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Introduction: Media trends in Central and Eastern Europe
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by Stefaan Verhulst
Almost a decade after revolutionary changes in Central and Eastern
Europe and the collapse of the Soviet Union, with some notable
exceptions, overt institutional censorship has largely disappeared,
private media have proliferated, and journalists have founded
associations to defend their rights. Press freedom has been declared
as part of the legal foundation of the new democratic systems.
In most countries new media (press) laws have been approved or
are awaiting parliamentary approval, or new constitutions contain
provisions guaranteeing freedom of the press. As a result newspapers
and radio and television stations have started to mushroom. Yet
across the region, to varying degrees, the following pessimistic
trends on the media front are discernible:
Government interference. Although privatisation has made spectacular
progress in the written press and local broadcasting, sale of
the national radio and television networks has stalled in many
countries, and proceeds only slowly even in the advanced reformer
countries, like the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland. The state-run
postal systems often have near-monopolies in distributing newspapers
and magazines, while television and radio-transmitting facilities
and licensing (access to frequencies) are still under direct government
control. Governments appoint the heads of the state-owned media
or select members of the overseeing boards in radio and television
organisations. In many countries the state controls the media
in part through ownership and funding. The government can funnel
advertisements of state-owned companies or agencies to favoured
papers and broadcasts, and provide other forms of subsidies. Discrimination
against the independent press is evident in high taxes and fines,
or refusal to deliver newsprint.
Tough finances. The short-lived media boom that followed the 1989-91
period gave way to a consolidation of the communications market.
Many papers closed down as state subsidies dried up and newsprint
became both expensive and in short supply (for example, in Albania
and Romania). Production and distribution costs increased, and
yet the distribution systems remained inadequate. With the deteriorating
economic situation fewer people could afford to buy newspapers.and
foreign investment made headway in some countries, primarily in
the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland. As a result the media
industries in most countries have been taken over by foreign interest
or are on the brink of collapse.
Tabloid versus responsible journalism. An increasing number of
private newspapers and radio and television stations in transition
economies choose to entertain and satisfy mass demand (and powerful
advertisers), in order to increase readership and audience, and
hence, profits. It is an open question whether the limited national
media markets can adequately support vehicles for responsible
journalism, which advocate democracy; communicate public opinions,
concerns, and hopes; and investigate abuses of political and economic
power-in other words, which fulfill the watchdog role of the press.
Moreover the competition among a handful of powerful media moguls
has often proved dangerous, because they still use their media
outlets as direct instruments of political power. In many countries
in the region with developing market economies, the lines between political and business
interests are blurred.
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