{"id":314,"date":"2014-02-13T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2014-02-13T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/test.johnwhittingdale.co.uk\/?p=314"},"modified":"2021-08-23T09:54:29","modified_gmt":"2021-08-23T09:54:29","slug":"supporting-the-creative-economy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/?p=314","title":{"rendered":"Supporting the Creative Economy"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_0\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000008\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew0\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000282\"><\/a><strong><strong>Mr John Whittingdale<\/strong> (Maldon) (Con):<\/strong> Thank  you, Mr Benton, for this opportunity to debate the Select Committee on Culture,  Media and Sport report, \u201cSupporting the Creative Economy\u201d. It was the result of  a major inquiry, in which we took a great deal of evidence and came up with a  wide range of conclusions. There has been a lot of interest in some of our  proposals across the industry and the House. I thank Elizabeth Flood, the  Committee\u2019s principal Clerk, and all the staff for their hard work on this  inquiry and others.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_2\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para2\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000009\"><\/a>We are  debating a great success story. There is no question but that in this country we  are very good at creative industries. Since the report was published, the  Department for Culture, Media and Sport has published the latest figures, which  show that the creative industries are worth \u00a371.5 billion to the UK economy and  generate around 1.68 million jobs. They are a substantial part of our economic  activity and are growing steadily. We are achieving ever greater success.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\"><\/a>Those bare figures conceal  remarkable achievements. In almost every sector of the creative industries that  we have examined, there have been fantastic successes. The British film industry  continued to produce some great films, and we have some of the greatest talent  in the world, but we have also been remarkably successful in attracting highly  mobile international investment to the UK to make films.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_1\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000010\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew1\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000283\"><\/a><strong><strong>Mr Jim Cunningham<\/strong> (Coventry South) (Lab):<\/strong> I welcome the Committee\u2019s report. Did the hon. Gentleman look at the arts and  the financial contribution that they make to this country? He mentioned the film  industry, but could he say something about the broader remit of the arts?<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p><strong>Mr Whittingdale:<\/strong> I am happy to, because I agree  that the arts make a substantial contribution, not just to this country\u2019s  cultural life, but to our economic life, and provide an important economic  stimulus. We are well aware of that, which is why, in a few weeks, the Committee  will conduct an inquiry into arts funding in the UK, and will discuss with the  Arts Council its priorities and how to ensure that the benefits are felt  throughout the UK. Some hon. Members feel strongly about that, and it is very  much a component of the creative economy\u2019s success.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_4\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para4\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000012\"><\/a>I have  spoken a little about film, but the music industry is another enormous success  for this country. The biggest selling artist last year was British: the band,  One Direction. I may not have added to their album sales, but that is a huge  success, which comes on top of&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">another remarkable achievement: in five of the last six years, the  best-selling album in the world has been by a British artist. This country  continues to produce enormously successful artists, and it is worth noting that  the music industry does that without any financial subsidy from the public.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_5\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para5\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000013\"><\/a>The  electronic games industry is another hugely important contributor to our  economy. Some of the best-known games, including \u201cTomb Raider\u201d, \u201cGrand Theft  Auto\u201d and \u201cFootball Manager\u201d, are British products. It is important that we  continue to be a centre for the electronic games industry; that is another issue  that I want to talk about.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_6\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para6\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000014\"><\/a>I went to  the MIPTV annual market in Cannes, where international buyers go to purchase TV  programmes. There is no question but that the UK dominates that market. BBC  Worldwide has a substantial presence at MIPTV, but independent production  companies such as Shed Productions, Shine TV and All3Media, are also hugely  successful at selling British products across the world. Then there are the  fashion and design industries. Britain is in the lead in all those  industries.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_7\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para7\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000015\"><\/a>We  started our inquiry on the basis that this country is remarkably good at the  creative industries. Is there more that the Government could do to support those  industries? Are there risks attached to that success? In each case we came up  with recommendations. We started our inquiry on the back of the most  extraordinary showcase for British talent\u2014the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic games  in London, where British talent, not only sporting but creative, was on display.  That creative talent was on display not only in the Cultural Olympiad but in the  games themselves, in the extraordinary opening ceremony by Danny Boyle, which  gave us an opportunity to exhibit British creative talent to the world.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_8\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para8\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000016\"><\/a>However,  we were concerned to hear, when we received evidence, that some of the companies  that played a key role in those events have not been able to take advantage by  using that fact in their marketing campaigns. I am sure that the Minister will  refer to the supplier recognition scheme, which is a huge step forward that  gives companies an opportunity to market themselves on the back of their  contribution to the Olympics, but we received evidence from the Professional  Lighting and Sound Association, the trade body that represents the professional  entertainment technology industry, which remains disappointed that it has not  been able to publicise its involvement in the London 2012 games. PLASA gave as  an example the fact that some of its members were responsible for the appearance  of those rings out of the fire, for the 70,500 LED tablets that were placed on  every single seat in the stadium ahead of the opening ceremony, and for the  industrial chimneys that rose out of the ground. All of those were iconic  moments in the opening ceremony, and the companies should have had an  opportunity to make it clear that they were responsible. We still hope that the  Government will reconsider the supplier recognition scheme and find a way to  allow companies in such fields as audio, video and audiovisual equipment to  promote their success in contributing to the games.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_9\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para9\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000017\"><\/a>A key  contributor to the success of the British creative industries is the tax credits  offered by the Treasury, for which we give full credit both to this Government  and the previous one. The film tax credit has been hugely successful. I  understand that last year it generated almost&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">\u00a3900 million in international investment in this country through just 37  feature films. I will always remember visiting Paramount Pictures to see the  trailer for \u201cWorld War Z\u201d. There was astonishment on the faces of Committee  members, particularly Scottish members, when we discovered that, although the  film ostensibly showed Philadelphia being overcome by waves of zombies, it was  not Philadelphia but Glasgow. Since then, several members of the Committee have  been to a screening of \u201cJack Ryan: Shadow Recruit\u201d, which is currently on at  cinemas. That film is set in America and Moscow, but it was filmed in this  country, mainly in London but also in a number of other places; locations  included Barnet, Battersea, Islington, Tower Hamlets, Birkenhead, Liverpool,  Hatfield, and a power station in Nottinghamshire.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000018\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000285\"><\/a><strong><strong>Tracey Crouch<\/strong> (Chatham and Aylesford)  (Con):<\/strong> My hon. Friend has missed out the important role of Chatham, which  has become a film set, having recently produced \u201cLes Mis\u00e9rables\u201d and various  other vast-selling products. Is that not the tax regime at its best, bringing  real benefit to local communities?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_4\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000019\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew4\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000286\"><\/a><strong>Mr Whittingdale:<\/strong> My hon. Friend is completely  right. I apologise for not mentioning Chatham, and I am sure that the fact that  it was chosen for \u201cLes Mis\u00e9rables\u201d is not a reflection on her constituents.  There is no question but that every part of the country benefits from that kind  of international investment. We have more to look forward to: \u201cMission:  Impossible 5\u201d will start filming in Britain soon, as will part of the next  episode of \u201cStar Wars\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_5\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000020\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spmin0\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000287\"><\/a><strong>The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for  Culture, Media and Sport (Mr Edward Vaizey):<\/strong> On \u201cLes Mis\u00e9rables\u201d, I hope  that my hon. Friend has noted that the stage production has brought in something  north of \u00a31 billion in revenue. At some point, he should acknowledge the  important role of British theatre in our creative industries.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_6\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000021\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew5\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000288\"><\/a><strong>Mr Whittingdale:<\/strong> The Minister is entirely right.  I am pleased that the Government are talking about extending the tax credit not  only, as already proposed, to high-end television drama, animation and  electronic games, but potentially to regional theatre, because theatre is the  breeding ground for many of our greatest talents.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_10\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para10\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000022\"><\/a>Still on  film success, we talked to the film companies and asked why they came to make  films in this country. A lot was to do with the extraordinary talent that we  have here\u2014the skills\u2014but they also said that, without question, had the tax  credit not been in place, they would not have been able to come here.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_7\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000023\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew6\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000289\"><\/a><strong><strong>Mrs Sharon Hodgson<\/strong> (Washington and Sunderland  West) (Lab):<\/strong> Might one of the other reasons film companies come here be our  heritage? For instance, \u201cHarry Potter\u201d was filmed up in Northumberland at  beautiful Alnwick castle. Looking around the world, or trying to build a set  such as Alnwick, would have cost a fortune. Does he agree that that also can be  a reason for people coming to this country to film?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_8\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000024\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew7\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000290\"><\/a><strong>Mr Whittingdale:<\/strong> Of course it is. In particular,  historical dramas make use of some of our great heritage assets. There are a  large number of reasons why people want to&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">come to Britain to make films, but without the tax credit, they probably  would not. We pay tribute to the previous Government for introducing it, and to  this Government for continuing it.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_11\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para11\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000025\"><\/a>I would  be interested to hear from the Minister an update on the progress of discussions  with the European Union on the introduction of the electronic games tax credit,  because that, too, is welcome. The games industry is under pressure, and we have  lost some companies already, so it is important for that tax credit to be  achieved soon.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_12\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para12\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000026\"><\/a>In  examining the creative industries, we received a lot of evidence about an issue  that lies at the absolute heart of their success: intellectual property rights.  For a long time, Governments have sought to address some of the problems created  by online distribution. In the previous Parliament, the Government passed the  Digital Economy Act 2010, which was a valiant attempt to put in place measures  to deter online piracy. Unfortunately, it has not come into force.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_13\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para13\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000027\"><\/a>I will  not recap the whole history of what has happened since the Act was passed\u2014the  judicial reviews, the arguments and so on. However, the principle behind it is  that people who illegally download copyrighted material, and so jeopardise the  success of the music, film, television, and, I suspect, in due course, games  industries, need to be told that what they are doing is not only illegal, but  poses a real threat to the economic viability and success of those industries.  It was suggested that that should be done through the dispatch of warning  letters. Once people were identified as serial downloaders, their internet  protocol addresses should be identified and the internet service providers asked  to send letters.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_9\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000028\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew8\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000291\"><\/a><strong><strong>Andrew Bingham<\/strong> (High Peak) (Con):<\/strong> Does my  hon. Friend agree that some people download unwittingly\u2014excuse the pun\u2014because  the websites all look plausible and completely legal? On the internet, there is  no way to distinguish what is legal and illegal on occasions.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_10\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000029\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew9\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000292\"><\/a><strong>Mr Whittingdale:<\/strong> My hon. Friend is right. Some of  the websites deliberately set out to appear legitimate. They might even make a  small charge, although often they are distributing the content for free. Perhaps  that would be another advantage of sending letters: it would increase awareness  and oblige people to ensure that when they did download, they did so from a  legal site, so that the artists and producers concerned received the  remuneration due.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_14\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para14\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000030\"><\/a>Despite  the difficulties in enacting the DEA, the recent development of a voluntary  agreement is in many ways preferable, if it can be made to work. In America,  that is already working well. A voluntary copyright alert programme would  involve an agreement between the rights owners and the ISPs that there would be  a system through which letters were issued to those identified as illegally  downloading. If that can be done voluntarily, that is preferable, and we should  get on with that as quickly as possible. The Committee\u2019s report is clear: we  prefer a voluntary system, but if agreement cannot be reached, the Government  need to stand by to bring into force the provisions of the Digital Economy Act  2010, and to use legislation.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_15\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para15\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000031\"><\/a>Unfortunately, we were perhaps less optimistic on  copyright law. The proposals on the modernisation of copyright law have given  rise to huge controversy. The&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">Minister will be only too aware of the concerns expressed right across the  creative industries about the dangers of tampering. Copyright law supports the  success story that I have described. The enormous economic contribution made to  our GDP by the creative industries is possible because copyright law ensures  that they receive the reward that they are due. Extending the exemptions on the  basis that it might produce extra economic activity and income is dangerous if  we do not take account of the risk of widened loopholes jeopardising existing  success.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_16\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para16\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000032\"><\/a>We  viewed the Hargreaves report with some concern. When we tried to find out how  Professor Hargreaves came up with the figures quoted in his report on the  substantial potential benefits of some exceptions, we were concerned at the lack  of hard evidence to support those figures, and no account was taken of the risk  that widening exceptions poses to the industry\u2019s success. That debate continues,  and we await the statutory instruments implementing some of the exceptions.  Great concern is still being expressed across the industry about the lack of  clarity on some of the proposed exceptions, and on the loopholes that might be  created. We are particularly concerned to ensure that Parliament has an  opportunity to examine each exception in detail. There should be proper  scrutiny.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_17\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para17\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000033\"><\/a>The  private copying exception has caused most concern, because it has the widest  effect. No one would argue that transferring a piece of music that one has  legally purchased from one device to another should not be permissible. Millions  of people do that, and it is nonsense that putting a song on an iPod, for  example, technically puts them in breach of copyright law. Legalising private  copying, however, has to be done carefully. The Committee took evidence on that,  and listened in particular to the concerns expressed by the film industry. Most  of the rest of Europe has not applied a private copying exception to audiovisual  material. The film industry said that the exception was unnecessary and that, in  any case, legal means were already being developed through which consumers who  purchased audiovisual material could store it in the cloud, or access it through  different devices. The Minister will know that the film industry remains very  concerned about the private copying exception. Perhaps he will say a few words  on that in his speech.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_18\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para18\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000034\"><\/a>We also  talked to Google, which is responsible for some great successes and huge  benefits; it is important to recognise that. The Committee visited the Google  campus in east London, which is providing opportunities for start-up firms and  app manufacturers to develop. It is at the forefront of the development of  technology and making it available to entrepreneurs and small start-up firms.  YouTube has been a great success in generating revenues for people who post  material on it. More than \u00a31 billion has already been generated in income.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_19\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para19\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000035\"><\/a>The  Committee was concerned about the issue of searching and the direction of people  towards illegal download sites. Google has supplied us and, I am sure, other  hon. Members present with statistics on how, if someone searches for an artist,  most of the results that come up will be legal. Part of the argument is about  the fact that Google is citing results of searches in which people simply put in  the artist\u2019s name, whereas the music industry points out that if, as well as  naming the&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">artist, people use the word \u201cdownload\u201d or \u201cMP3\u201d, that produces very different  results. The latest figures that I have been given show that the proportion of  links to infringing sites appearing in the top 10 search results remains roughly  the same as before. The latest figure that I was given was 252 out of a possible  400, so 63% of results in the top 10 were illegal download sites.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_20\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para20\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000036\"><\/a>Google  will tell us about the huge number of pages that it takes down when it is  notified that they contain copyrighted content being distributed illegally, but  the notice refers to a single page, with the result that the music industry has  sent more than 50 million notices to Google. Google does take the pages down  when notified, but no sooner do they come down than they go up again. A much  more sensible recommendation, which the music industry, among others, promotes,  is that when a website is the subject of, say, more than 10,000 notices, it  should be removed from the front page of search results, and when the figure of  100,000 notices is reached, it should be removed from the first 10 pages.  Eventually, if that goes on, it should be blocked in its entirety, on the basis  that it plainly consistently makes available copyrighted material illegally.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_21\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para21\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000037\"><\/a>The  Committee was persuaded that there was a very strong case for increasing the  penalties for online copyright infringement from two years to 10 years, so that  they were of the same severity as those for physical piracy. I know that the  Government are looking at that. We were very impressed when we visited the new  City of London police\u2019s IP crime unit. That is an encouraging innovation. It is  doing impressive work. However, there is a question about its long-term funding.  I hope that the Minister can give some indication of whether the Government see  it as a permanent part of our policing, with appropriate funding.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_22\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para22\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000038\"><\/a>I now  come to the final area that I want to discuss. I am sorry that the right hon.  Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) is not present, because he felt very strongly  about it. I understand that the severe flooding in the west country prevents him  from being with us. I am referring to education. It is obviously right that the  Government focus on the promotion of the so-called STEM subjects\u2014science,  technology, engineering and maths\u2014but, as the Minister knows, the debate is  about whether STEM should in fact be STEAM. In other words, arts should be part  of the core curriculum. I believe that the success of our creative industries is  an ample demonstration of why it is so much in our interests to make arts a core  part of the curriculum\u2014so that this country can continue to produce the  extraordinary talent that lies behind the success of all the industries that I  have talked about.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_23\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para23\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000039\"><\/a>I shall  not go on talking any longer. I thank the Minister for the response that he has  already given, but there are areas where we feel that he could go further, and I  hope that he might be willing to do so later this afternoon.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_11\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000040\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew10\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000293\"><\/a><strong><strong>Mrs Sharon Hodgson<\/strong> (Washington and Sunderland  West) (Lab):<\/strong> It is a pleasure to follow the Chairman of the Select  Committee, the hon. Member for Maldon (Mr Whittingdale). This is an excellent  report. I welcome the Select Committee\u2019s investigation of how we should best  support our creative economy. The hon. Gentleman made the case very well in his  opening speech.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_24\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para24\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000041\"><\/a>The UK\u2019s  creative industries are known worldwide for their cultural capacity to shape,  influence and inspire. As the hon. Gentleman covered in detail, the success of  the British film industry and the choice of this country as a location is a  great example of that, as is the British fashion industry. Our fashion designers  dominate the catwalks of London, Paris, New York and Milan; British musicians,  songwriters and composers top the charts and dominate the international  airwaves; and British architects and designers shape skylines and create beauty  all around the world. That is important for not just our international cultural  presence but the benefits to our economy.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_25\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para25\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000042\"><\/a>As we  have heard, Britain\u2019s creative industries account for more than 1.5 million jobs  and contribute more than \u00a370 billion to the economy. That should be all the  reason we need to know why it is imperative that we do everything possible  within our power to support such an increasingly crucial sector, and it is why  the report is right to address issues that affect it, such as the protection of  intellectual property, tax reliefs and education and skills.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_26\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para26\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000043\"><\/a>I chair  the all-party group on art, craft and design in education, which was set up to  champion high-quality and inclusive arts education in our schools. I therefore  particularly welcome the Select Committee\u2019s recommendation, as well as the  Secretary of State\u2019s intervention during her speech at the British Museum last  month, for STEM\u2014the focus on science, technology, engineering and mathematics\u2014to  be expanded to STEAM, as we just heard from the Chair of the Select Committee,  to improve the status of arts education in our schools. That recommendation must  be supported, especially when there are concerns that changes being implemented  by the Department for Education\u2014such as those to discounting codes and the  exclusion of creative subjects in the gold-standard English baccalaureate  performance benchmark\u2014will turn off the talent tap for our creative industries,  so undermining their long-term development.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_27\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para27\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000044\"><\/a>If we  are to support and expand our creative industries, that must be through not just  reforms to public funding and protection of intellectual property, as the report  calls for, but investment in the future work force by ensuring that children not  only have access to high-quality, inclusive arts education, but are positively  encouraged and supported to develop their skills.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_12\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000045\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew11\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000294\"><\/a><strong><strong>Damian Collins<\/strong> (Folkestone and Hythe)  (Con):<\/strong> It is said that many students who attend private schools have the  opportunity to develop greatly their artistic talent and flair through their  longer school day and study periods. Does the hon. Lady agree with the Secretary  of State for Education that we should consider extending the school day to give  more young people the opportunity to study the arts and creativity as part of  their everyday studies?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_13\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000046\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew12\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000295\"><\/a><strong>Mrs Hodgson:<\/strong> I will come on to the difference  between the state and the independent sector later in my speech, but I agree  that there is room to extend the school day from, say, 8 am until 6 pm,  especially with regard to child care. During that extra time, children can  obviously be doing all the extra-curricular stuff that is available in the  independent sector. That would be ideal, but the issue is how that is funded and  who pays. We know that&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">some schools currently offer extra-curricular lessons in music and other  things, but they must be paid for. The divide is between who can and who cannot  pay. Nevertheless, we should definitely debate and explore that idea  further.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_28\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para28\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000047\"><\/a>Although  the traditional subjects of English, maths and the sciences are and will always  be important, so that young people are numerically and scientifically literate  in the 21st century, it is also important that young people are creatively and  culturally literate. As we have heard, the gaming industry is a perfect example  of where both the traditional and the creative can be merged to create  competitively skilled employees.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_29\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para29\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000048\"><\/a>At this  point, I should declare an indirect interest as the mother of a young man  currently at Teesside university studying computer games art, having done  precursor courses at Gateshead college. According to figures cited in the Select  Committee\u2019s report, the boxed and digital UK video game retail market was worth  almost \u00a33 billion in 2011, so I hope that he is going into a thriving industry  and will get a job after all his studies.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_30\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para30\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000049\"><\/a>Web-based games such as \u201cMoshi Monsters\u201d and \u201cRuneScape\u201d  have more than 100 million registered users between them. With two out of every  three households playing video games\u2014a number that I am sure will keep rising as  they become an ever more pervasive feature of smartphones\u2014it is an industry  booming like never before, and it is crucial that our education system is geared  towards creating the pioneers of tomorrow, including my son, I hope.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_31\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para31\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000050\"><\/a>It is  right that future games developers should be competent in maths and the  sciences, and I welcome the introduction of computing to the English  baccalaureate, to allow young people to become literate in coding from an  earlier age, but we must remember the important creative aspects of the gaming  industry such as drawing and design skills. Hence the title of my son\u2019s course:  games art. Those skills have created such British successes as  \u201cLittleBigPlanet\u201d, \u201cTomb Raider\u201d and \u201cGrand Theft Audio\u201d, as we heard from the  Chairman of the Select Committee. The most recent edition of \u201cGrand Theft Auto\u201d  has sold more than 30 million copies worldwide.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_32\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para32\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000051\"><\/a>The  value of creative subjects lies not only directly in supporting the creative  industries, but in imparting the soft skills that benefit young people for  employment in other sectors. That is precisely what we mean by a rounded  education. As Josie Barnard, senior lecturer in creative writing at Middlesex  university, said in evidence to the Select Committee:<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cStudents who are taught creative writing are taught creative  thinking.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_33\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para33\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000052\"><\/a>That  could be said of all creative subjects, from drama and art to music, all of  which involve problem solving and the importance of practice, providing young  people with the ability and confidence to overcome situations in the workplace  creatively.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_34\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para34\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000053\"><\/a>Despite  all that, reforms implemented by the Department for Education over the past  three years have made access to creative subjects harder for young people.  According to the Cultural Learning Alliance, the impact of those changes is  already being felt, with art GCSE take-up declining by 14% between 2010 and  2013, while geography take-up has risen by 15%. We cannot fail to be cognisant  of the effects that the reforms are having.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_35\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para35\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000054\"><\/a>One of  those reforms involves changes to discounting codes, so that subjects such as  fine art and photography will be credited as just one GCSE rather than two in  the school league tables, even though they have different teaching pathways and  practices and distinct teacher specialisms. How is that fair, when pupils are  encouraged to take multiple sciences, humanities or languages, with good reason?  We would find it absurd to restrict a child by discounting French and German or  chemistry and physics, so why do we accept discrimination against creative  subjects?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_36\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para36\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000055\"><\/a>The  impact of that discrimination is that schools are pressured to deter or even  prevent students from doing similar creative subjects, not to impact their  league table status. Alongside that has been the introduction of the English  baccalaureate as the gold standard performance measure for schools, which has  further compounded the focus on the traditional subjects of maths, science and  geography, rather than on the creative subjects, to maintain or increase ranking  in the school league tables.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_37\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para37\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000056\"><\/a>In a  recent letter to Rachel Payne, senior lecturer in education and media at Oxford  Brookes university, the Department for Education stated that it<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201crecognises that the arts form an integral part of children\u2019s  development and believes that every child should experience a high-quality arts  education throughout their time at school\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_38\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para38\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000057\"><\/a>That  prompts the question: why is the Department knowingly and deliberately  undermining creativity in our schools? That is not an unsubstantiated criticism.  Recent research by Ipsos MORI found that 27% of schools withdrew non-EBacc  subjects from their curriculum this academic year, and that art was one of the  most commonly withdrawn subjects, at 17%.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_39\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para39\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000058\"><\/a>Even the  Government\u2019s own figures have shown that the take-up of creative subjects  decreased in 2012, with design and technology down by 5.1% and art and design  down by 2.4% from the previous academic year, while others in the EBacc standard  have increased. That decline has rightly drawn criticism from the great and the  good of the cultural world. Martin Roth, director of the Victoria and Albert  Museum, was recently quoted as saying that<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cif subjects such as art, design, music, drama and dance are  pushed out of the curriculum, Britain\u2019s creative economy will be destroyed  within a generation.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_40\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para40\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000059\"><\/a>That is  quite a strong statement. Vikki Heywood, chair of the Royal Society of Arts,  described the reforms as \u201chalf-baked\u201d and warned that they will be detrimental  to the potential of our creative industries.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_41\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para41\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000060\"><\/a>Last  November, the inaugural art party conference in Scarborough, organised by Bob  and Roberta Smith, was held purely as a reaction to the DFE\u2019s changes. It aimed  to promote and celebrate art by providing a forum for discussing the future of  art in the UK. That conference brought together organisations, such as the  National Society for Art and Design in Education, the Art Fund and the Cultural  Learning Alliance.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_42\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para42\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000061\"><\/a>Not only  will including art within STEM allow children and young people to gain creative  skills, to be dynamic players in the labour market, but it will allow young  people from poorer backgrounds to experience the vast array of culture that this  country has to offer, and even to have the opportunity to shape our national  culture.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_43\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para43\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000062\"><\/a>I raised  this matter in correspondence with the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and  Sport late last year, citing concerns that the National Youth Orchestra has&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">been criticised for recruiting extensively from the independent school  sector. This brings me to the point made by the hon. Member for Folkestone and  Hythe (Damian Collins) some moments ago. This is not a criticism of the National  Youth Orchestra, as all it is doing is recruiting the most talented kids, but  this is a shocking indictment of the lack of opportunity and encouragement in  our education system for involvement and progression in the arts. The  independent sector, rightly, values such involvement highly and, of course,  funds it.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_44\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para44\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000063\"><\/a>Of  course, this lack of involvement severely reduces diversity in our cultural  sector. That was raised recently by Stephen McGann, who spoke about how young  people from working class backgrounds struggle to enter the acting profession,  owing to a preference for those in the independent sector who have had access to  high-quality drama teaching throughout their school lives.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_45\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para45\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000064\"><\/a>If the  Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport is not successful in her  campaign to change STEM to STEAM in the eyes of the Secretary of State for  Education, the trend in downgrading arts education will continue and a two-tier  system will be created, where arts and design subjects are seen as inferior to  the traditional subjects, particularly in the state sector.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_14\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000065\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew13\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000296\"><\/a><strong>Damian Collins:<\/strong> Perhaps the hon. Lady is using  too broad a brush. There are many excellent schools in the state sector. I  highlight Brockhill Park school for the performing arts, in particular, which is  a comprehensive school in my constituency with an outstanding record in the arts  and in getting young people passionate and excited about them. There are many  great successes across the state sector, still.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_15\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000066\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew14\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000297\"><\/a><strong>Mrs Hodgson:<\/strong> I agree. We can all highlight the  exceptional state school that is really good at music, drama or dance, but  regarding the majority, the figures speak for themselves. These subjects are  being dropped, and in the teaching profession numbers are dropping in initial  teacher training for arts and drama teachers. We have to look at this long term.  In the short term, we will not see any damage, but if this trend continued in  the long term, I definitely believe that we would.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_46\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para46\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000067\"><\/a>If we  are to have high-quality, inclusive arts education, we must have highly  qualified teachers. However, there are concerns about the numbers of qualified  art and design teachers entering the state system, with just 350 initial teacher  education places allocated for art and design teachers in this academic year,  compared with just short of 600 in 2009, which is much fewer than the vast  majority of other subjects. To respond to the hon. Gentleman\u2019s intervention,  those figures show the decline. This is further proof that the Government and  the Secretary of State for Education are marginalising creativity, because they  regard creative subjects as soft and do not value the opportunities that  studying these subjects can bring, and that is why I hope that the Minister can  assure current and future parents that their child will be taught to a high  standard by a professional teacher who knows how to do it, especially in  subjects that not only fill their minds but feed their souls.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_47\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para47\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000068\"><\/a>If we  are to maintain our cultural importance around the world and the creative power  of UK plc and, in addition, create a diverse cultural sector made up of&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">people from all walks of life\u2014not just as contributors, but as consumers as  well\u2014we must invest in high-quality, inclusive arts education and allow children  to find and develop their talents or simply express themselves through the  various artistic mediums available. If not, where will we find the next Julie  Walters or Idris Elba\u2014not from our state sector?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_48\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para48\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000069\"><\/a>If we do  not give children the opportunities to creatively express themselves, we will  end up jeopardising recent growth and the substantial economic input from our  creative industries, owing to a weakened and depleted creative labour market  and, indeed, lessened patronage of creative works from a generation who have  never been inspired.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_49\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para49\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000070\"><\/a>The  creative subjects feed our soul, so reminding us of the creative capacity of  humanity. Why do we all love to listen to music, visit art galleries and see a  play or a musical, a ballet or an opera? Because they move us in ways that  nothing else can and connect us to our deepest emotions. I hope, therefore, that  the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport and this excellent Select  Committee report prevail over her Cabinet colleagues on the issue and that the  Government take seriously the Committee\u2019s many other recommendations.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_16\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000071\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew15\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000298\"><\/a><strong><strong>Nigel Adams<\/strong> (Selby and Ainsty) (Con):<\/strong> I  commend my hon. Friend the Member for Maldon (Mr Whittingdale) on his work as  Chair of the Culture, Media and Sport Committee, and on a brilliant and powerful  speech on the need for Government to provide adequate support to our creative  industries. I shall keep my remarks brief, because many Members want to  speak.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_50\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para50\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000072\"><\/a>Although  the UK\u2019s creative industries, as we have heard, enjoy a pre-eminent position in  the world, we must not be complacent. For that reason, I welcome many of the  recommendations made by the Select Committee in its excellent report. In  particular, I welcome suggestions that the Intellectual Property Office should  become a more powerful champion for the creative industries and play a greater  role in educating consumers on the value of intellectual property. The  importance of a strong and secure rights regime to the success of our creative  industries should not be underestimated. Where is the incentive, for example,  for a songwriter, composer, or software developer to create content if their  work can effectively be stolen online?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_51\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para51\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000073\"><\/a>I note  that the Government, in their response to the Committee\u2019s report, provide  evidence that many people still remain unsure about the legal status of the  sites they access. I agree that that evidence is very clear. In fact, Ofcom  commissioned research on copyright infringement that suggested that almost half  of all users cannot confidently identify whether the online content that they  download, stream or share is legal. In a YouGov survey last year, more than  2,000 UK adults were asked to differentiate illegal websites from legitimate  retail sites; more than a third of parents were unable to spot pirate websites  for music, film and TV content.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_52\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para52\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000074\"><\/a>I am  delighted that the Prime Minister has shown great interest in the issue and has  appointed an IP adviser, my hon. Friend the Member for Hove (Mike  Weatherley).<\/p>\n<p><strong style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">Mrs Hodgson:<\/strong><span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\"> Jolly good man.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_18\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000076\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew17\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000300\"><\/a><strong>Nigel Adams:<\/strong> Yes, he is a jolly good chap.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_19\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000077\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew18\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000301\"><\/a><strong><strong>Paul Farrelly<\/strong> (Newcastle-under-Lyme)  (Lab):<\/strong> Is he here?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_20\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000078\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew19\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000302\"><\/a><strong>Nigel Adams:<\/strong> I cannot spot him in the Chamber  today, but I understand that he has a meeting with representatives of the music  industry, so I am sure that he is doing great work on our behalf.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_53\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para53\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000079\"><\/a>There is  much important work going on to improve awareness of the importance of IP. I  welcome the recent launch of a joint IPO and UK Music game, which educates young  people about copyright in a fun and interesting way. I understand that the IPO\u2019s  karaoke shower is continuing its live tour of the UK and promoting the  importance of IP, and that is very welcome. Through the Alliance for  Intellectual Property, the industry has developed a content map, which allows  users to check which services are licensed. Signposting and nudging consumers in  the right direction is sensible, but we need further action to ensure that our  creators are properly rewarded.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_54\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para54\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000080\"><\/a>Those  are all positive steps forward, but education will not tackle illegal content if  it is not accompanied by mechanisms to ensure that consumers are able to make  the right choices about where to get their content. Earlier this week, I and  other colleagues here today were presented with a proposal from PRS for Music  for an IP traffic light system for online content. That system would provide  consumers with clear and visible indicators that would allow them to determine  easily whether a website provided illegal or legal content before they entered  the site. The merits of such a system are clear, and importantly, it would  tackle the root of the problem, which is consumer confusion, while cutting off  the traffic to illegal sites, and the revenues collected from advertising on  them. In fact, in a survey by Harris, 91% of online downloaders said that they  would welcome the introduction of a traffic light system to aid understanding of  which sites were legal.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_55\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para55\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000081\"><\/a>I  encourage technology companies to work more closely with the creative industries  to find a way of delivering such a system. The company whiteBULLET, which  received a grant from the Intellectual Property Office, has being doing good  work in that space, but more support should be encouraged. A signal today from  our excellent Minister that he backs the principle behind the traffic light  system, along with a commitment to support it going forward, would be  welcome.<\/p>\n<h5><strong style=\"font-size: 12px; line-height: 1.3em;\"><strong>Paul Farrelly<\/strong> (Newcastle-under-Lyme)  (Lab):<\/strong><span style=\"font-size: 12px; line-height: 1.3em;\"> <span style=\"font-weight: normal;\">We are well used to Governments of all colours responding to Select  Committee reports by saying that they take issue only with 10 out of 100 of the  Committee\u2019s recommendations and agree with the remaining 90. Usually, of course,  those are the 90 places in which the report has agreed with the Government in  the first place. The Government\u2019s response to this report is firmly in that  mould, and there is a general feeling on the Committee that it is perhaps the  most disappointing response we have yet had from the Government to a major  report. I do not blame the Minister for that; we have love and respect for  him.<\/span><\/span><\/h5>\n<p><span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">On all  fronts, the response shows a determination to plough on regardless. All too  often, such a determination is justified loosely by a wry reference to a  previous Administration, either because the recommendation has cropped up before  but was not, for whatever reason, pursued by the previous Government\u2014that is the  case with the sensible proposal to equalise penalties for copyright theft in the  online and physical worlds\u2014or because, as in the case of the private copying  exception, the recommendation follows a course that was endorsed before 2010,  but the then Government did not get round to implementing the proposal.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_57\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para57\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000084\"><\/a>The  impression from the response is that it is the first time in the history of the  coalition Government that the previous Labour Government have been accorded the  accolade of omniscience. It appears, for the first time, that we could do no  policy wrong. But of course what is right or wrong is what suits the present,  not the past, not least when digital technology and services are moving so  quickly that they can often render a policy redundant, harmful or both.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_58\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para58\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000085\"><\/a>In my  short contribution I want to focus on two areas that are central to our inquiry:  intellectual property and copyright, and education, which is so important to the  strength of the industries. That strength is recognised worldwide. Just a  fortnight ago I attended a discussion with the CBI and its German counterpart,  the Federation of German Industries, which was held at the instigation of the  German embassy. The federation\u2019s director-general, Dr Markus Kerber, made the  point that although Britain might be envious of Germany\u2019s car makers, its  household electricals manufacturing and its engineering prowess in general, we  should realise that there is the same envy and appreciation in Germany of our  creative industries\u2014music, film, video games, and general digital and online UK  consumer and business services. Our report cites a legion of statistics about  how important the creative industries are to the economy, and ahead of this  debate such statistics have been coming in thick and fast. I will not repeat  them all, for lack of time.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_59\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para59\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000086\"><\/a>Central  to the submissions from the creative industries, during the inquiry and since,  is the importance of copyright and of having a strong framework of intellectual  property law and enforcement. That is the bedrock on which those industries\u2019  success stands, and if we tinker with the framework rashly, we will weaken those  foundations. Having heard the evidence, our Committee, in the report, takes  issue with the direction of travel of the Hargreaves review in general\u2014quite  frankly, its quantification of the so-called benefits of relaxing copyright law  simply vanish under the slightest scrutiny\u2014and questions the effect of the  proposed copyright exceptions in particular.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_60\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para60\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000087\"><\/a>In our  conclusions, we agree with the creative industries that too often the changes  seem to be driven by the commercial interests of digital technology giants. They  were invariably American, and chief among them was Google. That company, as we  have heard from the Chairman of the Committee, clearly does some good works. It  has opened up the worldwide web, through YouTube in particular, an outlet that  is much used by new talent. However, we must remember that like all those  American digital giants, it goes to extraordinary lengths to avoid UK taxes, and  indeed those of its own country and every other.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">In their  response, the Government highlighted the role of the Under-Secretary of State  for Intellectual Property, Lord Younger, as the UK\u2019s IP champion and guardian of  our creative interests. The hon. Member for Selby and Ainsty (Nigel Adams)  referred to the Prime Minister\u2019s new IP tsar\u2014that is my description\u2014the hon.  Member for Hove (Mike Weatherley). There is still no Liberal Democrat even on  the fringes of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_62\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para62\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000089\"><\/a>It is  worth repeating what the Minister, Viscount Younger, told us in his evidence. As  stated in paragraph 52 of our report, he said:<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cGoogle is one of several search engines, and I am very aware  of their power, put it that way. I am also very aware, I think, that they have  access, for whatever reason, to higher levels than me in No. 10\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_63\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para63\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000090\"><\/a>The  industry\u2019s concern about that influence does not stop at our shores. I will  quote from a recent submission to us from the BPI, which represents the music  industry. It is worried not only about the Government pressing ahead with their  copyright exceptions in the UK, but Europe doing so under the EU\u2019s copyright  directive. It said:<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cThe UK has, for reasons the BPI doesn\u2019t fully understand,  achieved for itself a reputation in Europe as being hostile to copyright. This  is despite the UK being one of the European economies that gains most from the  creation of copyright content and has most to lose from hostile attacks on the  copyright regime.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_64\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para64\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000091\"><\/a>It is  time for the UK Government to act to dispel that reputation, and I hope the  Minister will give us some comfort when he responds.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_65\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para65\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000092\"><\/a>I will  conclude with a few words about education, skills and training. On the education  front, since 2010, there has been a history of repeated corrective actions.  Whenever a light bulb goes off in the Secretary of State for Education\u2019s head  when he is in the bath, humming \u201cJerusalem\u201d and mentally chiselling his epitaph  for when he is in the Elysian fields, we have to take action to try to correct  what he is doing. I will give a recent example. It has not had much coverage  here, but it was important to those involved. It involves Japanese, the language  of manga comics and of \u201cMy Neighbor Totoro\u201d, which is perhaps the finest and  most enchanting children\u2019s animation of recent times.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_66\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para66\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000093\"><\/a>You may  be surprised, Mr Benton, to learn that quite a number of primary schools around  the country teach Japanese. They tend to be clustered around factories, such as  Toyota in Derby, where there is a lot of Japanese-related employment. Those  schools do not have to teach Japanese. It is not statutory, but voluntary, and  they should be commended for teaching any language. However, that was not good  enough for our Secretary of State for Education, who is always on manoeuvres.  Last year, he published a list of recommended languages for those primary  schools. It included, of course, the ancients, German and French, but it did not  include Japanese, so at a stroke, those schools felt that they were being  discouraged from teaching Japanese. There was also the small matter of including  Mandarin, and the resulting diplomatic incident. After concerted pressure, the  Secretary of State was forced to change his mind. He may zig and occasionally  zag, but he often returns to his same true course; it is veritably an exercise  in constant vigilance.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_67\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para67\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000094\"><\/a>The  creative industries\u2019 concern starts with the Secretary of State\u2019s focus on the  STEM subjects; he gives little place to the arts. After much concerted  campaigning,&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">the Government changed some of the plans for the curriculum. There have been  changes to the EBacc, but the continuing concern is that schools will still  encourage pupils to opt for what they believe they are being measured on most  strongly, and that de facto choice is being driven out of the curriculum,  leading to an ongoing downgrading, as we have heard, of the arts, design and  technology of computing in the state curriculum, but not the private sector. The  industry fears that that will lead to further narrowing of the social background  of those in our creative industries, making it more dominant in the products of  some of our excellent private schools.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_68\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para68\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000095\"><\/a>I urge  the Minister and the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport to join us  in our eternal vigil, and to give us comfort on the arguments that have been  forcefully made on the importance of maintaining a robust, strong copyright  framework, and of enforcement, which have been the bedrock of the success of our  creative industries.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew21\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000304\"><\/a><strong><strong>Angie Bray<\/strong> (Ealing Central and Acton)  (Con):<\/strong> The debate is important. It is clear that we need this opportunity to  discuss the Government\u2019s response to the Select Committee\u2019s report on the shape  of the creative industries in the UK. Our recommendations focus on how we can  harness our extraordinary success and growth in the field, while ensuring that  that welcome development is not compromised by any failure to tackle crucial  issues such as copyright infringement. The UK has cemented its reputation in  recent years as a leading light in the creative world, a place where talent in  the creative industries is nurtured and allowed to develop and thrive, backed up  by wide-ranging financial support and a sympathetic tax system. As a result, we  are a destination on the film-maker\u2019s map. We are a place to go to make films,  where a director can come from abroad with the smallest of crews, because he or  she can call on superb local technical talent to direct and produce, and where  he or she can source some of the finest acting and musical talent. All that  creative skill, know-how and nous boosts the Treasury\u2019s coffers by nearly \u00a340  billion a year.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_69\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para69\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000096\"><\/a>I am  lucky and proud to have a fantastic example of the recent renewed success of our  creative economy on my doorstep in Ealing studios, the world\u2019s best known and  oldest continuously running film production studios. They showcase great British  talent with, among other things, some of the \u201cDownton Abbey\u201d sets and the  stunning Imaginarium studios, which use performance capture technology under the  direction of one of our best exports, Andy Serkis. The Chancellor of the  Exchequer recently paid a visit to see for himself the success story sitting at  the heart of Ealing. He was keen to find out that the view of what the Treasury  is doing is positive, and it is. The message that he got was that the film tax  relief, the extension of which he announced in the autumn statement, is turning  the UK into one of the most popular film locations.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_70\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para70\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000097\"><\/a>The  Select Committee had in mind the question of what more might be done when we  took the fascinating evidence sessions for our report on the creative economy.  We carried out work here in London and on our Committee trip to the United  States. The aim throughout was to get to the bottom of how we might best protect  the livelihoods&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">of the people and businesses that make such a massive contribution to our  economy, and how we might help them to grow still further.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_71\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para71\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000098\"><\/a>Several  of the issues that we raised in our report stand out as being particularly  important for the growth of our creative industries. The most significant, as  other hon. Members have said, is the need to stand up for intellectual property  rights in an ever-changing and increasingly challenging environment. The modern  internet dictates most people\u2019s daily movements, and it is all about accessing  as much information as possible and sharing it as easily as possible. If proper  protections are not put in place for those who create, we will not get much more  creation. As those protections get weaker, the chances of proper recompense  diminish, which is a hardly an incentive to carry on creating. A critical  balance must be found and maintained between free access and property rights,  but the Government\u2019s feedback on our report is not encouraging on that  point.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_72\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para72\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000099\"><\/a>That  difficult subject provided the basis of our discussions when we visited film  studios in Los Angeles, which are also battling with issues relating to copying  and piracy. Whenever technology moves on, piracy moves with it, and it is always  a problem. Creators need certainty that the Government will protect the  principle that the right people must be rewarded properly. The danger, as I  think is apparent in the Government\u2019s response, is that standards may slip. For  instance, when we met the chief executive of Fox, he spoke about his concern  over plans to legalise the copying of audio-visual material on to other formats,  which is illegal at the moment but everyone does it. Organisations such as Fox  are well aware of that, but they choose to do very little about it, essentially  because it is too difficult. He underlined the point that any change in the law  that recognises the right to copy would be a slippery slope. That law may be  rarely applied, but it serves an important purpose in limiting abuse. Meanwhile,  he and others are working on legal mechanisms that would allow copying on to  different formats but would still allow due financial reward for the creators.  Unfortunately, the Government\u2019s response suggests that they have no intention of  listening to that message.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_73\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para73\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000100\"><\/a>The name  that always crops up in debates such as this is Google, as we have heard today.  I wonder whether there is anyone here who does not spend a great deal of their  time using Google to find any amount of easy-to-access information. There is a  darker side, however, which is a major concern to those who worry about  intellectual property rights. In providing easy-to-access information for  nothing, Google\u2019s search engine can take users through to sites that breach  copyright regulations. Google told us that, wherever possible, it takes such  offending sites down. It is hampered, however, by the many millions of pages  that must be trawled through. The BPI alone sends Google well in excess of 2  million notices per month relating to individual pages on sites guilty of  copyright infringement. Again, Google says that in many cases the pages are  contained on sites that otherwise host legal content, making it difficult to  take action. My view and that of my colleagues on the Select Committee is that  that is a pretty flimsy excuse. It is not beyond the wit of Google and its  engineers to devise proper solutions. It can certainly afford to do so.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_22\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000101\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew22\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000305\"><\/a><strong><strong>Helen Goodman<\/strong> (Bishop Auckland) (Lab):<\/strong> The  hon. Lady makes a good point. When sites are found by the&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">courts to be providing material that has not been paid for, Google is able to  take action. Does that not demonstrate that it has the technological capacity to  which she is referring?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_23\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000102\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew23\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000306\"><\/a><strong>Angie Bray:<\/strong> The hon. Lady makes a reasonable  point, and I tend to agree with her.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_74\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para74\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000103\"><\/a>There  are many ways in which to provide a balance to help everyone. The Hargreaves  report recommended the establishment of a digital copyright exchange, which got  expanded into a copyright hub, set up in July 2013. The key point about it is  that anyone may access it online to find out anything about the complexities of  copyright and about who owns what rights. The idea was also to make licensing  arrangements easier with a one-stop shop.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_75\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para75\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000104\"><\/a>Our  Committee has made plain its firm support for the establishment of a global  repertoire database, based in the UK, making us a global centre for copyright  exchanges. We remain of the view, however, that participation in a copyright  exchange should preferably be voluntary.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_76\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para76\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000105\"><\/a>It would  be childish of me not to mention some areas in which the Government are showing  a remarkable and positive lead in promoting and nurturing our home-grown  creative industries. As I said earlier, the Chancellor has demonstrated his  commitment and delighted the film and vision-effects industries with another  dollop of tax relief, meaning that big-budget productions will get the same 25%  tax relief that smaller firms already enjoy for the first \u00a320 million that they  spend. He has also widened the criteria for those who can apply for the  relief.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_77\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para77\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000106\"><\/a>All that  is a huge encouragement to film makers to make their movies in the UK, thereby  investing often considerable sums here. It is clear that such relief easily more  than pays for itself. Other beneficiaries of the new points system, which will  adjudicate the recipients, will be those who work in special and visual effects,  again where the UK excels. We look forward to the Government\u2019s introducing video  games tax relief as soon as possible as well.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_78\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para78\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000107\"><\/a>By the  way, an interesting suggestion was put to us by Fox as a way of illustrating the  economic value to countries and local communities of providing locations for  film production. The idea would be to include in the opening credits of films  some brief information about the economic benefits and job opportunities as a  consequence of the film being made in a given location.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_79\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para79\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000108\"><\/a>The  Committee has expressed concerns, as we have heard repeatedly this afternoon,  about the downgrading of arts subjects in the curriculum, although the  Government have responded by stating that a key measurement of a school\u2019s  performance will continue to include art, design and music. I agree with my hon.  Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe (Damian Collins), who suggested that  extending school hours would provide an opportunity for schools, which are  perhaps sending children home at 3 o\u2019clock in the afternoon, to introduce more  arts, drama and music.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_80\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para80\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000109\"><\/a>I put on  record that one of my local schools, Twyford, has an excellent record in music.  Indeed, I saw some of its members playing with the English Chamber Orchestra  only last night. Some state schools still take arts and music seriously, but I  want to see longer hours meaning that there is more opportunity, because we have  to&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">widen such opportunities. I have noticed recently that people have noted the  fact that so many public school people are becoming the big names as actors and  actresses, because they get the drama opportunities.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_24\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000110\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew24\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000307\"><\/a><strong>Mrs Hodgson:<\/strong> As I said earlier, I agree, but my  concern is the funding for all the extra-curricular lessons and opportunities.  Some of the necessary items, such as a musical instrument, are outside the reach  of a lot of children. What solutions does the hon. Lady suggest to ensure  equality, so that all children get those opportunities?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew25\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000308\"><\/a><strong>Angie Bray:<\/strong> I can assure the hon. Lady that last  night all the children playing in the orchestra had their violins and cellos  with them. Obviously, there must be access to musical instruments, and in the  case of Twyford, there certainly is. We need to work that out. First, we need  everyone to agree that we are going to have those longer hours. We must then  ensure that we make the best use of them to build the skills base.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_25\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000111\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew26\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000309\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> Surely my hon. Friend, in welcoming  many of the Government\u2019s initiatives, will welcome the funding of music  education by the Secretary of State for Education. He ring-fenced \u00a3170 million  for music education. He has also provided financial support for the national  plan for cultural education.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_26\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000112\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew27\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000310\"><\/a><strong>Angie Bray:<\/strong> I certainly do. I hope that music  money will be spent wisely because, as someone who studied music, I am keen to  ensure that nobody loses the opportunity to build their skills base, which is  important for the country.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_27\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000113\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew28\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000311\"><\/a><strong>Mrs Hodgson:<\/strong> Does the hon. Lady share my concern  about the discount codes? Although children might still be allowed to take  creative GCSE subjects, some schools may have a perverse incentive to deter  children from taking multiple GCSEs in creative subjects because they are  discounted on the league tables.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_28\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000114\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew29\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000312\"><\/a><strong>Angie Bray:<\/strong> I am most concerned to ensure that we  make full use of those longer hours for the arts.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_81\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para81\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000115\"><\/a>Our  report welcomes the greater focus on computing in schools as part of the digital  age. There is no doubt that our video games and special effects industries will  flourish even more with a new generation of creatives who have the highest level  of IT and programming skills. We have a number of universities that are building  a global reputation for media production, including Bournemouth university and  the well-thought-of course at my local university of West London. We were given  a strong impression on our trip to Los Angeles that, tax relief aside, the UK is  such an appealing location for film making because the skills base is already  available here. We need to build on that success story.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_29\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000116\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew30\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000313\"><\/a><strong><strong>Kerry McCarthy<\/strong> (Bristol East) (Lab):<\/strong> As  ever, it is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Benton. I congratulate the  Committee on its excellent and timely report. The Chair of the Committee has  given a thorough account of the many issues covered in the report. I apologise  in advance for focusing, perhaps in tedious detail, on one specific issue, but I  think it is important to get my views on the record. The private copying  exception, which the&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">Government are due to introduce soon, has already been mentioned by a couple  of other speakers. The exception remains a considerable concern to musicians and  other performers working in the creative industries, but it has not been much  discussed in the Commons; it has been discussed more in the other place. As a  result of the Committee\u2019s findings, I hope that there might be a change from the  draft version presented for technical review last year, as there will be no  opportunity to improve the exception once it is introduced under the affirmative  procedure.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_82\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para82\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000117\"><\/a>The  Committee adopts the Department\u2019s definition of the creative industries:<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cthose industries which have their origin in individual  creativity, skill and talent and which have a potential for wealth and job  creation through the generation and exploitation of intellectual property\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_83\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para83\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000118\"><\/a>In some  circles, \u201cintellectual property\u201d has almost become a dirty word. There are  people who evangelise that content ought to be freely available to anyone who  wants to listen to it. Why should true music lovers have to pay for music? That  is fine for consumers, but it is not so good for people who have expended time,  effort and money to produce that work. I have always been baffled that people do  not equate someone\u2019s labour and input into artistic work with labour, time and  money spent on producing something more tangible and less easily shared. IP and  copyright are important. They allow musicians and artists to derive an income  from their creativity and provide the basis for investment in one of the  fastest-growing sectors of the economy. The CBI forecasts that the industry will  play an even bigger role in our economy in the coming years.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_84\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para84\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000119\"><\/a>The  current working environment in the entertainment industry is one of worsening  levels of pay, or indeed no pay at all, for many actors, musicians and writers.  Research by the Musicians Union demonstrates that more than half of professional  musicians work for less than \u00a320,000 a year and that 60% have worked for free  over the past year. Equity\u2019s most recent survey of members found that 9.6% earn  nothing from their work in the industry and more than 69% earn either nothing or  less than \u00a310,000 a year.<\/p>\n<p>The Performers Alliance all-party group published a report late last year,  and I declare an interest as its chair. \u201cWork Not Play\u201d sets out much more  extensively than I can today the current state of play and the appallingly low  pay in the industry. It is vital for us to get a grip on the situation, so that  work in the sector will not become the preserve of the amateur, or those who are  independently funded or from privileged backgrounds. It is also vital to the  future of new music and drama that artists should be able to survive  financially, and build sustainable careers.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_85\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para85\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000120\"><\/a>In the  environment that I have described, the loss of income from the right to be  compensated for the copying of one\u2019s work is significant. Artists are  increasingly dependent on micro-payments from collective licensing agreements,  and that is likely to increase. A few hundred extra pounds generated under a  fair compensation scheme for format shifting would be significant for an  individual musician or performer. The Government will argue that account is  already taken of that in the purchase price, but the Committee was not&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">convinced that a facility for private copying was factored into the purchase  price either of music or of devices to store, play or copy it.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_86\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para86\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000121\"><\/a>The  introduction of an exception without fair compensation would leave UK artists  worse off than their counterparts in 25 other EU countries. All 25 EU countries  that have introduced private copying exceptions have also included fair  compensation to rights holders by way of a small levy on certain hardware  products that allow copying. Those countries have introduced exceptions to  copyright granted under the European copyright directive, because they have  decided, in interpreting the directive, that copying would result in economic  harm to creators; so why is the UK, which has by far the biggest music scene of  all EU countries, taking a different view, as flagged up by my hon. Friend the  Member for Newcastle-under-Lyme (Paul Farrelly)? What discussions has the  Minister had with his EU counterparts about how the UK proposals will fit into  the framework being set by the other 25 countries?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_87\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para87\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000122\"><\/a>A  process of reform of the levy system across Europe, which compensates creators  for private copying of their work, is currently under way, and I fear that the  UK proposals have the potential to undermine that. I understand that a legal  opinion on how the private copying compensation system works in EU member states  is likely to be given days before the measure is expected to come into force in  the UK, although the Government currently have no plans to delay implementation.  Have the Government received representations from UK collecting societies such  as PPL, for British musicians, and the British Equity Collecting Society, for  actors, which collect revenues from private copying levies in other European  countries that operate such systems? I am concerned that what is happening is  likely to put the relationship under strain, especially at a time when other  European countries are already questioning the lack of reciprocity with the UK  on the collection of levy payments.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_88\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para88\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000123\"><\/a>Creators  feel strongly that they should benefit from income streams to which their work  gives value, when so much of the income generated by MP3 players, cloud storage  and so on is derived from the value that consumers see in the music and films  they hold on them. Research by UK Music shows that consumers ascribe between 32%  and 53% of the value of an MP3 player to its ability to copy music. There is a  need for balance between protecting creators\u2019 rights and not placing inhibitions  on innovation or on companies and technologies. People who work in the industry  think that the balance has gone too far towards the technology industries. In  her evidence to the Committee, Alison Wenham, chief executive of the Association  of Independent Music, said:<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cThis is an opportunity to license so that the value that is  created between industries can be shared and there is a balance of interests. At  the moment what we are seeing is a race to the technology industries taking the  value from the content industries, which would be a disaster for this country\u2019s  creativity at its root.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_89\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para89\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000124\"><\/a>It would  be good to hear from the Minister why the Government are not taking the  opportunity to compensate. I know from previous answers to written and oral  questions that the Government\u2019s argument is that private copying is factored  into the price charged at the point of sale, that the exception is narrowly  defined, and that economic harm would be minimal. The Minister nods, so I expect  that I shall hear that again today when he makes his response. In their response  to the Committee&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">inquiry, the Government said that the proposed private copying exception will  be the narrowest in Europe, but they have not provided sufficient evidence to  support that. I asked them in a written question last year to substantiate that  claim, and the answer referred to an out-of-date report more than six years old,  which suggested that only two countries have wider exceptions, while the scheme  in other EU countries was similar to that proposed for the UK.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>That was taken up in a debate in the other place in December. The Minister  with responsibility for intellectual property, Viscount Younger of Leckie, wrote  to participants in the debate following up on points that he did not have time  to answer, and it seems from that letter that the Government intend to make the  narrowest exception. However, the draft exception, which was open to technical  review last summer, was as wide as most European exceptions. If the exception is  not seen before it is laid before the House, there are concerns about whether  the intention to have a narrow exception will actually match the wording of the  legislation. Will the Minister commit to provide greater clarity to rights  holders before legislation is published? That is particularly true of whether  the exception will cover cloud services.<\/p>\n<p>It was encouraging to read in the Government\u2019s response to the Committee\u2019s  investigation that the private exception will not now cover cloud services. I  presume that the Government were persuaded by the Committee\u2019s findings and are  keen to address the Committee\u2019s serious concerns, including, for example, that  if the exception includes cloud services, it could<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cmutate into a new mechanism for illegal file-sharing, such  as a cyber locker\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_90\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para90\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000125\"><\/a>and  could make it more difficult to take enforcement action against illegal  downloading from the cloud. The Committee also concluded that a private copying  exception could harm the development of legal, subscription-based cloud  services, such as UltraViolet and iTunes, which are already emerging from  business-to-business deals in which rights holders are properly rewarded.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_91\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para91\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000126\"><\/a>As with  iPods and other devices, musicians and rights holders in film and television  feel that they should be able to gain some value from these income streams,  because part of the service that they offer consumers, and the money that they  generate, is around providing greater convenience when listening to music or  playing films. Cloud services are likely to grow in use and are a potential  replacement for current methods of storage and delivery. Andy Heath, chair of UK  Music, expressed that in strong terms to the Committee when he said that<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cApple and Google are not creating Cloud storage lockers for  fun. They are doing it for immense profit. It is another brick in their  moneymaking machine, and it is completely immoral for the transfer of the value  to occur without any level of compensation.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_92\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para92\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000127\"><\/a>In their  response to the Committee, the Government said that cloud-based music services  such as iTunes Match and Amazon Cloud Player are out of scope, which was much  welcomed, but that cloud-based storage is within scope. I and others are not  aware of any cloud-based storage facility, which include Dropbox and Google  Docs, that does not allow an element of sharing. If it is to be the narrowest  exception in Europe, it surely cannot include facilities such as those? If they  are included, the concerns raised by the Committee still hold about how that  could<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cmutate into a new mechanism for illegal file-sharing, such  as a cyber locker\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_93\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para93\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000128\"><\/a>and  could have a significant impact on the ability to license value-added services,  such as the cloud. A music industry representative said to my office that<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cthe cloud is currently the biggest technological development  happening at the moment\u2026so for the Government to create uncertainty in this area  at this point before that market is fully realised and understood is not  helpful\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_94\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para94\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000129\"><\/a>I  appreciate that my points have been rather technical and detailed, so I suspect  that I know what the Minister\u2019s response will be today, but I would be pleased  if he wrote to me to address some of my concerns in more detail.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_30\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000130\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew31\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000314\"><\/a><strong><strong>Damian Collins<\/strong> (Folkestone and Hythe)  (Con):<\/strong> It always seems when we debate the creative economy that it falls at  a good time, because something interesting, exciting or dynamic is always  happening. That is particularly true now, as we have the BAFTA film awards,  where we anticipate British success, London fashion week, which has gone from  strength to strength as one of the major international fashion weeks, and the  BRIT awards, where British creativity and excellence is being celebrated. In the  nearly four years of this Parliament, we have had many debates on the creative  economy and industries. Warnings and concerns have often been raised, some of  which have been legitimate and some less so, but we always have these debates in  the context of increasing strength, popularity and ingenuity in the creative  industries nationally, regionally and locally.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_95\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para95\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000131\"><\/a>This  debate has seen considerable discussion about copyright and IP, so I do not  intend to dwell on them too much. Instead, I want to discuss the economic  development of the creative industries and, in particular, the role of tax  incentives for investment and of clustering, which was considered by the  Culture, Media and Sport Committee in its report.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_96\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para96\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000132\"><\/a>The  bedrock of the underlying strength of the UK\u2019s creative industries is Britain\u2019s  talent pool and unique heritage, as a recognised leading performer in music,  film, drama and arts over many years. Why businesses are coming to this country  and investing now has much to do with the tax regime that has been put in place.  The production tax credits for film, video games and high-end television drama  are bringing production to the UK, and it would not be unfair to say that those  industries\u2014in particular, film production and television production\u2014are booming  in this country. That is not only good for companies that work in that sector  directly, but for the great infrastructure\u2014the great web of businesses\u2014that also  rely on that investment. The post-production, including the sound production,  for a film shot at Pinewood studios would probably take place in Soho and use  the talents of a great number of people in that production process, from  technicians to musicians and artists, as well as actors.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_31\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000133\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew32\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000315\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> On that note, will my hon. Friend join  me in welcoming the advent of the new Industrial Light &amp; Magic base? ILM is  the special effects house that grew out of Lucasfilm and it is setting up its UK  base in Soho imminently to coincide with the imminent start of production of  \u201cStar Wars\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_32\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000134\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew33\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000316\"><\/a><strong>Damian Collins:<\/strong> The Minister gives an excellent  example of the sort of investment that the film industry and production industry  are bringing to this country. Of&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">course, as he will be aware, we anticipate success in the film awards this  year for \u201c12 Years A Slave\u201d, which of course is a film that Britain can be proud  of. It is based on a book published many years ago by Penguin. Writers involved  in the film industry are an important part of the talent mix. Whether the  writers of original scripts or writers who adapt books that have previously been  published, they are all part of the same ecosystem.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_97\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para97\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000135\"><\/a>When I  worked in the adverting industry, I was always impressed that Soho could draw on  the talents of such a broad base of people, which is why people from around the  world come to be here. A film company seeking to make a big feature film can  come to the UK and know that we have the facilities to make it and the talents  to complete the job at every level. That is what makes working in the creative  industry in the UK so exciting.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_98\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para98\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000136\"><\/a>The  development of creative centres of excellence, not only in London but around the  country, is an important part of the ecology of the creative economy and its  future success. We do not want our creative industries purely to be centred and  located in the traditional centres of excellence in London and the south-east;  we want to have a strong network of them right across the country. We can see  that happening now. Particularly with the investment in Media City at Salford  Quays and projects such as the Sharp Project, Manchester city council has come  together with members of the business community to create a hub for creativity  in that city. Such developments are helping to make Manchester the fastest  growing media city, or creative city, in Europe. In Birmingham, there is an  important and growing creative hub and community in Digbeth, and in Belfast,  around the Titanic centre and the Titanic quarter, near the old Harland and  Wolff shipyards, there is another important centre of the creative economy.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_99\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para99\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000137\"><\/a>Yesterday, I attended an event focused on the creative  industries in my constituency and the rest of east Kent, where we looked at the  development of creative and digital clusters around the east Kent coast,  particularly in Folkestone, Ramsgate and Canterbury. In my constituency of  Folkestone and Hythe,we now have more than 200 businesses that can be considered  as part of the creative technology economy, according to the Department for  Culture, Media and Sport\u2019s definition of that economy. It is a rapidly growing  sector employing a large number of people, and that growth is only accelerating  in the scope and range of the tasks that the sector is undertaking, as well as  in the number of opportunities for work that exist within the sector.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_100\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para100\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000138\"><\/a>One of  the challenges is how we link together these different centres of  excellence\u2014these different hubs and clusters\u2014and how we ensure that we have good  links, both through broadband infrastructure and transport infrastructure, that  connect the hubs in places such as east Kent to the centres of excellence in  Tech City in London and elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_101\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para101\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000139\"><\/a>Sleeping Giant Media is a search engine optimisation and  social media marketing campaign company based in Folkestone. A few years ago, it  was started from nothing and it now employs more than 20 people. There are many  reasons why such a company chooses to locate in Folkestone. The quality of life  in Folkestone and the low cost of doing business there will be among&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">them, but Folkestone is less than an hour by high-speed rail from one of the  world centres of excellence in the creative economy\u2014Tech City in London\u2014and that  is a key reason why those businesses are in Folkestone.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_102\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para102\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000140\"><\/a>Businesses in Digbeth in Birmingham, working in places  such as the Fazeley Studios and the Custard Factory, have a great place to do  business and a great community of people to work alongside, but it is their  proximity to a major global centre of excellent in London that makes it so  attractive to be there.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_103\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para103\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000141\"><\/a>We can  have the physical infrastructure and facilities to support an expanding creative  economy. The Select Committee underlines the importance of these hubs and  clusters. It was right that the Committee visited silicon valley as part of its  study tour, because that is a great example of a successful cluster that has  given birth to a number of great companies.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_104\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para104\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000142\"><\/a>It is  interesting that companies such as Facebook and Google have been born out of  research laboratories and facilities, not only of universities such as Stanford,  but our of precursor companies in that industry, such as Hewlett-Packard and  Xerox, the success of which spawned further companies. We hope that in London  new businesses will come out of our creative and digital economy as it develops,  in turn spawning the creation of further businesses down the line and employing  yet more people.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_105\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para105\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000143\"><\/a>The  Chancellor of the Exchequer set out his ambition that London should be the tech  hub and creative hub for Europe. We are well on the way to achieving that, if it  has not already been achieved. One key aspect of making that possible is  attracting businesses, investment and talent. We want to see as many people as  possible born in Britain taking advantage of the opportunities to work in such a  centre of excellence. We also need to ensure that we can bring in the best  talent from around the world. At the moment, the industry is growing apace, but  we do not currently have enough people to satisfy all the demand. Therefore,  having the right policy on visas that allows the most talented people to work in  the UK is a crucial issue facing development.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_106\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para106\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000144\"><\/a>Another  element of that development is ensuring that young people have the skills that  they need and the understanding to take part in this growing sector of the  economy. The importance of young people\u2019s having the opportunity to develop  their creative talents at a young age, when at school, through music and the  arts has been discussed in this debate. I do not believe that the Secretary of  State for Education\u2019s focus on some core academic subjects in any way undermines  that. People need good skills and qualifications in those core subjects to do  almost anything that they would seek to do; that is an important part of a good  education. There is no reason why creativity and artistic talent and flair  cannot form part of the curriculum. Schools can do that. A longer school day  will give schools many more options in pursuing that.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_107\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para107\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000145\"><\/a>There  are also uses for such talents in other sectors in the creative industry,  particularly for young people who might want to work in the video game sector.  We want a nation of young people who not only play video games, which are  increasingly made in this country and exported around the world, but know how to  build them. That is why bringing computer science into the science curriculum,  as an equal science alongside chemistry, physics and biology, is an important  step. We need more young people learning computer coding at school, so they&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">know the building blocks of computer programming and the creativity needed to  build websites, computer games and animation programmes. That should be an  important part of the curriculum.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_33\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000146\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew34\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000317\"><\/a><strong>Paul Farrelly:<\/strong> I recently went through GCSE  choices with my son and saw first hand how the school is being measured and how  it felt that it would be measured in future. Once the subjects of that  measurement are prescribed, there is a great limit on choice that drives  subjects such as computing out of being an effective choice.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_34\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000147\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew35\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000318\"><\/a><strong>Damian Collins:<\/strong> It note the hon. Gentleman\u2019s  point, but that is why I said that it is important that computer science is  given equal standing and equal weight, alongside other areas of the science  curriculum, as part of the core science subjects that young people can study.  However, we must also consider what people do a long time before they get to  GCSE choices. That is why code clubs in primary schools are important.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_108\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para108\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000148\"><\/a>I saw  Google run one of its code club projects at the Folkestone primary academy  school in my constituency, getting primary schoolchildren to learn basic  programming techniques, which is something that those of us who are old enough  to remember did on BBC Microcomputers and Spectrum computers back in the 1980s,  although advances in software render that sort of programming redundant.  Teaching coding is being brought back to young children of primary school age.  Code clubs can be part of extra-curricular activities, as part of a longer  school day, as well as being something that young people can do in evenings out  of school.<\/p>\n<h4>[Sandra Osborne <em>in the Chair<\/em>]<\/h4>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_109\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para109\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000149\"><\/a>In  Hackney, with the support of Tech City and businesses in that area, a concerted  effort is being made to take coding in particular into the schools that surround  the Tech City area, so that young people do not grow up just seeing the new  glass buildings and office blocks and understanding that people are working  there but never acquiring the skills to take advantage of the jobs that are  being created. It is very important that we focus on the educational element of  developing talent to work not only on the artistic and creative side of the  creative industries, but on the technical side, through coding and programme  writing and making.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_110\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para110\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000150\"><\/a>Another  important development that the Government are supporting through the Department  for Education is studio schools. In Folkestone, we are about to embark on a  project to create a new studio school with a focus on the creative industries,  where young people will not only learn subjects linked to the examinations that  they will take and the qualifications that they will gain, but do so in  conjunction with direct work experience as part of the ordinary school day.  Studio schools linked to creative businesses in the towns and cities that they  serve are an excellent way to provide that and are an important innovation,  alongside having more of an emphasis on creativity and creative skills as part  of the school curriculum.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_111\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para111\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000151\"><\/a>The  final point that I want to add to the debate about IP is this. I followed very  closely the argument made by the hon. Member for Bristol East (Kerry McCarthy)  in the speech before mine. With regard to private copying, we can look at Nick  Hornby\u2019s book \u201cHigh Fidelity\u201d and the film made of it. In some ways, that book  and&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">that film celebrate private copying. That is an important part of the story  in the book. It is something that everyone has done or certainly people who grew  up with records and cassettes have done. Probably everyone in this room has  breached copyright law by copying a record on to a cassette or by loading a CD  into a computer and copying the contents on to the hard drive. Each time, they  are infringing copyright. Some people may consider that once they have purchased  an item of music\u2014once they have paid the fee for it\u2014it is theirs to enjoy  personally. A change in the law that reflects something that is already  commonplace\u2014that people already do\u2014is not necessarily something that we should  be frightened of.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_112\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para112\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000152\"><\/a>I agree  with the hon. Lady, though, that when we get to a position where people can  share music, in particular, or film or another form of content through the cloud  and potentially with a wider audience, they are getting into a remit where they  are no longer privately copying but, either intentionally or unintentionally,  distributing content. That is a very different matter and something that we must  be very careful of. The hon. Lady is right to raise that important point.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_35\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000153\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew36\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000319\"><\/a><strong>Kerry McCarthy:<\/strong> May I make it clear that what I  suggested would not prevent people from copying things? It would just give the  musicians and other artists some compensation by putting an additional levy on  the devices that people would use to do that. Twenty-five other EU countries  have decided that that is the right way to go. I hope that the Minister will  explain just why the UK deserves different treatment.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_36\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000154\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew37\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000320\"><\/a><strong>Damian Collins:<\/strong> I understand the hon. Lady\u2019s  point. Of course, France has done what she describes for some time. Personally,  I think that it is a blunt tool and that the key is to ensure that we do not,  particularly as technology develops, make it easier for more people to  distribute things. We have talked about the role that search engines play in  taking people to sites where they can easily download music for free, in breach  of copyright rules. We should clamp down on that.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_113\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para113\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000155\"><\/a>We have  only to look at the predictive search result that comes up when someone types  the letters MP into Google. I did that earlier in the debate and the result was  for an MP3 converter site where people can download tracks from YouTube directly  on to their MP3 player. It is therefore right that we look at the various tools  that exist in the internet world and that make it easier for people to infringe  copyright. I believe that that is where our energies should lie. We should be  careful that a private copying exemption does not have the unintended  consequence of allowing people to distribute music through cloud systems such as  Dropbox, as the hon. Lady mentioned. We should look at that technical aspect  very carefully.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_114\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para114\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000156\"><\/a>The  Select Committee is looking at the role of the BBC in its current inquiry.  Technology is playing an important role in how we consume television in  particular. The distinctions between television that may be viewed through a  portable device, through a satellite or cable subscription or through what we  used to call terrestrial television are going. We have a single creative stream,  which is distributing through multiple devices. That throws up not only  long-term challenges for the role that the BBC licence fee can play in the  future, because&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">it is no longer wedded to the purchase of a television set. It also throws up  challenges about the way in which different television companies\u2014different  content creators\u2014distribute their content and pay a fair licensing fee for the  distribution of that content through the multiple channels through which it is  being used.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_115\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para115\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000157\"><\/a>There  is a debate to be had between the cable and satellite broadcasters, such as Sky  and Virgin, and the old terrestrial television channels, such as the BBC,  Channel 4 and ITV, about how they agree on a fair price to pay for distributing  someone else\u2019s content through their channels. That is particularly necessary if  distributing through avenues where advertising is excluded or can easily be  excluded by the consumer. As people consume television in ways that are very  different from those in the past, we will have to debate the future of  television and how it is funded through different revenue streams, such as the  licence fee, advertising or subscription. I do not intend to go into that issue  at great length now, but it is one for the future.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_37\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000158\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew38\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000321\"><\/a><strong><strong>Mark Lazarowicz<\/strong> (Edinburgh North and Leith)  (Lab\/Co-op):<\/strong> It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Osborne,  particularly as I want to make a few remarks with a Scottish dimension. It is  also a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe (Damian  Collins). He emphasised the importance of the cultural and creative industries,  both to the entire UK and to different parts of the country. I represent  Edinburgh, and the subject is of particular interest to me, my city and my  constituency; Edinburgh North and Leith can claim to be a creative hub in many  ways, as many who have visited it will know.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_116\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para116\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000159\"><\/a>I will  not run through all the positive features of my constituency, but I would like  to mention a few. There have been a number of mentions of \u201cGrand Theft Auto\u201d. Of  course, that game comes out of the Rockstar North stable, which is currently  headquartered in my constituency. It is perhaps a sign of the times that, as I  understand it, it is soon to move into the building occupied at the moment by  The Scotsman Publications Ltd. That is an interesting example of how the  emphasis in the different sections of the creative industry is moving from older  to newer technologies.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_117\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para117\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000160\"><\/a>I was  told just this morning of the success of an e-publishing company in my  constituency, so I will take the opportunity to mention that. APS Group Scotland  has just won a prestigious award in the academic category at the digital book  awards 2014 in New York, ahead of several hundred fellow international entrants.  That is another example of success in my constituency. Of course, my city also  hosts the Edinburgh festival in all its many guises.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_38\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000161\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew39\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000322\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> Hear, hear!<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_39\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000162\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew40\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000323\"><\/a><strong>Mark Lazarowicz:<\/strong> The Minister clearly recognises  that festival as a showcase of great importance, not just to Edinburgh and  Scotland, but to the UK as a whole.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_118\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para118\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000163\"><\/a>The  main point that I want to make is that the report is about supporting the  creative economy in the United Kingdom. It is important to make that point.  Colleagues from outside Scotland will understand why the possible implications  of Scottish independence are on the minds&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">of most Members from Scotland\u2014indeed, it is also quite rightly on the minds  of many Members from the rest of the UK. One argument put forward by the  Scottish Government in support of independence is that the cultural and creative  sectors would gain more from independence than from the status quo. The Scottish  Government do support the creative economy and cultural industries in many  ways\u2014I pay tribute to that\u2014but so did previous Scottish Governments under  different political leaderships.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_119\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para119\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000164\"><\/a>Local  authorities also recognise the incredible importance of the sector. My local  authority, the Labour-led Edinburgh council\u2014I must be fair: it is a  Labour-Scottish National party council\u2014has been supporting the creative economy  in many ways for many years. That illustrates how the very success of the sector  in Scotland underlines the fact that we are better together. We can be  successful because we are part of the UK; we do not need an entirely separate  state to nurture such successful parts of our economy. They are important for  us, but they also benefit the economy of a much wider area and allow the UK as a  whole to support and draw on what we are doing in Edinburgh, and in  Scotland.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_120\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para120\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000165\"><\/a>Some  good examples of that are highlighted in the report, such as the international  activities of UK Trade &amp; Investment, which I am sure the Minister will refer  to in his closing comments. Scottish creative activity can take part in that and  draw from it. There is also support at the UK level for film, which benefits  Scotland directly and indirectly. There is the very fact that we in Scotland  have access to the UK market. Of course, if Scotland were independent, no one is  suggesting that it would not be able to export from its creative economy to the  rest of the UK, but the strong foundation in a UK-wide market, in which the  cultural or creative economy is a major sector, is something on which we can  base our activity. That applies to other sectors as well.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_121\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para121\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000166\"><\/a>We also  have the BBC. It is interesting to note that that is one of many areas in which  those supporting independence suggest that not much would change; the BBC would  just be slightly different. They are trying to get the best of the UK while also  going for independence.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_122\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para122\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000167\"><\/a>That is  my picture of the benefits for Scotland of being part of the UK, but there are  of course areas in which there could be improvements and more could be done.  Mention was made of the importance of broadband. The Minister knows that I have  for some time been pressing on the issue of superfast broadband in my city of  Edinburgh. It is ironic that, apparently, part of Edinburgh city centre will not  be included under the arrangements for additional superfast broadband that were  recently announced.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_123\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para123\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000168\"><\/a>The  hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe mentioned the advantages to his area from  being close to high-speed rail. I will not hold the Minister and his Department  responsible for High Speed 2, but I emphasise an important point: if the entire  UK is to draw on the benefits of London\u2019s role as a media centre for Europe, we  need to have fast and efficient transport from the entire UK to London in as  many ways as possible. That includes HS2 reaching Scotland and having direct  high-speed lines at the earliest possible opportunity.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_124\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para124\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000169\"><\/a>There  are so many clear benefits to Scotland\u2019s creative economy, and the rest of  Scotland\u2019s economy, being part of the UK. The Government have produced a wide  range of useful papers by independent experts highlighting&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">the benefits, for both Scotland and the rest of the UK, of Scotland\u2019s  involvement in the UK. It would be useful if the Minister\u2019s Department were to  consider something similar in the field of the creative economy. I put that  challenge to him today. I ask him to think about it and to consider bringing  forward such a report or study, allowing it to feed into the debate taking place  in Scotland.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_125\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para125\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000170\"><\/a>We have  some travel difficulties at the moment from parts of the south to the north, but  things are not too bad at the moment, so I hope that you will excuse me, Mrs  Osborne, if I leave the debate a few minutes before the end of the sitting, if  we go to full time. Having said that, I am glad that I have been able to  contribute to the debate with something of a Scottish perspective on the  creative economies of the entire UK.<\/p>\n<h5><strong style=\"font-size: 12px; line-height: 1.3em;\"><strong>Helen Goodman<\/strong> (Bishop Auckland) (Lab):<\/strong><span style=\"font-size: 12px; line-height: 1.3em;\"> It  is a great pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mrs Osborne.<\/span><\/h5>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_126\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para126\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000172\"><\/a>I  congratulate the Select Committee and in particular its Chair, the hon. Member  for Maldon (Mr Whittingdale), on producing a thorough report on an extremely  important subject. He waxed lyrical about the great quality of the British  creative industries. Whether one looks at the economic or the artistic  dimension, we have much to be proud of. That is one reason why Labour Members  think it is extremely strange that the Department for Business, Innovation and  Skills\u2014not the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, of course\u2014has not  included the creative industries among its 11 priority sectors. The creative  industries certainly should be a priority sector.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_127\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para127\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000173\"><\/a>The  hon. Gentleman began with a little reference to the Olympic legacy and the need  to change the \u201cno marketing rights\u201d protocol to allow people who were involved  in the productions for the Olympic and Paralympic games to exploit their success  further. I agree with what he said, and I have met representatives from PLASA.  In addition, some of my constituents were involved in the building and  engineering aspects of the games, and they have also been prevented from  exploiting their success to the full. That is a shame, and I hope that the  Minister will look again at the matter.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_128\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para128\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000174\"><\/a>In this  debate, a lot of time has been devoted to the important question of copyright  protection. I will not repeat in full the remarks I made on Second Reading of  the Intellectual Property Bill on 20 January, but I want to highlight what I  believe to be the priorities. I agree with the Select Committee that the law is  not enforced adequately, and I agree with the remarks of my hon. Friend the  Member for Stoke\u2014<em>[<\/em><em>Interruption.<\/em><em>]<\/em> I apologise; I meant my  hon. Friend the Member for Newcastle-under-Lyme (Paul Farrelly). The Annunciator  has not been working properly, so I have had to try to remember all my  colleagues\u2019 constituencies, and I clearly made a mistake on this occasion. The  point is that the Government do not seem to understand that the copyright issue  is urgent, and I am sorry to say that the Minister\u2019s response to the Select  Committee report did not demonstrate the necessary zing and zest. During this  Parliament, the total cost to the creative industries in our country of people  downloading films, television programmes and music will be some \u00a31 billion,  which is why it is so important to crack on energetically with tackling the  problem.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">The  Select Committee highlighted the role of search engines and described Google\u2019s  efforts as \u201cderisorily ineffective\u201d. From the discussions I have had with both  sides of the industry\u2014the publishers and the search engines\u2014I believe that that  is a reasonable judgment. The Select Committee rightly states that the  Intellectual Property Office should be beefed-up to make it a champion for  intellectual property; at the moment, it really is not. My hon. Friend the  Member for Bristol East (Kerry McCarthy) spoke eloquently about the impact that  a failure to get to grips with the matter will have on individual artists,  particularly when it comes to pay, and she emphasised that many people in the  sector have extremely low incomes.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_130\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para130\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000176\"><\/a>All the  comments made about the different exceptions and exemptions, and the complexity  of the issues, highlight the importance of dealing with the issues through  separate statutory instruments, so that we can look at each matter individually.  I hope that the Minister will discuss that with his colleagues in BIS, who will  probably take the lead on producing those statutory instruments. I hope that the  Government will adopt a joined-up approach. Surely it must be possible to have a  regime that protects musicians but does not hinder, for example, scientific  researchers in epidemiology departments. Their needs are not the same as the  needs of people in the music sector.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_131\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para131\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000177\"><\/a>I want  to draw the attention of hon. Members to the remarks of Roly Keating, the chief  executive of the British Library, who has said that the goal is to foster an  environment that benefits researchers and creators. That is absolutely right.  Separating out the statutory instruments and enabling us to look at them  individually will give us a much better chance of producing that  environment.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_132\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para132\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000178\"><\/a>The  Committee also looked at funding and finance. It was right to identify that  issue, but I am not so confident that its solutions were commensurate with the  scale of the problem. Investors are not well informed and do not have sufficient  understanding of the value of intangible assets in the sector. The difficulty in  securing finance in the sector was brought home to me by some film makers who  came to my constituency surgery in Bishop Auckland. The people of Bishop  Auckland are creative, imaginative and intelligent, but I have to say that the  arrival of film makers at my surgery was a surprise. The film that they had made  really could not be further from the \u201cGrand Theft Auto\u201d model\u2014they had made a  rather lyrical and poetic film about the lives of hill farmers. They are finding  it extremely difficult to move from the first stage, which is having 60 hours\u2019  worth of film, to the next stage of producing something that can be shown and  watched. That highlighted for me the difficulties that people in the sector  have, particularly outside the M25.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_133\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para133\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000179\"><\/a>We need  a more deliberate and proactive approach from the Government in building  partnerships across sectors and skills. I was pleased to receive a briefing from  Creative England, and to see the work that it has done in setting up accelerator  programmes and commissioning, film innovation and enterprise funds. That is a  model for what we need to do, but on a bigger scale.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_134\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para134\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000180\"><\/a>I also  had an interesting meeting with an organisation called the Cultural Capital  Exchange. It is a company\u2014run, incidentally, entirely by women\u2014that promotes  exchange between universities and the creative and cultural sectors.<\/p>\n<p>It has been particularly productive in finding ideas from research for  extremely interesting films and television programmes. A more active Government  intervention of that kind would support the creative economy even further. It is  what the economist Mariana Mazzucato has called \u201cthe entrepreneurial state\u201d. We  need specialists in finance advice, creative business and management to come  together far more.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_41\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000181\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew42\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000325\"><\/a><strong>Damian Collins:<\/strong> Does the hon. Lady agree that,  outside London, the regional growth funds are playing an active role in  supporting creative businesses, and, in particular, that the various enterprise  investment schemes have brought a huge amount of private investment into  businesses right across the creative sector?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_42\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000182\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew43\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000326\"><\/a><strong>Helen Goodman:<\/strong> I was going to say that the demise  of the regional development agency and the much reduced resources of the local  enterprise partnerships have left rather a gap outside the M25. I know that in  Folkestone in the hon. Gentleman\u2019s constituency, people have benefited from a  philanthropist whose name escapes me\u2014<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_43\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000183\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew44\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000327\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> Sir Roger de Haan.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_44\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000184\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew45\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000328\"><\/a><strong>Helen Goodman:<\/strong> As ever, the Minister is there,  ready to help at any moment. Of course, that philanthropy has bolstered  considerably what has been going on in the constituency of the hon. Member for  Folkestone and Hythe (Damian Collins), but we need a more structured approach  from Government. I will come on to talk about geography.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_45\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000185\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew46\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000329\"><\/a><strong>Damian Collins:<\/strong> I am glad that we have managed to  get Roger de Haan into the debate somehow, even though, for once, I did not  refer to him in my speech. If the hon. Lady wants to come to Folkestone, as she  is more than welcome to, she will see that his work has created some of the  infrastructure. Companies such as Cognitive Media\u2014an animation company that is  doing incredibly well\u2014and other private people are renting office space that he  created. They are raising their own money, winning business, growing and doing  incredibly well. That story has been replicated right around the country.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_46\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000186\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew47\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000330\"><\/a><strong>Helen Goodman:<\/strong> I agree that the creative sector  is one of the few sectors that is growing rapidly. I will make my points in a  different order to deal with the hon. Gentleman\u2019s intervention. Under the Labour  Administration, culture was part of the regeneration programme in Liverpool,  Gateshead, which was mentioned, Manchester and Salford; for example, there was  the movement of the BBC. Those were big initiatives. The hon. Gentleman will be  hard-pressed to find examples of such significance in the current climate. The  Government do not have anything comparable to those initiatives that goes beyond  the M25.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_47\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000187\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew48\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000331\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> Many of those initiatives were  financed by the lottery, which was created by the Conservative Government who  preceded the Labour Government.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_48\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000188\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew49\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000332\"><\/a><strong>Helen Goodman:<\/strong> I am sorry to disappoint the  Minister, but a lot of the money was put into those initiatives by the regional  development agencies. He needs to talk more to his colleagues in other Whitehall  Departments,&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">because those self-same big cities are seeing the biggest reductions in  funding in their local government settlements. The reduction in Liverpool is  somewhere between 30% and 60%, and the picture is similar in Gateshead and  Manchester. He should be less complacent about the situation faced by the  creative sectors beyond London. He cannot get away from giving the impression  that the Government are not developing creative industries across the entire  country because they are staying within their comfort zone.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_49\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000189\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew50\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000333\"><\/a><strong>Angie Bray<\/strong> <em>rose\u2014<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_50\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000190\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew51\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000334\"><\/a><strong>Helen Goodman:<\/strong> I will not take any further  interventions on this point; otherwise, the debate will deteriorate in tone, and  I would not want that to happen during my speech.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_135\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para135\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000191\"><\/a>I was  pleased by the Select Committee Chairman\u2019s remarks on film tax credits. I never  expected to hear Government Members praise tax credits, but there we have it; he  has done so, at least for the film sector. I reiterate his request to the  Minister: it would be good if the Minister brought us up to speed on his  negotiations with the European Union. I also wholeheartedly agree with what the  Select Committee said on education and skills:<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cThe broader arts curriculum has been seriously hit by the  Government\u2019s approach to performance measurement&#8230;The danger remains that  schools will in practice see a continued diminution in the provision of dance,  drama and other creative subjects.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_136\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para136\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000192\"><\/a>My hon.  Friend the Member for Washington and Sunderland West (Mrs Hodgson), who is doing  an excellent job as chair of the all-party group on art, craft and design in  education, made a well-informed and telling speech. Since 2010, there has been a  14% drop in the number of children taking arts subjects at GCSE. We must  incorporate arts into the curriculum at the same level as other subjects. I  cannot do better than quote a letter from my constituent, Jonathan Carney. He is  head of visual arts and photography at Redcar academy and, in preparation for  this debate, he wrote to me, saying:<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cI am very concerned that the current disincentives to study  arts subjects in schools will have a serious impact on the pipeline of UK  workers in to employment in the Creative Industries and more broadly on our  children\u2019s ability to compete in the global jobs market. Employers look for  well-balanced, well-rounded individuals who are capable of expressing themselves  and thinking creatively.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_137\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para137\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000193\"><\/a>We  would all agree with that; none of us could have put it better. One thing that  is a bit worrying about the Secretary of State for Education\u2019s approach is that  he seems to think that those subjects are not intellectually rigorous. Has he  not met an architect or listened to a jazz pianist? Of course those subjects are  as intellectually rigorous as mathematics, Latin grammar and English literature.  It is patently absurd to think that rigour is only in one part of the curriculum  and not in another.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_138\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para138\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000194\"><\/a>I hope  that the Minister will go back to his colleagues in the Department for Education  and reinforce the message that is coming from across the sectors. Everywhere I  go, the one complaint I get that is common across the board, whether in theatre,  music or museums, is about the narrowing of the curriculum.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_139\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para139\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000195\"><\/a>I also  want to take up with the Minister his remarks about music hubs. I do not think  those are performing as intended. We hear many reports, particularly from&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">the Musicians\u2019 Union, of the undermining of music services, and of the fact  that the music hubs are not making up for local authorities\u2019 loss of direct  funding as a result of reductions by the Secretary of State for Communities and  Local Government. Once again, the Minister is too roseate in his picture of what  is going on in the world.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_140\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para140\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000196\"><\/a>Finally, I also agree with the Committee about the  Creative Industry Council and the need for Minister to go to the council\u2019s  meetings. Surely it is not too much to ask Ministers to go to their own  meetings. However, the Committee might have looked more at two issues. One is  geographical spread, which we have discussed; I will not go over that ground  again. The other is the importance of widening access and opportunities to work  in the cultural industries. That is partly about education, and it is partly a  justice issue. These are good, fun jobs that people want, and it will not be  satisfactory if, to borrow George Orwell\u2019s phrase, they become of the preserve  of<\/p>\n<p class=\"tabletext\">\u201cthe lower-upper-middle class\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_141\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para141\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000197\"><\/a>However, just as importantly, the arts need these  people. The arts need the widest pool of talent.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_142\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para142\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000198\"><\/a>I will  give an example. I was talking to the director of one of our major dance  companies, and he said that, to be frank, he did not need any more middle-class  girls from the home counties coming into his theatre. When the company got boys  from ethnic minorities in east London, they brought a lot more energy and  innovation to the theatre. That is really positive and really great. We must  have a much bigger picture of what is possible for people.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_143\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para143\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000199\"><\/a>The  Minister\u2019s response to the Committee\u2019s report is a bit disappointing. We do not  want a global race to the bottom, with a few multi-millionaires and thousands of  unpaid interns. The Opposition believe that creative Britain can do better than  that.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_51\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000200\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spmin1\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000335\"><\/a><strong>The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for  Culture, Media and Sport (Mr Edward Vaizey):<\/strong> I am pleased to have the chance  to reply to this stimulating debate. It has been extremely wide-ranging,  covering copyright, education, Scottish independence and the future of HS2\u2014all  four of which I am not formally responsible for, but I will try to address the  points that were raised.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_144\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para144\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000201\"><\/a>I  particularly enjoyed the speech of the hon. Member for Washington and Sunderland  West (Mrs Hodgson). It included extensive plugs for her son\u2014I would have done  the same thing\u2014and his future career in the video games industry. Short of  reading his CV into the record, I do not think she could have done more to bring  the industry\u2019s attention to the budding talents of Hodgson Junior, as I assume  he is called.<\/p>\n<p>The hon. Lady was followed by my hon. Friend the Member for Selby and Ainsty  (Nigel Adams)\u2014<em>[<\/em><em>Interruption.<\/em><em>]<\/em> He is over here now\u2014he is the  acting parliamentary private secretary; he was promoted in the middle of this  debate. He refrained from mentioning the success and talents of his son, Ben  Adams, in the soon-to-be-world-famous British band Summer City. I regretted that  he did not mention it, because then we could have had a contest to decide in the  course of this debate whether the offspring of Labour MPs are more creative than  the offspring of Conservative MPs. I was particularly pleased to open a copy of  my local newspaper&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">to find that the son of my hon. Friend the Member for Henley (John  Howell)\u2014Conservative\u2014has won the first scholarship from Sky Arts and been picked  out by Quincy Jones as one of the most talented drummers he had ever seen. Let  it not be said that MPs from all parties are not making their own direct  contributions to the success of the creative industries.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_145\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para145\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000202\"><\/a>It is a  good thing that all of us who have spoken in this debate can point to the  success of the creative industries. In the spirit of ecumenicalism that often  surrounds such debates, I point out that the creative industries were identified  by the former Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, Lord Smith of  Finsbury, who has managed to make an impact on other areas of public policy  since then. That was the process by which the UK\u2019s creative industries were put  on the map. The process of identifying a rather disparate sector as a coherent  whole has been followed by many other countries. Because of it, we can identify  the success of the creative industries: more than 1.5 million jobs, over 5% of  UK jobs; growth of 8.6% since 2011; a contribution of \u00a370 billion to the UK  economy.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_146\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para146\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000203\"><\/a>This  Government have built on the achievements of previous Governments in supporting  the creative industries. I was particularly pleased that we have built on the  success of the film tax credit, which now brings in roughly \u00a31 billion annually  of inward investment in the UK, with the introduction of television tax credit  for high-end drama and a tax credit for animation, which was responsible,  incidentally, for more than \u00a3200 million in inward investment in its first year.  To answer the first question posed, we are expecting an announcement shortly  from the European Commission on the video games tax credit. I have been in  discussions with the Commission for a time. It has a job to do, and the  Government, particularly the Conservatives, recognise the importance of policing  state aid and unfair and anti-competitive Government subsidies to industries. It  is important that the Commission is convinced that a tax credit is the right  thing to do, but we have made great progress and we expect an announcement  shortly.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_147\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para147\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000204\"><\/a>As well  as the tax credit support\u2014I was delighted when the Chancellor extended the film  tax credit; it is particularly important to support the visual effects industry,  in which the UK is among the leaders in the sector\u2014there are other forms of  support. I hear what the hon. Member for Bishop Auckland (Helen Goodman) asked  about whether the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills has designated  the creative industries as a priority sector. We are certainly the first  Government to set up a sector council for the creative industries; we now have a  Creative Industries Council, which is co-chaired by the Secretaries of State for  Business, Innovation and Skills and for Culture, Media and Sport alongside  Nicola Mendelsohn, the chief executive of Facebook in Europe.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_148\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para148\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000205\"><\/a>Alongside that council, which considers a range of  issues including access to finance, skills and exports, we have set up Creative  England, which is designed to support the creative industries outside London. We  take that support seriously. To respond to what my hon. Friend the Member for  Folkestone and Hythe (Damian Collins) said, it has received significant support  from the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills in terms of money from  the regional growth fund.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_149\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para149\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000206\"><\/a>There  is also Tech City, which acts as a beacon to show this country\u2019s support for the  technology industry. It is important to recognise that Joanna Shields, the  chairman of Tech City, has made it an imperative to reach out to all the other  clusters across the UK, to bring them together as a coherent whole and to ensure  that other parts of the UK also benefit from that extraordinary growth. I have  written to the chairmen and chief executives of local enterprise  partnerships\u2014many of them already recognise this\u2014to remind them of the  importance of the creative industries when setting out their strategies. Some of  the city deals, particularly the one in Brighton, have put the creative  industries centre stage. With Tim Davie from BBC Worldwide, I co-chair UK Trade  &amp; Investment\u2019s sector advisory group, which works to help the export of our  successful creative industries and to attract inward investment. There is a  hugely successful story to tell about Government support for the creative  industries and about the ongoing activity to support the industries.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_150\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para150\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000207\"><\/a>It is  also important to stress that we should include the Arts Council in the mix. The  hon. Member for Bishop Auckland talked earlier about the need to support people  in employment. The Arts Council has set up a \u00a315 million fund to fund  apprenticeships in the creative industries, in addition to the \u00a337 million  creative people and places fund to help fund the arts in areas where they have  previously been under-represented. The agenda is wide, but there is a huge range  of activity to support that agenda.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_151\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para151\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000208\"><\/a>I pay  tribute to the fantastic Chairman of the Select Committee. He rules the  Committee with an iron fist and directs it towards all the pertinent issues of  the day. He has, as usual, produced a perspicacious and incisive report that  focuses in particular on concerns about the changes to the copyright regime. As  the Minister with responsibility for the creative industries, I understand the  concern of many in the creative industries about copyright enforcement. I have  tried to bring together the different sides of the debate\u2014the rights holders,  the internet service providers and the search engines. We take a wide range of  action. Let us not forget that existing law has been used effectively by rights  holders to seek and obtain injunctions against some of the biggest sites that  exist for the sole purpose of distributing infringing material. We also work  with City of London police and credit card companies to take down payment sites,  and we have one of the most advanced systems, if not the most advanced system,  working with the advertising industry to ensure that advertising is not present  on many of those websites.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_152\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para152\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000209\"><\/a>We take  a wide range of action, but my response to the Select Committee, which seems to  have got a resounding B+ from hon. Members here  today\u2014<em>[<\/em><em>Interruption.<\/em><em>]<\/em> I might be being optimistic. We want  Google to do more, and we will continue to press it to do so.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_52\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000210\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew52\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000336\"><\/a><strong>Paul Farrelly:<\/strong> It is a Select Committee, so the  B+ is cross-party.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_53\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000211\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew53\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000337\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I am grateful for that clarification.  My excellent officials have provided me with answers to most of the questions  that have been posed in this debate. I feel like I should recreate the famous  Bob Dylan video when I read them out, but I will address some of the excellent  points that have been raised.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_153\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para153\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000212\"><\/a>Copyright reform began with the Hargreaves review, which  has been extensively consulted upon. Many views have been taken into account,  and it is important to get the balance right. The hon. Member for Bristol East  (Kerry McCarthy) knows that I am going to say that we believe that the private  copying exception is the narrowest exception in Europe, so we do not think a  levy is appropriate. I shall write to her as she invited me to, setting out in  great detail why I think that.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_54\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000213\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew54\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000338\"><\/a><strong>Helen Goodman:<\/strong> When the Minister writes to my  hon. Friend, will he copy me in?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_55\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000214\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew55\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000339\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I shall certainly copy in the hon.  Lady.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_56\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000215\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew56\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000340\"><\/a><strong>Mr Whittingdale:<\/strong> And, indeed, everyone.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_57\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000216\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew57\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000341\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I will certainly copy the hon. Lady  and the Chairman of the Select Committee into my reply.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_154\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para154\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000217\"><\/a>Danish  law allows sharing within a household; Polish law apparently allows sharing  within social circles\u2014so there are much wider exceptions in Europe, and we have  been careful to draw ours as narrowly as possible.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_155\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para155\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000218\"><\/a>My hon.  Friend the Select Committee Chairman asked about the future funding of the  Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit. The Intellectual Property Office funded  the set-up costs and the initial period of operation, but I understand that the  baton will pass to industry, and that has always been made clear. If the work is  worth doing, the industry should support it. I am interested in the PRS proposal  on traffic lights. We reached out to some of the relevant intermediaries but  without success, but if PRS still believes that we could pursue that system, it  is worth revisiting.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_156\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para156\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000219\"><\/a>As to  increasing the sentences for online copyright infringement, I understand that  the Minister with responsibility for intellectual property said that it was  worth looking into that, and we also said so in our response. Further, the  Science Minister, who responded on Second Reading in the Commons, said that we  would report our findings by the end of the year. We support industry  initiatives to educate people about the complexities of copyright, and are in  active discussions with the industry about how the Government can support more  education initiatives.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_157\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para157\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000220\"><\/a>Perhaps  that is the appropriate moment for me to pick up the point that the Select  Committee Chairman made about the VCAP proposals. It has been difficult to  implement the details of the Digital Economy Act 2010. The Government have not  resiled from it, but there are significant technical obstacles, including the  fact that we were being sued by BT and TalkTalk for at least two years from the  time when it was passed. Other technical obstacles have presented themselves,  and we are actively seeking to overcome them, but nevertheless we welcome the  industry initiative, not only because we hope it may be up and running before  the end of the year, but because it requires a partnership between both sides of  the debate, and because it brings important flexibility to make it possible to  adapt. I suspect that it will be easier to adapt the system as technology  changes.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_158\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para158\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000221\"><\/a>The  Select Committee\u2019s position and that of many hon. Members who rightly act as  strong advocates for the creative industries and rights holders is well known.  The Government\u2019s position is also well established, and there has been an  extensive dialogue. I hear what has&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">been said about the need for separate statutory instruments when the  exceptions are debated, and I am sure that the Department responsible will  listen carefully to that recommendation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_159\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para159\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000222\"><\/a>Another  all-pervasive issue is the position of the arts in education. Hon. Members will  know that I sought out the job as culture spokesman in opposition and was lucky  enough to be appointed Minister when we came into office. I passionately support  the arts and would be concerned if I thought that some of what people allege  about the state of the arts in schools was genuine. The Secretary of State for  Education is a fantastic supporter of the arts. I have no doubt about that, and  I work closely with him, as I have done for several years. One of the first  things that we did was jointly to commission Darren Henley to look at music  education, to secure the ring-fenced funding of music education services at a  time when most funding was being devolved to schools, and when schools were  becoming academies, as they still are. I felt that it was important to take that  strong position.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_160\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para160\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000223\"><\/a>We want  music services to change, which is why we re-christened them music hubs.  Obviously, more has to be done than simply change the name. We want music  organisations\u2014orchestras, and so on\u2014to be genuine partners with local authority  music services and for music services to be able to call on the talents of a  wide range of people who deliver music in different ways in any local area. That  is why we introduced the qualified music educator status, to allow people who  teach music but are not formally teachers to be recognised for their talents and  skills. And that is why we extended the In Harmony programme, increased its  funding and integrated it into a wider national music plan.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_161\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para161\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000224\"><\/a>We are  at the beginning of this journey. Nobody is expecting music hubs to spring fully  formed from this policy change. We have achieved two important things: we have  ring-fenced the money and established the principle that music organisations and  music services should be partners. A third important principle is that the money  is contestable; no one local music service or local authority should be  complacent\u2014a word that has been used in this debate in other contexts\u2014and simply  expect to receive that money every three years.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_58\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000225\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew58\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000342\"><\/a><strong>Angie Bray:<\/strong> My hon. Friend the Minister will  recall launching the Ealing music and film festival this time last year. As I  said earlier, on our first night of the festival, last night, the English  chamber orchestra was partnering young musicians from Twyford school. Tonight it  will be partnering young musicians from Ealing youth orchestra. Does he agree  that it is good for young people that such an initiative can be promoted even by  a festival?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_59\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000226\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew59\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000343\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I do think it is a good thing for  young people. That is absolutely brilliant. Again, we tend always to look at  what we say is going wrong and not good enough and often fail to recognise what  is right in front of us, which is that tens of thousands of our young people are  brilliant musicians enjoying a brilliant music education. Funnily enough, I was  lucky to visit Twyford school with Howard Goodall several years ago and watch  its choir in action. It is a phenomenal state school\u2014I emphasise that\u2014with  phenomenal music teaching. I recognise what my hon. Friend says.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">That is  where we are in terms of music education. But we went further and introduced the  first national cultural education plan, which, again, has put on the table  heritage schools. English Heritage is now working with schools to ensure that  heritage is taught in our schools. There are many other initiatives to ensure  that our children enjoy as wide a cultural education as possible.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_163\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para163\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000228\"><\/a>Clearly, the Secretary of State for Education has his  own agenda in terms of ensuring, rightly, that we continue to drive up standards  in our schools. He is utterly passionate about education and about not leaving  behind too many children who, in the past, for whatever reason, have been  written off, as have their life chances. He has determined to introduce rigour  into the curriculum. The Department for Education has listened to concerns that  have been enunciated. We now have the new progress 8 system, which allows  schools to take into account the arts and arts education.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_164\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para164\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000229\"><\/a>There  is an either\/or element when we debate the arts in education. No one has made  teaching the arts illegal in schools. The Secretary of State is also about  empowering our teachers and head teachers to lead their schools. A good head  teacher and a great teaching staff will recognise the importance of the arts and  the fantastic bonus that great arts teaching brings, not just in introducing  children to the arts, but enhancing their academic achievement in many other  subjects.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew60\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000344\"><\/a><strong>Mrs Hodgson:<\/strong> Nobody doubts that the Secretary of  State cares about all this. We are not saying that it is a competition or a  matter of either\/or. The fact is that there are unintended consequences to the  baccalaureate. The number of art teachers being trained has dropped by 14%. The  discount codes are deterring young people from taking more than one GCSE in arts  subjects. This has to be looked at. The reality is there in black and white in  the figures. Will the Minister say something about the proposal in the report  for STEM to become STEAM and whether the Government will take that on board?<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_60\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000230\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew61\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000345\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> The hon. Lady mentioned discount  codes. The Government recognise the differences between artistic disciplines,  and it is important to get it across that decisions on discount codes are made  on the basis of a detailed scrutiny of the exam specifications, rather than on a  general view of the subjects concerned. Where substantial overlap between two  specifications exists, the subjects will be discounted. Those decisions can be  reviewed and are being reviewed in the case of drama and dance. I emphasise  again the Department for Education\u2019s continued support for music and dance  schemes, which equates to some \u00a318 million-worth of bursaries over the next  three years, which is a huge amount of support. The Department has also listened  to concerns about the EBacc and that is why we now have the new progress 8  measure, which allows schools to have their teaching of arts subjects taken into  account when measuring their progress and success.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_165\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para165\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000231\"><\/a>We have  had a lively and well-balanced debate with contributions from both sides of the  House and from hon. Members who are passionate advocates and supporters of the  creative industries, even when not taking part in this debate.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_61\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000232\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew62\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000346\"><\/a><strong>Helen Goodman:<\/strong> Before the Minister sits down, my  hon. Friend the Member for Edinburgh North and Leith (Mark Lazarowicz) asked  whether he would look&nbsp;<span style=\"line-height: 1.3em;\">at the potential implications of Scottish independence on the cultural  industries. It was a good suggestion, and I would be happy to co-operate with  the Minister if he takes it forward.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_62\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000233\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew63\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000347\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I hesitate to commit my Secretary of  State or the Government to such a report, but given today\u2019s important speech by  the Chancellor about the future of currency in Scotland and the Prime Minister\u2019s  important speech about Scottish independence just under a week ago, I am sure  that an opportunity will present itself between now and the vote for the  Department for Culture, Media and Sport to highlight the effect that  independence could have on the creative industries.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_63\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000234\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew64\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000348\"><\/a><strong>Paul Farrelly<\/strong> <em>rose\u2014<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_64\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000235\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew65\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000349\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I now give way to the hon. Gentleman  not from Stoke.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_65\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000236\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew66\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000350\"><\/a><strong>Paul Farrelly:<\/strong> It is almost a Stoke point. Before  the Minister concludes, I want to take him back to the beginning and point out  an anomaly that was discovered in the definitions and statistics\u2014although I am  not going to argue for the inclusion of ceramics in the statistics, which is a  Stoke argument. When examining the statistics, we found that, of the \u00a336  billion, \u00a320 billion was attributed to the so-called fashion industry, so I  asked the Chairman of the Committee why we were discussing music and film, but  not clothes. It seems that the \u00a320 billion attributed to the fashion industries  includes pretty much everything that goes by the name of clothing on the high  street, so the Minister may want to consider the statistics and how they are  gathered and measured.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_66\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000237\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew67\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000351\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I do not know why the Chairman of the  Select Committee would not want to talk about fashion. I would have thought that  it was his top subject. As my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe  said, London fashion week begins tomorrow, and I know for a fact that the  British Fashion Council would welcome the Chairman of the Committee at any of  its events over the next five days.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_67\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000238\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew68\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000352\"><\/a><strong>Mark Lazarowicz<\/strong> <em>rose\u2014<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_68\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000239\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew69\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000353\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I see that the hon. Member for  Edinburgh North and Leith is keen to come in, but I must say that it is  interesting that every element of the creative industries will publish reports  about their value to the economy. I think that the British Fashion Council  engaged Oxford Economics to make the serious point that the high-end, luxury  fashion of the catwalk, which seems somewhat removed from our daily existence,  sits at the apex or epicentre of a wide industry that includes photography,  hairdressing, make-up and a whole range of things. Those are not official  statistics, however. They come from a report produced by the British Fashion  Council.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_69\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000240\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew70\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000354\"><\/a><strong><strong>Mark Lazarowicz<\/strong><strong>:<\/strong><\/strong> To be clear, I was  thinking of something more along the line of highlighting the positive  advantages for the creative industries if Scotland remains in the UK. Instead of  emphasising the negatives of independence, I would like to see something that  highlights the positive advantages that are so clear to so many of us.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_70\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000241\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew71\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000355\"><\/a><strong>Mr Vaizey:<\/strong> I will happily do that. I have regular  meetings with the Scottish Culture Minister, Fiona Hyslop, and know about the  astonishing success of the creative industries in Scotland, the Edinburgh  international festival being not just the oldest, but the largest arts festival  of its kind. I am looking forward this year to the second summit of culture  Ministers that will take place around the Edinburgh international festival.  There is a lot to celebrate in the creative success of Scotland, and of the UK  where Scotland and the rest of the UK are better together, as the hon. Member  for Edinburgh North and Leith pointed out in his brilliant comments.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_166\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para166\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000242\"><\/a>This  has been a wide-ranging debate covering a wide range of issues, but at its heart  sits a truth now universally acknowledged. I say that in the full knowledge that  I will be going to Jane Austen\u2019s house this evening after this debate to  celebrate the keeping of her ring in the UK. I know that keeping cultural  objects in this country is close to the heart of the hon. Member for Bishop  Auckland. A truth that must be universally acknowledged is that Britain is  fantastically successful in the creative industries, including television, film,  animation, games, fashion, architecture, craft, the visual arts and the  performing arts. We attract massive inward investment for the arts and we are  known around the world for them.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_167\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para167\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000243\"><\/a>The  Government will continue to support the creative industries directly through tax  credits and indirectly through policy changes and in our support for growth in  the economy. If there is one thing I would like to see, it is more recognition  in this country for our astonishing success and our global prominence thanks to  our creative industries.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"st_71\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000244\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_spnew72\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000356\"><\/a><strong>Mr Whittingdale:<\/strong> I had not anticipated commenting  further, but this has been a very good debate. I am grateful to the members of  my Committee who have come along to speak and to other hon. Members. That has  demonstrated the degree of support and interest on both sides of the House and,  indeed, in all parts of the country. As the Minister said, the debate has ranged  into areas that perhaps go beyond his Department\u2019s responsibilities, but I hope  that he will consider carefully what has been said.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_168\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para168\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000245\"><\/a>I echo  everything the Minister said about the success of our creative industries. The  Government are doing many good things, but the area that I remain concerned  about and that several hon. Members raised is copyright. If there are to be  modernisation changes, they should be made carefully, and we hope that there  will be opportunities to look carefully at every proposed change. That will mean  debates on the statutory instruments, if possible, as they appear.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_336WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_337WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_338WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_339WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_340WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_1\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time1\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000271\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_341WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_342WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev0\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000256\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_343WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev1\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000257\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev2\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000258\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_344WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_345WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_2\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time2\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000272\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_346WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000273\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_347WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_348WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000259\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev4\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000260\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_349WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_4\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time4\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000274\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000249\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_350WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_351WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_352WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000250\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_5\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time5\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000275\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_353WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev5\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000261\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000251\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_354WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev6\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000262\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_355WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000252\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000253\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev7\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000263\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev8\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000264\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev9\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000265\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_356WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev10\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000266\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_6\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time6\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000276\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_357WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_358WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_359WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"hd_3\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_head2\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000005\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_360WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_361WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_7\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time7\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000277\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_362WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_363WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_8\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time8\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000278\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_364WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_365WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_366WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev11\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000267\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev12\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000268\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_367WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_brev13\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000269\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_9\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time9\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000279\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000254\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_368WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_369WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_370WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_371WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_372WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000255\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_373WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor-column noCont\" name=\"column_374WH\"><\/a> <a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"time_10\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_time10\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor noCont\" name=\"14021365000280\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"stpa_169\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"140213h0001.htm_para169\"><\/a><a class=\"anchor\" name=\"14021365000246\"><\/a>I thank  the Minister for his reply. His official response did not go as far as we might  have hoped in some areas, but he has endeavoured in some way to make up for that  this afternoon.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Mr John Whittingdale (Maldon) (Con): Thank you, Mr Benton, for this opportunity to debate the Select Committee on Culture, Media and Sport report, \u201cSupporting the Creative Economy\u201d. It was the result of a major inquiry, in which we took a great deal of evidence and came up with a wide range of conclusions. There has [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":1533,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-314","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-speeches"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/314","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=314"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/314\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2046,"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/314\/revisions\/2046"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/1533"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=314"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=314"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.johnwhittingdale.org.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=314"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}