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POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY I:Internationalization, Vertical Integration

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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
VU
LESSON 30
POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY I
Political economic theory is an old label that has been revived to identify a socially critical approach
which focuses primarily on the relation between the economic structure and dynamics of media
industries and the ideological content of media.
It directs research attention to the empirical analysis of the structure of ownership and control of
media and to the way media market forces operate. From this point of view, the media institution
has to be considered as part of the economic system with close links to the political system.
In the early 1970s Golding and Murdock , two of Britain's leading political economists document
the concentration and consolidation of ownership in publishing, print, broadcasting, film and
recording industries in UK. They found that the top five companies in each industry held
considerable power. They accounted for 86 % of circulation of morning newspapers in Britain, 88%
of the Sunday papers, 73% of ITV network production, 86% of all paperbacks sold.
This work was one of the earliest systematic analyses of commercial power of the media it
highlighted the increasing control of the large companies over a particular media sector, or even
several sectors, but also the increasing influence over popular leisure time. Since 1974 the authors
have continued to document the consolidation of corporate power in the media industries. In the
United States such documentation is associated with the work of Ben Bagdikian in his book the `the
Media Monopoly in 1983'. He first published that about 50 media companies dominated the
American media. The latest edition of his book, published in 1997, argues this figure had fallen to
ten with around another dozen in a position of secondary standing.
Herman and Chomsky in 1988 developed this point identifying concentration and nature of media
ownership as one of the essential ingredients in their propaganda model. They argue a range of
political economic and organization filters constrain the reporting of international news in United
States. Their first filter is the `size, ownership and profit orientation of the mass media '. Similarly,
in Europe the growing power of media moguls has been subject to examination. Researcher have
shown the ability of media owners in Britain , France, Germany and Italy to deliver partisan
support at national elections and actively influence the evolving national political agenda through
their ownership of newspapers and TV channels.
Three economic processes that have increased the reach of media corporations are:-
1. Internationalization
2. Integration and
3. diversification
Internationalization
Corporations are ceasing to be simply national in their operations and are becoming global. This
trend of internationalization was noted by Murdock and Golding who consider it another aspect of
how concentration contributes to consolidation the necessary commercial constraints on cultural
production. In media firms are extending their influence into overseas markets while foreign
companies, mainly American, are consolidating their interests in the British media. Today British
media interests increasingly are part of large global empires. In every part of the global media
industries the dominance of a few corporations is document, e.g. the pop music industry. By 1994
90% of the gross sales of recorded music world wide came from albums, singles and music videos
owned or distributed by 6 multi-national companies. The power to decide what is played on `global
jukebox' rests in the hands of these organizations. Scholars note that at the end of 1980s the
combined revenue of the five largest global media firms was estimated at 18 % of the worldwide
information industry.
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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
VU
Integration
Contemporary statistics show that fewer and fewer large companies increasingly own what we see,
hear and read. A specter is haunting the media around the world today and that specter is Rupert
Murdoch. He is the archetypal media owner whose interests have attracted a considerable degree of
comment and political concern.
Integration takes two forms
1. Vertical
2. Horizontal
Vertical Integration
Vertical integration refers to the process by which one owner acquires all aspects of production and
distribution of a single type of media product. Scholars discusses how global media giants such as
Sony , Bertelsmann the News Corporation and Time Warner have through vertical integration ,
extended their power to control the creation production and distribution of world-wide information
and communication
The Japanese electronic multi-national, Sony in 1989 bought Columbia pictures and Guber-Peter's
entertainment, two leading US production companies who made films and TV series for worldwide
distribution, to combine their capacity to make video /audio equipment with the ability to
manufacture cultural products. The previous year the company had purchase CBS records for same
reason. Such purchase enabled Sony to increase control over the market by reducing its dependency
on American programme making companies.
Horizontal integration
Horizontal integration is the process by which one company buys different kinds of media,
concentrating ownership across different kinds of media .Cross ­media ownership has developed at
a rapid pace in recent years.
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Table of Contents:
  1. COMMUNICATION:Nature of communication, Transactional approach, Communication is symbolic:
  2. THEORY, PARADIGM AND MODEL (I):Positivistic Perspective, Critical Perspective
  3. THEORY, PARADIGM AND MODEL (II):Empirical problems, Conceptual problems
  4. FROM COMMUNICATION TO MASS COMMUNICATION MODELS:Channel
  5. NORMATIVE THEORIES:Authoritarian Theory, Libertarian Theory, Limitations
  6. HUTCHINS COMMISSION ON FREEDOM, CHICAGO SCHOOL & BASIC PRINCIPLES OF SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY THEORY
  7. CIVIC JOURNALISM, DEVELOPMENT MEDIA THEORY & DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPANT THEORY
  8. LIMITATIONS OF THE PRESS THEORY:Concentration and monopoly, Commercialism
  9. MCQUAIL’S FOUR KINDS OF THEORIES:Social scientific theory, Critical theory
  10. PROPAGANDA THEORIES:Origin of Propaganda, Engineering of Consent, Behaviorism
  11. PARADIGM SHIFT & TWO STEP FLOW OF INFORMATION
  12. MIDDLE RANGE THEORIES:Background, Functional Analysis Approach, Elite Pluralism
  13. KLAPPER’S PHENOMENSITIC THEORY:Klapper’s Generalizations, Criticism
  14. DIFFUSION OF INNOVATION THEORY:Innovators, Early adopters
  15. CHALLENGING THE DOMINANT PARADIGM:Catharsis Social learning Social cognitive theory
  16. SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEROY:Symbolizing Capacity, MODELLING
  17. MODELING FROM MASS MEDIA:Recent research, Summary, PRIMING EFFECTS
  18. PRIMING EFFECT:Conceptual Roots, Perceived meaning, Percieved justifiability
  19. CULTIVATION OF PERCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL REALITY:History
  20. SYSTEMS THEORIES OF COMMUNICATION PROCESSES:System
  21. EMERGENCE OF CRITICAL & CULTURAL THEORIES OF MASS COMMUNICATION
  22. REVISION:Positivistic perspective, Interpretive Perspective, Inductive approach
  23. CRITICAL THEORIES & ROLE OF MASS COMMUNICATION IN A SOCIETY -THE MEDIATION OF SOCIAL RELATIONS
  24. ROLE OF MASS MEDIA IN SOCIAL ORDER & MARXIST THEORY:Positive View
  25. KEY PRINCIPLES USED IN MARXISM:Materialism, Class Struggle, Superstructure
  26. CONSUMER SOCIETY:Role of mass media in alienation, Summary of Marxism
  27. COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE:Neo Marxism, Characteristics of Culture
  28. HEGEMONY:What exactly is the meaning of "hegemony"?
  29. CULTURE INDUSTRY:Gramscianism on Communications Matters
  30. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY I:Internationalization, Vertical Integration
  31. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY II:Diversification, Instrumental
  32. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY III:Criticism, Power of Advertising
  33. AGENDA SETTING THEORY:A change in thinking, First empirical test
  34. FRAMING & SPIRAL OF SILENCE:Spiral of Silence, Assessing public opinion
  35. SPIRAL OF SILENCE:Fear of isolation, Assessing public opinion, Micro-level
  36. MARSHALL MCLUHAN: THE MEDIUM IS THE MESSAGE AND MASSAGE
  37. KNOWLEDGE GAP THEORY:Criticism on Marshal McLuhan
  38. MEDIA SYSTEM DEPENDENCY THEORY:Media System Dependency Theory
  39. USES AND GRATIFICATIONS THEORY:Methods
  40. RECEPTION THEORY
  41. FRAMING AND FRAME ANALYSIS:Information Processing Theory, Summing up
  42. TRENDS IN MASS COMMUNICATION I:Communication Science, Direct channels
  43. TRENDS IN MASS COMMUNICATION II:Communication Maxims, Emotions
  44. GLOBALIZATION AND MEDIA:Mediated Communication, Post Modernism
  45. REVISION:Microscopic Theories, Mediation of Social Relations