Last year the Australian Bureau of Statistics did the maths – government spends about A$7 billion annually in Australia on arts and culture. The exact dollar figure varies depending on what we count, but it includes heritage, broadcasting and botanical gardens, along with all the usual suspects: performing arts, literature, film, visual arts, and so on. For the sake of argument, let’s assume A$7 billion is exactly the right amount of public funding for the arts. To make this exercise fun, let’s suppose that no political horse-trading was involved in reaching this figure. Let’s assume this figure is the result of disinterested economic calculation of the size of the positive externality in the production of a public good, all wrapped in wi...
Harsh public budget constraints which reduce the public funding available to cultural operators, are...
In the government’s programme of cuts it has become clear that the arts may well be hit the hardest....
© The Author(s) 2014 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav. Questions arou...
Many successive governments have funded the arts, cultural activities and heritage. Every now and th...
Things to remember if you are a federal minister for the arts: In arts policy, as in the arts, ...
The Great Recession dramatically reframed the debate on funding for the arts from a social one to a ...
This paper seeks to transcend entrenched misunderstandings between economists and arts policymakers,...
This paper proposes, by way of a theoretical model, that public subsidies for the arts act as a spur...
This paper examines the rationales for public funding for the arts that arise out of economic models...
Most OECD countries support the arts with a broad range of tax incentives. The primary incentives pr...
The debate about whether the arts should be supported or not is far from new, and most governments s...
Just as the arts lend constant support to community life, the debate about the appropriate level of ...
The current economic crisis has led to cutbacks in government spending on the arts in virtually all ...
The former director of Britain's National Theatre, Sir Richard Eyre (2005), suggests there is a fund...
In 2012, public debate over the value of art and culture has reignited as conservative state governm...
Harsh public budget constraints which reduce the public funding available to cultural operators, are...
In the government’s programme of cuts it has become clear that the arts may well be hit the hardest....
© The Author(s) 2014 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav. Questions arou...
Many successive governments have funded the arts, cultural activities and heritage. Every now and th...
Things to remember if you are a federal minister for the arts: In arts policy, as in the arts, ...
The Great Recession dramatically reframed the debate on funding for the arts from a social one to a ...
This paper seeks to transcend entrenched misunderstandings between economists and arts policymakers,...
This paper proposes, by way of a theoretical model, that public subsidies for the arts act as a spur...
This paper examines the rationales for public funding for the arts that arise out of economic models...
Most OECD countries support the arts with a broad range of tax incentives. The primary incentives pr...
The debate about whether the arts should be supported or not is far from new, and most governments s...
Just as the arts lend constant support to community life, the debate about the appropriate level of ...
The current economic crisis has led to cutbacks in government spending on the arts in virtually all ...
The former director of Britain's National Theatre, Sir Richard Eyre (2005), suggests there is a fund...
In 2012, public debate over the value of art and culture has reignited as conservative state governm...
Harsh public budget constraints which reduce the public funding available to cultural operators, are...
In the government’s programme of cuts it has become clear that the arts may well be hit the hardest....
© The Author(s) 2014 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav. Questions arou...