Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Fraser Institute: Netflix-CRTC standoff is chance to open Canadian TV system

The Canadian Press , 08 Oct, 2014 12:36 PM
    VANCOUVER - A new Fraser Institute paper suggests that the recent stand-off between Netflix and the CRTC provides an opportunity for the government to dismantle barriers that prevent open competition in Canadian television broadcasting.
     
    A senior fellow with the Fraser Institute, Steven Globerman, says existing regulatory and legal barriers could be dismantled to relieve conventional broadcasters, cable and satellite companies of their Canadian content obligations.
     
    He also advocates lifting restrictions on foreign ownership of Canadian broadcasters to allow for takeovers by more efficient businesses and suggests that Canadian cultural programming requirements should be left to the CBC-Radio Canada.
     
    The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications is in the final stages of a major review of its policy framework for the television industry.
     
    Netflix and Google refused to release some information demanded by the CRTC last month during two weeks of hearings on the future of television and the commission responded by saying it would remove their presentations from the public record.
     
    The regulator had ordered Netflix to provide confidential information related to its business operations in Canada, including the number of Canadian subscribers and how much money it spent producing Canadian video content.
     
    It had also asked Google to spell out the amount of content uploaded by Canadian users of its service, by how much it expected its advertising to grow and what advertising revenues it generated in Canada.
     
    Both Netflix and Google had appeared voluntarily before the commission but said they had concerns about whether the information could be kept secret.
     
    Netflix also questioned the authority of the regulator to impose demands on it, suggesting that the video streaming service did not fall under the Broadcasting Act since it is not a conventional broadcaster.
     
    Globerman writes that it could be up to the courts to decide whether the Broadcasting Act applies to Netflix but suggests that "serious consideration" be given to the option of of dismantling the existing regulatory and legal arriers to open competition.
     
    Globerman writes in his analysis for the Fraser Institute that Canada's conventional broadcasts "have a legitimate complaint that meeting the regulation imposed on them, but not imposed on Internet broadcasters, puts them at a competitive disadvantage, and the asymmetry invites the possibility of inefficient competition."
     
    "The preferred policy option in this context is to deregulate the conventional broadcasting sector," Globerman writes.
     
    "In particular, Canadian content rules should be eliminated along with requirements that cable and satellite distributors carry a preponderance of Canadian programs. Foreign ownership restrictions in broadcasting should be eliminated, which would expose existing broadcast distributors to the threat of unwanted takeovers by more efficient foreign companies. The latter initiative would further increase de facto competition in the broadcast industry."
     
    Globerman is a business professor at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash., about 90 kilometres south of Vancouver, where the Fraser Institute has its headquarters. The think-tank describes itself as an independent, non-partisan policy group but frequently publishes articles that advocate reduced government regulation and increased competition.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    32 Killed In Dussehra Event Stampede In Patna

    32 Killed In Dussehra Event Stampede In Patna
    At least 32 people, including women and children, died in a stampede Friday evening after the burning of the Ravana effigy at the Gandhi Maidan here, officials said.

    32 Killed In Dussehra Event Stampede In Patna

    Canadian Satellite Finally To Be Launched By India

    Canadian Satellite Finally To Be Launched By India
     The launch of a Canadian satellite, postponed amid tensions in the Ukraine, is finally scheduled for liftoff — one year behind schedule. The M3M communications satellite  was originally to be launched aboard a Russian rocket

    Canadian Satellite Finally To Be Launched By India

    Rob Ford Told Cancer Has 50/50 Survival Rate

    Rob Ford Told Cancer Has 50/50 Survival Rate
    TORONTO - The hardest part of battling a rare and aggressive form of cancer has been explaining it to his school-age children, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford said Thursday, admitting he sometimes cries himself to sleep.

    Rob Ford Told Cancer Has 50/50 Survival Rate

    Vancouver Police Probe Targeted Home Invasion Involving Alleged Gang Associate

    Vancouver Police Probe Targeted Home Invasion Involving Alleged Gang Associate
    VANCOUVER - A man Vancouver police believe to be a gang associate is recovering from multiple stab wounds after a targeted home invasion.

    Vancouver Police Probe Targeted Home Invasion Involving Alleged Gang Associate

    Shooting Suspects Sought After Abbotsford, B.C. Police Find Body In Car

    Shooting Suspects Sought After Abbotsford, B.C. Police Find Body In Car
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. - Abbotsford, B.C. police say a young man was found dead in a residential neighbourhood Thursday evening.

    Shooting Suspects Sought After Abbotsford, B.C. Police Find Body In Car

    Iconic Canadian photo, Wait for Me Daddy has dual meaning for B.C. boy now senior

    Iconic Canadian photo, Wait for Me Daddy has dual meaning for B.C. boy now senior
    VANCOUVER - It's credited as the most famous Canadian photo of the Second World War, a little boy running from his mother for the outstretched hand of his soldier father, but for Warren "Whitey" Bernard his image as a five year old is more powerful for what it doesn't show.

    Iconic Canadian photo, Wait for Me Daddy has dual meaning for B.C. boy now senior