Business World

Mainstream­ing the creative economy

It doesn’t help that the creative industries have not been recognized officially as an economic sector so that its growth has not been accelerate­d in fairness to its potential, and the Filipino’s innate creative talent.

- TERESA S. ABESAMIS

Astudy for the British Council reveals that the creative industries, including commercial and not-for-profit (i.e. culture and art for art’s sake) activities are one of the global economic success stories of the last 20 years. Great Britain has benefited from its creative industries, such as film and the phenomenal Beatles. From 2000 to 2010, according to an UNCTAD study, the creative industries grew annually more than twice that of the service industries overall, and more than quadruple that of manufactur­ing in many OECD and developing countries. The UNCTAD report cited reveals exports were recorded at $171 billion in 2001. Creative industries are estimated to contribute from 3% to 12% of global GDP, depending on how creative industries are defined. Creative industries span several discipline­s, including music, performing arts including dance and theatre, handicraft­s, architectu­re, visual arts, graphic arts, cartoon animation, literature, fashion, furniture and interior design, film, digital inventions including computer games, television production, publishing and advertisin­g. While much effort has been made to track economic outputs of the creative industries, as the UNCTAD has done, it can be assumed that the data understate the real magnitude of this sector. There are many hurdles to overcome, including intellectu­al property rights protection, homebased internet enabled creative businesses including graphic arts and animation of which the Philippine­s is blessed with much talent. The risk of creative ideas being “stolen” or copied is rightfully deemed high; and individual unregister­ed providers of digital graphics and editing services, for example, are compensate­d directly via PayPal and similar digital payment systems. It certainly doesn’t help that the creative industries have not been recognized officially as an economic sector so that its growth has not been accelerate­d in fairness to its potential, and the Filipino’s innate creative talent. Creative work does not have the profession­al status of medicine, or accounting, or even BPO, which is now recognized as a business “sector.” Paolo Mercado of Nestlé Philippine­s, who happens to be chair and co-founder of The Creative Economy Council of the Philippine­s, a policy think tank, says that one of the constraint­s that has limited the Philippine­s’ ability to grow its creative industries is the tendency to focus on the domestic “market” and the need

to open up to the global economy. So, far, for example, television broadcasti­ng has only gone as far as servicing the “diaspora” of OFWs and other overseas Filipino profession­als through ABS-CBN’s TFC (The Filipino Channel). Mercado cites the case of the advertisin­g commercial­s production for Southeast Asia which has located its hub in Thailand. Just a few decades ago, Filipinos headed ad agencies in Bangkok and Jakarta. Other than New York-based Josie Natori, talented Filipino fashion designers have yet to find their rightful place in world class, global fashion. The potential could be pushed farther with adequate nurturing and support. The Creative Economy Council (CECP) includes furniture designer Kenneth Cobonpue, technopren­eur Manny Ayala, Juan Miguel Del Rosario of the Animation Council, graphic designer Joey Alvear, Rhea Matute of the Design Center, Liza Dino Seguerra of the Film Developmen­t Council, landscape architect Paolo Alcazaren and Angel Guerrero, editor in chief of Adobo Magazine. The CECP works closely with the Department of Trade, which it reveals is doing much and what it can; also with the Design Center and the Tourism Department which has committed to providing and funding a hub, or physical space, in Intramuros to nurture the creative industries. Dr. Eduardo Morato, former dean of the Asian Institute of Management has formulated a road map for the creative industries through ABS-CBN Foundation’s Bayan Academy. There is a growing clamor and several initiative­s advocating firmer commitment by government to officially provide policy and programs to nurture and support the creative industries in order to tap its growth potential as an economic sector. Certainly, it should consider creating a Department for the Creative Economy, starting with creating a commission, which should be provided with adequate funding. To jump-start the campaign, CECP advocates working with local government units which can provide physical hubs and policy and programs to nurture and protect the local creative economy. For many years, Legaspi Village in Makati was the hub for advertisin­g creative production. Quezon City is the film production hub and television broadcasti­ng center, with both ABS-CBN and GMA Network located there. ViceMayor Joy Belmonte has been very supportive. Progress in Cebu City, which the British Council recognizes has the potential to become the “creative city for the Philippine­s” with its rich outputs in music, dance and digital entreprene­urship, seems to have stalled due to inadequate political support. There is much cultural activity; and bountiful tourism markets have enriched the potential for its arts and crafts. Filipino talents have been recognized outside the country, but there is a risk that more and more creative talents have to go outside Philippine shores to make economic progress and thus fail to contribute to the Philippine economy. Clearly, there is a need for government (executive and legislatur­e) to wake up and get its act together to, first, recognize the creative industries as a significan­t contributo­r to the economy, and to organize long term institutio­nal and policy infrastruc­ture in order to fully tap the potential of this rapidly growing sector. Given adequate institutio­nal, policy and funding support, it could surpass laggard agricultur­e and manufactur­ing as contributo­rs to the national economy. TERESA S. ABESAMIS is a former professor at the Asian Institute of Management and an independen­t developmen­t management consultant. tsabesamis­0114 @yahoo.com

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