This essay discusses the merits of public intervention in the provision of television broadcasting services. I argue that intervention was justified in the past, when there were just a few channels and when advertising was the sole source of commercial funds. However, the advent of subscription television overcomes many of the market failures that once existed. Moreover, asymmetric treatment of broadcasters acts to distort the incentives of commercial broadcasters. Finally, viewers have an increasing ability to avoid unappealing, but perhaps socially desirable, content, which further weakens the case for public intervention in the market
This article examines the status of public service broadcasting in the European Union, focusing on t...
Can public service broadcasting under the pressure of the market approach be saved for development a...
The BBC has been financed by a hypothecated tax levied on television sets since 1946. For most of th...
The television broadcasting industry is subject to an exceptionally high level of public interventio...
Public service broadcasters face a severe dilemma. The neoliberals' aim is to weaken the public serv...
This article is a defense of the concept of public service broadcasting and a polemic against its cr...
This paper studies the market provision of a specific type of public good: radio and television broa...
Abstract This paper presents a theory of the market provision of broadcasting and uses it to address...
The media landscape is subject to substantial technological change. In this Discussion Paper we anal...
The media landscape is subject to substantial technological change. In this Discussion Paper we anal...
Few will deny that public service broadcasting, broadcasting that is controlled neither by the state...
The reversal of the FCC\u27s laissez-faire approach to broadcasters could be caricatured as a resurg...
Public service broadcasting and its commercial alternatives – most notably the corporate media syste...
This paper offers a preliminary exploration of some of the ways the Internet is changing free-to-air...
Throughout the world, the future of public service broadcasting is in doubt. Partly this is a crisis...
This article examines the status of public service broadcasting in the European Union, focusing on t...
Can public service broadcasting under the pressure of the market approach be saved for development a...
The BBC has been financed by a hypothecated tax levied on television sets since 1946. For most of th...
The television broadcasting industry is subject to an exceptionally high level of public interventio...
Public service broadcasters face a severe dilemma. The neoliberals' aim is to weaken the public serv...
This article is a defense of the concept of public service broadcasting and a polemic against its cr...
This paper studies the market provision of a specific type of public good: radio and television broa...
Abstract This paper presents a theory of the market provision of broadcasting and uses it to address...
The media landscape is subject to substantial technological change. In this Discussion Paper we anal...
The media landscape is subject to substantial technological change. In this Discussion Paper we anal...
Few will deny that public service broadcasting, broadcasting that is controlled neither by the state...
The reversal of the FCC\u27s laissez-faire approach to broadcasters could be caricatured as a resurg...
Public service broadcasting and its commercial alternatives – most notably the corporate media syste...
This paper offers a preliminary exploration of some of the ways the Internet is changing free-to-air...
Throughout the world, the future of public service broadcasting is in doubt. Partly this is a crisis...
This article examines the status of public service broadcasting in the European Union, focusing on t...
Can public service broadcasting under the pressure of the market approach be saved for development a...
The BBC has been financed by a hypothecated tax levied on television sets since 1946. For most of th...