Good morning, committee members.
I have about half a dozen points to make. I hope I am able to get through them before we turn to questions.
The late legendary Canadian economist John Kenneth Galbraith explained the aptly named trickle-down theory of economics as follows. He said that if you feed the horse enough oats, some will pass through to the road for the sparrows.
That's essentially the basis of the copyright system as we know it in Canada. It's frankly a bit messy. We have about 38 collectives in Canada, which is about six times more than in the United States. We have the largest, most expensive, and slowest-moving copyright tribunal in the world.
Most of the sparrows get very little from this system. Take Access Copyright, for example. Based on its 2017 figures, 11,000 creators got $2,090,000 from Access Copyright and its publishers for an average of about $190 per annum each. That's less than the hourly billing rate of most junior lawyers these days.
The copyright system can be a disincentive to creation. A case in point is that of Giuseppe Verdi. For any of you who are opera fans, he was probably the greatest opera composer of all. This is documented in a wonderful book, which I urge you to look at or get your research staff to look at, by Professor F.M. Scherer, called Quarter Notes and Bank Notes. I'll post a link to it on my blog.
There is a recent important book and article by Professor Glynn Lunney on contemporary sound recording in the commercial music industry, and I'll also post that stuff.
Here are some facts I would ask you to keep in mind.
It's impossible to define who a professional writer, musician, composer, painter or other creator may be. I write a lot in my work and outside of my job. I certainly don't consider myself a professional writer; however, I did get a cheque the other day for just short of $85 from Access Copyright, which is more than a lot of other people I know get. It's always been incredibly easy to qualify as an Access Copyright creator or affiliate. Doubling my Access Copyright royalties would mean nothing to me other than maybe a nice lunch for two, but would cost the educational system in Canada hundreds of millions of dollars a year.
The composers whose works you might hear over at the National Arts Centre, the composers of so-called serious music or concerts, are lucky to make $500 or $1,000 a year from SOCAN. It's a good thing they get grants and commissions and maybe salaries, if they're fortunate enough to be a professor.
Virtually all professors are writers, and they get paid well for their writing by getting tenure and nice six-figure salaries these days. But only a very small handful, such as Jordan Peterson, make serious money publishing books.
In Canada, a trade book selling 5,000 copies is considered a great success. The writer will be lucky to get $15,000 from the publisher and a pittance from Access Copyright, so I hope they have a good day job.
My second point is on how digital technology can help artists get paid. While digital technology has a lot of potential, Justin Bieber was discovered by his talent manager and got a record deal because of his YouTube video covers 10 years ago, and the rest is history. Then there is the recent example of that wonderful 95-year-old gentleman, Harry Leslie Smith, who is suddenly a worldwide Internet sensation and sells books and whatever, and we wish him a speedy recovery. The Internet was his ticket to being known.
There is no doubt that artists will find a way, perhaps with the help of Google, Amazon, Shopify or other platforms yet to come, of selling directly online to their fans without having to sign away their rights and most of their revenues in exchange for recoupable advances and elusive dreams that almost never come true. But beware of digital delusions and vapourware. For example, I am frankly very skeptical about Access Copyright's latest announcement on something called “Prescient”, which promises the world. Once again, I am not holding my breath, based on its past failures to deliver.
Talking about blockchain and machine learning is easy to do. That's why everybody is doing it and talking. Everybody is talking about it, and hardly anybody is doing it.
Above all, please consider that we're looking at the cultural and knowledge sector of which copyright is only a component or tool and not the sector or the end in itself.
Think about the transportation sector, which evolved from horse and buggy to cars. More money got spent on transportation over the years, but it got spent differently. Things change and constantly evolve. Old business models and jobs are not guaranteed—just look at Oshawa. As Universities Canada pointed out the other day and in their brief filed with the INDU committee in June of this year, Canadian universities are spending more than ever before in purchasing content—more than one billion dollars in library content in the past three years combined. That's based on StatsCan data.
My third point is that increasing use of Public Lending Right and similar models would be a good idea. The Public Lending Right is an excellent program that rewards creators whose works are borrowed from public libraries. Because it's outside the copyright system, the payments can be restricted to Canadian writers. Unfortunately, the amount has fallen over the years from $4,000 to $3,000 as the maximum payment. Let's put more money into this system and consider Roy MacSkimming's excellent suggestion for broadening the system to include an educational lending right. That would enable payments to Canadian authors of school and college textbooks and educational materials, including scholarly works.
My fourth point is how can collectives best serve artists? Collectives have an inherent conflict of interest when it comes to serving creators. High salaries and high legal fees can only be justified in big organizations with annual revenues in the tens or hundreds of millions of dollars. Collectives can best serve artists by doing their best to put themselves out of business, or at least making themselves smaller and smarter, by embracing digital technology. It's simply unacceptable for a collective to spend 25% or 30% of its revenues on administration, lobbying and legal fees. That's the members' money.
The Copyright Board should allow a collective to operate only if it does so in the best interests of both creators and users. In all cases, it should require full disclosure of actual repertoire; average and median payments to individual creators; salaries of senior officers and in-house counsel; and amounts spent on outside lobbyists, lawyers, experts and other consultants, along with their names.
The next point is on levies and earmarked taxes. Since 1997, Canada has had a blank media levy system. On behalf of the Retail Council of Canada, I tried to get the Federal Court of Appeal to agree that it's an illegal tax, and I very nearly succeeded, but close is no cigar. However, a previous minister, the Honourable James Moore, agreed with me, and in 2010 called the proposed iPod levy a “tax”, and said: “this idea is really toxic and, frankly, really dumb.”
The Copyright Board is inexplicably keeping this zombie tax alive and allowing the music industry to use the small revenues of about $2 million a year, almost 30% of which goes for administration, lobbying and lawyers, to wait in zombie-like stealth for another day to pounce on smart phones, ISPs, the cloud, and whatever they persuade a gullible government to somehow tax.
The music industry is also now asking for a new “tax” on iPhones. They don't call it that.