Judging by the squealing coming from government ranks, many in the Coalition are all for efficiency when it comes to public broadcasting — but only for everyone else, thanks.
Nationals MPs are seething about cuts to ABC regional radio services, despite the much higher cost per listener of producing regional radio content compared to either networking it from elsewhere or offering national services. The cuts should have fallen preponderantly on Sydney and Melbourne, Nats say — missing the point that that’s exactly what’s happening, especially with the loss of 100 news and current affairs jobs and 40 management jobs.
Reductions in ABC Local Radio services in the bush naturally affect Nationals electorates, but it’s more personal for Nats MPs: the boys, and the occasional girl, from the bush are guided on media policy by how much media coverage they get in their own electorates, and since regional commercial radio licensees have mostly become networks with minimal local content and few local reporters, increasingly the ABC is the only source of local electronic media coverage for Nationals MPs. When they complain about ABC cuts, Nats are as much incensed about the diminishing number of microphones at their press conferences as they are about their constituents.
It was pressure from the Nationals that helped the ABC get the first new money for domestic services it ever got from the Howard government, in 2001, when it received just under $20 million for, primarily, more regional radio services. The government also wanted to reward the ABC board for appointing Jonathan Shier, who was perceived as One Of Us, although Shier, with his Rudd-like genius for alienating people, left six months after that. The extra funding enabled the ABC to expand its Local Radio network to over 50 locations at a time when commercial radio was abandoning the bush in favour of networked programming. One of the stations opened with the Shier funding, Wagin in Western Australia, will now be closed, along with four others. On balance, it’s not a bad outcome for the bush — an extra $19 million a year delivered four more stations, and a cut of $50 million a year, 13 years later, closes five stations.
But while Nationals MPs have a long history of demanding that urban Australians be subjected to the sort of efficiency and economic rigour that they themselves would run a mile from, it’s different when urban Liberals adopt a similar NIMBYism. Take born-again public broadcasting advocate Education Minister Christopher Pyne, representing the electorate of Sturt in South Australia. Pyne is gung-ho for deregulation in the university sector, backed the government’s automotive subsidy cuts, and wasn’t overly fussed when General Motors announced it was closing local operations. “The simple reality,” Pyne said in February, completely accurately, “is that it is very expensive to manufacture motor vehicles in Australia.” Now, however, Pyne is unhappy that the ABC has decided to close its Adelaide production facilities when they are more expensive than larger, centralised production facilities in Sydney and Melbourne.
Who’d have thought a Liberal politician would be more concerned about maintaining subsidised production for ABC staff than for car workers?
What Pyne and the Nationals have in common is an apparent belief in the concept of an efficient national broadcaster. Of course, there can be no such thing — you can either be a genuinely national broadcaster that not merely broadcasts to, but makes content in, every part of the country, or you can be efficient. But while you can efficiently produce local content in a rural radio station, or in a TV studio in Adelaide, it will never be as efficient as producing it in a centralised location where economies of scale and larger workforces are available. The ABC is less efficient than commercial broadcasters, because it produces much more of its content in less economically efficient locations like Wagin, so the best way to make it more efficient is to cut back such content. So ABC managing director Mark Scott’s cuts take the government at its word: it wants a more efficient broadcaster, right? Well, this is how you achieve it.
If Pyne or the Nationals or critics of the ending of state-based programs want production subsidies to keep less efficient ABC services open, the answer is what the Howard government did — fund the ABC to maintain those kinds of services (there’ll be an argument about tied funding, but an accommodation can easily be reached that preserves ABC independence but ensures it delivers what the government has funded). Indeed, there is much to be said for making more explicit the cost of being a genuinely national broadcaster so that voters can see how much is spent providing broadcasting services to rural and regional communities.
What has annoyed News Corporation, of course, is that Scott has declined to target ABC activities in markets where it competes successfully with the Murdoch family’s interests as part of its statutory requirement to provide a comprehensive service. You don’t see the Murdochs running commercially unviable regional radio stations — only a commercially unviable national broadsheet. It’s in digital services that the ABC is the biggest threat to the Murdochs. Thus the froth-mouthed fury in The Australian today about where Scott has chosen to cut. It turns out it’s not merely the Nats and Pyne that had a sense of entitlement about the ABC, the Murdochs did too, and the ABC board has disappointed them. The war, accordingly, will go on.


57 thoughts on “Outbreak of entitlement confuses ABC critics”
Chris Hartwell
November 27, 2014 at 8:18 am@liamj – I didn’t reveal the greatest injustice of where I lived: Namely, we had FIBRE OPTICS laid out throughout the town as part of a case study BUT … Telstra wouldn’t upgrade the exchange to take advantage of it!
Venise Alstergren
December 2, 2014 at 3:04 pmTyger Tyger: I have been involved in bushfires. The last major one being Ash Wednesday where my husband lost his property. Fortunately the cattle saved themselves, everything else was flattened. Several members of the local fire brigade were incinerated on that dreadful day. So I hope I’ve killed off your colossal assumption that everyone who criticises anything is a Marxist-Leninist, latté drinking, Labor government loving, inner city feral.
I admit to stirring the pot when I wrote that comment. But, it is the importance of the regional population I tend to query, not the relevance of the ABC.
Tyger Tyger
December 5, 2014 at 12:37 amVenise, spare me the Hanscombe-like generalisations about people of whom you know nothing. I have no idea where, ‘So I hope I’ve killed off your colossal assumption that everyone who criticises anything is a Marxist-Leninist, latté drinking, Labor government loving, inner city feral…’ came from. Except perhaps from your propensity to engage in verbal whorls and flourishes and generally use ten words where one would suffice. Your comment certainly bears no relevance to anything I said in my post.
For what it’s worth:
I reject teleology outright so you’ve stumbled on a truth by assuming I’m leery of “Marxist-Leninists”. Historical determinism is as nonsensical – and religiously inspired – as Calvinism;
I was an activist squatter in Melbourne’s CBD and inner suburbs in the 1980s. You wanna talk “inner city feral”? I’ll show you the manual if you like – and the scars;
I drink latte for what it’s worth – mine’s a double shot, thanks – though I am politically incorrect enough to not bother with all the hassle of holding the key down and fiddling around with the cursor to ensure the final ‘e’ bears its accent when I write it;
Labor governments? Historically better than LNP governments in my experience, but if you compare the Australia we live in now to the one we might have had had we listened to the sort of arguments Donald Horne was putting forth in “The Lucky Country” back in 1964, you’d have to say they’ve both generally underperformed.
We remain overly dependant on primary production, have eschewed manufacturing and have forever dragged the chain on value-adding so’s our economy is still far too reliant on commodity prices and susceptible when they fall.
Just ask Sloppy Joe – it’s happening again even as we speak.
Now that’s out of the way and we’ve dealt with your tangential rant, the topic at hand.
You say you’ve been involved in bushfires. Tell me, what role did the ABC play during that time? Because my argument is they play a critical role in co-ordinating information and making it available to the public during natural and other disasters. That is my experience as an Electrical Linesman with 20 years’ experience – most of that “in the bush” – who has had to work with Police, Fire and other relevant authorities to expedite restoring power to homes and businesses during many such situations.
How about you engage with that argument, rather than expressing surprise at being splashed, having first chosen to “stir the pot”?
Venise Alstergren
December 5, 2014 at 5:51 pmTYGER TYGER: 1) You accuse me of being wordy!!!; 2) One person’s 20 years can be another person’s 20 weeks. 3) The shortest comment I’ve written, I pass onto you. “Cräp.”
Tyger Tyger
December 5, 2014 at 10:09 pmVenise, it wasn’t the quantity of words to which I was referring, but the amount required to achieve the desired effect. Two different things. I’m guessing I used just the right amount to achieve what I was after.
“One person’s 20 years can be another person’s 20 weeks.”
Huh? Can I have some of what you’re smoking?
As for you getting all huffy: where do you get off? I disagreed with you in a post so you go off on some trollish, Hanscombe-like rant. Then you moan about getting slapped back?!
Grow up.
Meanwhile, you still haven’t answered my question. The ABC, remember?
Venise Alstergren
December 8, 2014 at 9:22 pmI can endure your criticism of my syntax, even your twisting of yr para one. I’m amused by your “Mines better than yours,” rebuttal.
You remember I said I wasn’t questioning the relevance of the ABC, rather questioning the presence of Australia’s Rurals. Socialism for the farmers, no less.
BTW: To accuse me of verbosity when my Tweets are pungent one liners shows your lack of research; not mine.
Likening me to Norman Hanscombe is offensive but you are, after all, merely a Rural.
Tyger Tyger
December 20, 2014 at 2:20 amVenise, you and Norm are two halves of the same brain. You the left hemisphere, he the right, only there’s a bile duct where the corpus callosum should be.
But I see what you’re saying about the “presence of Australia’s rurals”. Clearly they constitute an undifferentiated mass sucking on the public teat and contributing nothing to the nation. Much like the rent-seekers, the urban paper-pushing middle-class, trust-fund kids and the like.
What do you propose we do with these despicable country folk? Some sort of reverse Pol Pot where we force them to don coke-bottle glasses then drive them off the land into offices where they can join the enlightened city folk in the “service industries”? (A term that always reminds me of Lewis Carroll’s great line about “..that island, whose inhabitants made a precarious living by taking in each other’s washing.”)
And again you’ve gone right back to where we started – your ENTIRELY Hanscombe-like rant (so glad you’re offended by the way, that was my intention) which characterised me without having the foggiest notion who or what I am. “Merely a rural” indeed. Not true in any sense, but I’ll happily wear it. Could be a lot worse.
I could be an utterly deluded spoilt brat who thinks they’re sooooo progressive when in fact they display the very worst of fascist tendencies. How awful would that be?!