Report Released on Runaway Films
Published:
20 January 2001 y., Saturday
A federal study released Friday details what entertainment industry people have said for years - that studios are taking billions of dollars a year from the U.S. economy by shooting films and television shows outside the country.
The practice, known as ``runaway film production,'' is fueled by countries like Australia and Canada offering huge tax incentives to studios willing to shoot there. ``Runaway film production has affected thousands of workers in industries ranging from computer graphics to construction workers and caterers,'' Commerce Secretary Norman Mineta said in a statement about the report, which was released on the last day of the Clinton administration. ``These losses threaten to disrupt important parts of a vital American industry.''
The report does not recommend specific solutions, but does mention some from people in the industry, including federal and state tax credits for filmmakers, loans for independent film companies, and the creation a federal film commission.
An earlier, industry-funded report that said the percentage of films from major studios produced outside the country jumped from 29 percent in 1990 to 37 percent in 1998.
The industry study also said that $10.3 billion in direct expenditures, wages and taxes were lost in 1998 because of foreign production.
Šaltinis:
entertainment.netscape.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Culture is taking centre stage in many of the activities scheduled for the “Europe Day” (9 May) celebrations being held under the Spanish Presidency of the EU, with the festivities even extending to the World Expo in Shanghai, where the EU Youth Orchestra will give a performance, conducted by Spain's Inma Shara.
more »
New York's Metropolitan Museum celebrates the evolving fashion of the American woman in a new exhibition.
more »
The Metropolitan Museum of Art opens an exhibition featuring its entire collection of Picasso art.
more »
In one Lithuanian cinema Pasaka, audience members peddle on stationary bicycles to create the energy powering the projector.
more »
Possessions belonging to 'Adventures of Huckleberry Finn' writer Mark Twain are set to go under the hammer at Sotheby's.
more »
The Ministry of Culture has announced that the “Sharing Cultural Heritage” seminar, scheduled for 19 and 20 April in the city of Caceres, has been postponed due to the closure of European air space caused by the eruption of the Eyjafjalla volcano in Iceland.
more »
Following the success of the first part of the programme at the San Juan Evangelista Music and Jazz Club, the Eurojazz Madrid 2010 festival is now moving on to the Reina Sofia National Museum and Art Centre, where it will host some of the most representative European jazz acts.
more »
The Ministers of Culture of the EU, gathered for an informal meeting in Barcelona, have unanimously approved “to put culture at the heart of the 2020 strategy” which will act as a framework for a more competitive and sustainable economy during this decade.
more »
On 23-24 March, the European Commission will celebrate the 25th anniversary of the European Capitals of Culture with a conference and exhibition in Brussels attended by more than 400 representatives of past, present and future Capitals and many other cultural operators.
more »
The sound of these traditional Indonesian bamboo instruments was once in danger of dying out.
more »