chair of the Canadian Council of Music Industry Associations.
To give you a bit of background, Music BC is a provincial music industry association. We provide advocacy, artist development, music business education programs, networking opportunities, export marketing initiatives, and funding resources. We have 1,000 paid members.
The CCMIA is a group of the provincial and territorial music industry associations that represent about 10,000 artists, labels, publishers, managers, studios, and producers from coast to coast to coast. The mandate of the CCMIA is to act as the national voice of the provincial and territorial music industry associations. The CCMIA membership consists of Music Newfoundland and Labrador, Music Nova Scotia, Music Prince Edward Island, Music NB, Music and Film in Motion Northern Ontario, Manitoba Music, SaskMusic, Alberta Music, Music Yukon, Music NWT, and Music BC. I'll refer to them as the MIAs. Please note that Music Ontario is run by CIMA and is not part of our organization.
That was background.
CCMIA and Music BC would like to thank the Canadian government and the Department of Canadian Heritage for renewing the Canada Music Fund. These funds, forming such private partnerships as FACTOR and Musicaction, have really helped to establish Canada as a leader in the world of music. We certainly deliver more than our fair share of internationally successful artists, and I believe this is to a great extent the result of public support of the music industry in Canada, so thank you.
In particular, the MIAs' memberships have benefited greatly from the Canadian Heritage collective initiative program administered by FACTOR. These programs help the MIAs to support their communities in many ways: education of artists and music industry personnel through career development programming on topics such as online and social media marketing, booking, touring, securing music placements for film and television; developing digital online initiatives such as as our tourhub national venue database; funding export marketing to key markets such as South by Southwest, The Great Escape in the U.K., and BIGSOUND in Australia, to name a few; bringing international buyers in with programs as Showcase PEI, BreakOut West, the ECMAs; developing and supporting music industry partnerships such as the Western Canadian Music Alliance, which produces BreakOut West; and of course, supporting amazing conferences and celebration of Canadian talent such as the Western Canadian Music Awards, ECMAs, CMW, North by Northeast, and many others. These are fantastic programs and essential to the health and vibrancy of the Canadian music industry. We really, really want to thank the Canadian government for continuing to support Canadian music in this way.
Now for the regional perspective, let me give you a bit of background.
Napster of course changed the entire landscape of the industry in 2000. Even though the original Napster is no longer with us, it really led the way to the erosion of the major label control of distribution worldwide. What resulted over the next 10 years was a paradigm shift in the distribution of recorded music globally. Physical sales, the foundation of record label financial stability, fell dramatically throughout the world. Unfortunately, legitimate online downloads such as iTunes did not bring up the gap. The result is a halving of worldwide record sale revenue and a massive downsizing of the major labels.
During the 1970s to the 1990s, record labels recognized that artists needed to be developed over a number of albums, but most major labels in that era often did not expect a return on their investment until the third album released. Today a lot of artists are lucky to get a single, it's so competitive. Artists are generally not signed nowadays without significant development from either themselves or an independent music company.
In Canada, 80% of the independent record labels and all of the major labels are located in Toronto; however, the new and emerging artists are located all over Canada. A concerted effort was made by Music Canada to consolidate and grow the Ontario-based industry. This has resulted in the Ontario government creating a $45 million fund for Ontario-based companies, including the foreign major labels.
This move is unprecedented in Canadian funding history. Luckily, with lobbying from CIMA, the independent sector in Ontario was also able to access that funding.
As it stands right now with annual reports, 59% of FACTOR funding goes to Ontario, and 50% of Radio Starmaker CCD goes to Ontario as well. In English Canada the majority of the music entrepreneurial component funding goes to Ontario companies. As 80% of the companies are in southern Ontario, that makes a bit of sense, but from the regional perspective there seems to be an imbalance.
The music industry has been redefined due to market pressures. As stated earlier, the new and emerging artists, to get the attention of the major labels or labels like Shauna's, often have to develop themselves. This artist development is happening right across the country in small and large communities. Nationally, artists and their teams are creating micro-entrepreneurial ventures to develop their careers. The role of provincial and territorial music industry associations in helping these artists and their teams has grown exponentially over the last 10 years.
While the CCMIA is the first to recognize and praise the amazing work of MEC, FACTOR, and Musicaction and Radio Starmaker, the CCMIA respectfully submits that the changes in the market should lead to more artist development at the grassroots level. We have some models that work. We developed a program in British Columbia called the Peak Performance Project. This marries education, marketing, and promotion, leverages every penny with sponsorship dollars, and also allows us to activate locally. It has been incredibly successful. We have had two Juno award winners, dozens of records released, international tours, and significant radio play.
The point is that the music industry associations provide locally activated artist development. What we would like the Department of Canadian Heritage to consider is that perhaps there needs to be some sort of balancing. In other words, we would like to see, from the music industry association point of view, more money spent in the regions for grassroots artist development.
In closing, I want to reiterate that certainly the music industry associations and the CCMIA completely support the positions of ADISQ and CIMA that were just made. There's absolutely no question that FACTOR, Radio Starmaker, and MEC, all these programs, are absolutely essential. We're just saying that perhaps there could be some balancing.
Thank you very much.
:
Good, that's wonderful. I didn't know that I was able to be heard in both languages.
First of all, I just want to say that I think it's wonderful to have with us a group of people from all over Canada who have shared artistic and cultural interests. I think that's very exciting. I think that we are all learning a lot.
Clearly, this industry is facing particular challenges that are intimately linked to technology. We have to recognize that the music industry is very happy with the amount that they have been able to secure. It's an amount of $25 million. You said several times that that's all the better for the government.
Furthermore, the program managers are doing good work in terms of production and in terms of the basic activities we've been talking about so far. This money and this expertise from the government, all of that matches. I would like to hear you speak about the fact that we will have to change our way of analyzing and we will have to move more quickly in order to deal with theses changes.
Ms. Drouin, you mentioned figures from the IFPI which indicate to what extent we are moving towards a streaming broadcast model. I will give you an example. Yesterday, while I was preparing for today's meeting, I discovered that there was a new Hall and Oates album. I am betraying my age. Hall and Oates were a duo from the 1970s. I listened to the entire album, I didn't pay anything, and it was not illegal. So there's a problem. It's not the fact that it's free. Indeed, if it's free, so much the better for everyone, but an agreement was signed with these streaming broadcasting services. I would like to know if the terms are favourable for you. How is such an agreement signed? We are always hearing and reading that these agreements only allow for a tiny amount of income. Will you be able to renew these agreements? Do you have the support of government policies to do so?
You should at least be paid when people listen to a song. It would be nice if you could also be seen. We would like the artists to be seen. That's why I will let you speak. It's important to hear the perspective of independent companies and not just large companies.
We know that Avril Lavigne comes from Napanee, but promotional tools are definitely developed in the United States, and that is a huge machine. The artists who represent our cultural reality are the artists that the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage should consider.
I would like to hear your opinion on this, Ms. Drouin, Mr. Johnston, Ms. de Cartier and Mr. D'Eith.
:
Yes, for sure. There's an area where it just takes a regulatory change, we believe.
The CRTC right now is undergoing a radio review to determine future policies relating to the broadcasters, the Broadcasting Act, and whatnot.
One of the challenges the CRTC has is enforcing compliance for the broadcasters to pay their required Canadian content development funds. They have to pay half a per cent of their revenues every year into the CCD fund, which goes to the support of the music industry, and up to 6% of the value of a licence whenever they sell that licence, like the Bell-Astral deal.
Compliance is a very big problem. Last year a million dollars was left on the table because in 266 instances last year, CCD money was not paid by the broadcasters in a timely manner.
How does the CRTC enforce this? Our solution, in part, would be to give the CRTC the regulatory authority, if they don't already have it, and there's some question as to whether or not they do, and the ability to impose a late fee. It's not unheard of. The phone companies all charge us late fees. Well, when the phone companies forget to pay their CCD, perhaps a 2% surcharge should be added to what they owe. There's a simple way to change the regulatory authority to provide the incentive for the broadcasters to comply with their obligations.
That's one of the things we'd like to put on the table for consideration.
:
Definitely. Furthermore, the CIMA proposed that in their brief. We supported that measure, but it is aimed at current conventional broadcasters. We absolutely must not forget them, because they are still a very important part of the landscape of music broadcasting. We must never forget that we have not quite transitioned into a new reality. We are still in a traditional world, if I can put it that way. The broadcasters have a significant impact.
There is something else. The CRTC has the power to regulate broadcast services on the Internet. They have chosen not to do so by renewing the exemption for new media. Personally, I do not believe that we absolutely must copy the radio regulations simplistically and apply them to the new music broadcast services. It has to be adapted.
We asked the CRTC, when they were studying the renewal of this exemption, to start to do something. On the Internet, there are several things and people play with combinations. There are so many things to do that that forces people not to do anything at all.
We have to study the Internet for what it is, that is to say many things. There are telecommunications, that is telephone conversations on the Internet, which we must not regulate, of course, because that constitutes freedom of expression. However, there are commercial services on the Internet, as there are music broadcasting services with subscription fees. Why is this beyond our control?
We must review all facets of the Internet and study this issue. We must take a step in the right direction and start regulating certain Internet services. Technologically speaking, it is possible to do so. If we do not do so, it is a political issue.