BEIJING, April 7 -- Market-oriented news
organizations and publishers have been given a deadline of one to two years to
make the transition to full-fledged commercial players, according to guidelines
released by the industry watchdog on Monday.
Publishers of books and electronic products at local
and college levels will have to complete their reform by this year, and
publishers at central and ministerial level by the next, according to the China
General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP).
Newspapers and magazines deemed to be serving the
public interest are encouraged to restructure their operations but will not be
subject to the full force of the market.
Most news organizations and publishers are affiliated
to governments at various levels.
The new guidelines pledge policy support to media
giants which publish newspapers and magazines overseas, and acknowledge the
status of private publishers for the first time.
"About six or seven press and publishing giants with annual revenues
of more than 10 billion yuan (1.46 billion U.S. dollars) will be set up to
compete globally in three to five years," said Fan Weiping, director of the
publishing industry development department affiliated to the GAPP.
"The guidelines will serve as an impetus for the
development of the press and publication sector," said Zhou Weihua, a professor
at the school of journalism at Renmin University of China.
The industry has long been imbued with a political
and ideological tinge, with the commercial and business roles ignored, he said.
The latest move paves the way for press and
publication houses to use market resources to flourish, he said.
The top 20 players in the industry have only 20
percent of the market share, compared to 85 percent in the United States, Zhou
said.
Cutting the umbilical cord between the government and
press and publication houses will stimulate competition and benefit the industry
and society, he added.
The guidelines recognize the status of
privately-owned publishing houses by including them in the official regulation
system, Fan said.
There is no official figure for the number of private
publishers in the country but they contract a wide array of writers and publish
most of the bestsellers using book numbers - a permit for publication - of
State-owned publishing houses.
By the end of 2007, there were nearly 600 publishing
houses in the country. The country also published 9,500 magazines and 2,000
newspapers that year.
Other highlights include:
Strengthening the restructuring of four non-profit
press and publishing houses: People's Press, Ethnic Minority Press, Tibetan
Studies Press and Braille Press.
Media organizations and publishing houses are
encouraged to run newspapers and magazines or set up branches overseas through
wholly-funded or joint ventures.
Major publishing and media enterprises are encouraged
to go public.
(Source: China Daily)