The media tax debate: Is it being used as a distraction for the broken business model?

Nic ChristensenYesterday saw Google, Apple, Microsoft and News Corp Australia front a Senate Committee on corporate tax avoidance. The event was high on drama, Nic Christensen argues, but while the tax discussion is important, too many traditional media businesses use it as a distraction for ignoring their disrupted business models.  

As a piece of entertainment, yesterday’s Senate Economic References Committee on corporate tax avoidance was superb theatre. 

Start with a cast of excellent characters (hello: Senators Dastyari, Xenophon, Milne plus the likes of Julian Clarke and even the normally camera-shy Maile Carnegie), add a large national stage (hello: saturation national press) and then add just the right amount of tension (usually Xenophon or Milne demanding that their question actually be answered) and you had quite a show.

Screen Shot 2015-04-08 at 2.34.52 pmThe appearance is, rightly, dominating today’s headlines and I know we’ve given significant coverage to the evidence of both Google/Apple/Microsoft and also the testimony of News Corp.

Subscribe to keep reading

Join Mumbrella Pro to access the Mumbrella archive and read our premium analysis of everything under the media and marketing umbrella.

Subscribe

Get the latest media and marketing industry news (and views) direct to your inbox.

Sign up to the free Mumbrella newsletter now.

"*" indicates required fields

 

SUBSCRIBE

Sign up to our free daily update to get the latest in media and marketing.