Author List: Cheng, Hsing Kenneth; JuanFeng; Gary J. Koehler,; Marston, Sean;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2010, Volume 27, Issue 3, Page 269-302.
Many countries limit the influence of foreign entertainment products, such as music, film, and television programs, to protect their domestic cultural industry. Commonly observed policy tools include quotas, tariffs, and subsidies. However, advances in digital technology enable consumers to access digital versions of foreign entertainment programs via the Internet, a leakage channel that bypasses government protection methods. This calls for a reexamination of the effectiveness of these traditional tools. We build a unified analytical framework to study the impact of digital technology on cultural protection policies. We find that in the presence of Internet leakage, imposing a quota is the least effective protection policy to maximize the total domestic social welfare, but using either a tariff or subsidy policy is optimal, depending on the quality difference between domestic and foreign entertainment programs via the traditional channel and the Internet. Using quotas remains the least effective policy when we extend the analyses to consider the presence of piracy. In addition to the quality difference between foreign and domestic entertainment, the proportion of unethical consumers and the cost of piracy determine whether using tariffs or subsidies is the optimal policy.
Keywords: cultural protection policy; digital entertainment; quotas; subsidies; tariffs
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List of Topics

#201 0.271 piracy goods digital property intellectual rights protection presence legal consumption music consumers enforcement publisher pirate producers policies copyright provision profits
#164 0.254 countries global developing technology international country developed national economic policy domestic study foreign globalization world government nations innovative technological especially
#5 0.140 consumer consumers model optimal welfare price market pricing equilibrium surplus different higher results strategy quality cost lower competition firm paper
#228 0.095 internet peer used access web influence traditional fraud world ecology services impact cases wide home studies addition choice 2008 telephone
#115 0.076 quality different servqual service high-quality difference used quantity importance use measure framework impact assurance better include means van dimensions assessing
#86 0.059 methods information systems approach using method requirements used use developed effective develop determining research determine assessment useful series critical existing