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Paying for Australia
For nearly
10 years under the Bob Hawke and Paul Keating Labor federal governments,
pay-TV was a distant dream in Australia.
The Labor
Party determined to keep out new operators, perhaps to appease the then
current commercial TV operators, channels 7, 9 and 10, the state-owned ABC and
the multicultural SBS (Special Broadcasting Service) who were perceived as
soft on a Labor government.
The federal
government decided pay-TV had nothing new to offer, despite much of the
western world having multichannel pay-TV services.
When the
government was facing defeat in the polls almost 12 years ago, they passed
legislation allowing the Commonwealth of Australia to adopt a pay-TV service
via cable, microwave and digital satellite service – a sop to the public or a
dead weight to saddle the Liberal/National coalition that would follow.
But to the
surprise of many, the Keating government was re-elected on the fear of the
(conservative) Liberals adopting a consumption tax - GST (Goods and Services
Tax).
The fledging
service was thus launched under a Labor administration by Galaxy TV via
microwave, an 8 channel service of 2 movie channels, an entertainment channel,
a news service, a kids channel, a music channel, a science channel – in short,
all the usual stuff you expect from pay-TV packages worldwide.
Rupert
Murdoch, owner of News Corporation and UK's BSkyB launched FOXTEL, a cable
service, jointly with Telstra, sharing Galaxy's multichannels plus a few of
their own to throw in. The standard service on both services was A$39.95 per
month.
A third pay-TV
service - Optus - was also launched, provided by the largest telephone
operator rival to Telstra and half-owned by the UK's Cable and Wireless.
They launched
an equivalent service of movie channels, Ovation (equivalent to Discovery) and
MTV.
Galaxy TV were
soon in financial trouble with the Australian Stock Exchange forecasting
Australia could not sustain three pay TV operators and thereafter folded,
leaving metropolitan viewers without pay-TV.
The gap was
filled by a regional franchisee to Galaxy, AUSTAR, carrying both Foxtel and
Galaxy services to regional Australia and the bush via microwave and
satellite. It joined forces with Foxtel, in effect creating two united
services (Austar for regional Australia via satellite and Foxtel via cable for
metropolitan Australia) and leaving Optus as the direct competition.
Ten years on,
Foxtel via cable has broken even, while the regional service Austar is still
losing money. The economics are simple: more people live in the city (and
receive Foxtel) than the bush (and receive Austar). Optus is losing money as
well.
Last year the
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) received a request from
the Foxtel/Austar pay-TV service to share programmes with the competitor Optus
TV. The ACCC refused point blank.
An appeal to
the ACCC and the federal government (now run by the Liberal/Nationals) was
granted last week. Foxtel/Austar may now share its programme stations with the
opposition Optus and vice versa, on the grounds that Australian viewers would
suffer if one of the loss making services were to fold, leaving viewers
without a service in certain areas. Each service is expected to earn an extra
$30 million dollars in added income as a result of the programming merger. It
is expected that up to 144 multichannels will be on offer to each of the two
services in the future.
So where is
Australian pay-TV heading? You don't have to be a Rhodes Scholar to figure
that out. ITV Digital in the UK is a prime example, with the overall UK winner
being Rupert Murdoch's BSkyB. It would be fair to assume that Mr Murdoch’s
FOXTEL down under will follow suit.
Foxtel has the
better programming with Sky News, live from Sky News UK on the half hour, and
a UKTV channel, owned 50% by Foxtel, 25% BBC and 25% the former Thames TV.
Channels such as The Comedy Channel, partly owned by Granada and Fox 8, a
channel similar to Sky One, complete the basic package.
The
globalisation of Murdoch’s empire continues. And their share price jumped up a
whole A$3 overnight.
James Barrington
James
Barrington was born in Liverpool in 1960, moving to Australia in 1978. He
works on-air on radio and likes to specialise in television presentation,
keeping up to date with UK trends
Compilation © 2002 Transdiffusion Broadcasting System
Text © 2002 James Barrington. All rights reserved. Used with permission
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