From foreign movies and TV programmes to books and concerts,
China is ringing up a huge cultural deficit, a senior official said
yesterday.
The unfavorable balance of trade in the cultural sector will
remain acute for a long time to come, Minister of Culture Sun
Jiazheng told China Daily on the sidelines of a press
conference addressed by two other top officials.
Sun did not assign a monetary value for the deficit but the
nation imported nearly seven times more movies than it produced
last year. Similarly, it is estimated that the number of books
imported was 10 times more than exports.
"It is rather difficult to reverse the trend for the time being,
since we have adopted an opening-up policy, and foreign cultural
products will continue to flow to China," the minister said.
The movie industry is one of the areas where the effects are
most telling.
"We imported 1,970 movies in 2005, a year when China produced
260," Zhao Shi, vice-minister of the State Administration of Radio,
Film and Television, told the press conference hosted by the State
Council Information Office.
"We are embracing the world whole-heartedly; we welcome overseas
movies to China."
The imports included Hollywood blockbusters and other movies
bought by Chinese cinemas, television stations and cultural
institutions, according to Zhao.
Despite a recently-imposed ban on foreign cartoons being shown
on prime-time TV which Zhao said was in response to demands by
Chinese parents the country has not restricted their influx.
"As you can all see, a huge number of imported cartoons are
being shown on the cartoon channels of a host of stations in China
outside prime time," she said.
In the publication sector, foreign books are knocking local
works off the bestseller lists, Liu Binjie, deputy chief of the
General Administration of Press and Publication, said at the same
press conference.
The government has ratified the operation of 38
overseas-invested publication distribution enterprises, with 14 of
them entitled to wholesale distribution rights.
It has also approved at least 2,000 overseas-funded printing
firms, some of which are large-scale, Liu said, adding that the
country has given the green light to Sino-foreign collaboration for
51 newspapers and periodicals.
During the 11th Five-Year Plan period (2006-10), the country
will open up the sector even more, Liu said.
The officials' remarks came a day after the release of the
Guidelines for Cultural Development in the 11th Five-Year Plan,
which set out that China will "absorb and borrow the excellent
cultural fruits of the rest of the world."
The guidelines prescribe that China actively explore
international cultural markets and promote Chinese culture to the
world to reduce the "deficit" in international cultural
exchanges.
"It will also become a trend that more and more Chinese cultural
products will go abroad," the culture minister said.
Unless China's cultural sector makes quick inroads in the global
market, the situation will not change much, said Chen Shaofeng,
vice-director of the Cultural Industry Research Institute at Peking
University.
Chen suggested the country develop its own brands and
heavyweight players, and cooperate with foreign businesses to
produce content that is sought after abroad.
(China Daily September 15, 2006)