The Rise of Hollywood East: Moving from Industry to Project-based Perspectives on Creative Clusters

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Transcription:

The Rise of Hollywood East: Moving from Industry to Project-based Perspectives on Creative Clusters Pacey Foster University of Massachusetts, Boston Three Million Stories Curb Center, Vanderbilt University March, 2013

The U.S. film and television industry: Incentives and regionalization In the 1990s Canadian tax incentive programs lead to a fear of runaway productions in the USA In 2001 US states begin offering incentives to lure productions from Hollywood By 2010 most states have some film tax credit in place Some evidence that states are effectively luring work away from New York and Hollywood (though costs/benefits are contested) Current debates and models miss fundamental aspects of creative industries Projects vs industries Mobile labor networks 2

Creative industries vs creative project networks Industry perspective Level of analysis Macro Meso Project network perspective Units of analysis NAICS codes and firms Clusters, projects and occupations Governance Organizational/ Hierarchical Contractual/ Network Labor markets Internal, long term employment Labor mobility Low High(er) External, freelance employment Careers Organizational Intra-organizational 3

Film and TV production in Massachusetts: The rise of (the story of) Hollywood East Vibrant industry in the 1980 s with lots of production and local crew Dropping production in the late 1990 s and early 2000 s Implementation of a 25% transferrable tax incentive in 2005 stimulated production (and debate about costs/benefits) Combining industry and project network views is critical for understanding regional dynamics 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Annual Film and TV Spending (millions) 2005 2006 2007 2008 Source: Massachusetts Film Office Films and TV shows shot in MA: 1999-2008 25 20 15 10 5 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

Industry Level Data: Employment and Wages 1998-2008 3,000 2,500 2,000 Removal of $ cap 25% Tax Credit Implemented New $ cap proposed Annual average employment Film and TV production (51211) Postproduction (51219) 1,500 1,000 500 0 Average Annual Establishments 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Motion picture & video production (51211) 319 316 326 311 308 293 297 297 272 273 298 287 295 Postproduction & other (51219) 34 31 35 36 33 30 30 32 28 30 31 32 29 Annual Average Employment Motion picture & video production (51211) 1,736 1,621 1,836 1,753 1,471 1,285 1,187 1,124 1,295 1,299 2,439 2,672 2,164 Postproduction & other (51219) 371 301 351 282 379 230 318 371 247 803 840 236 196 Annual Average Wages Motion picture & video production (51211) 42,840 45,453 50,103 50,700 48,624 51,370 54,415 57,695 60,527 60,598 61,225 53,051 41,033 Postproduction & other (51219) 31,648 39,477 46,471 49,301 30,932 49,953 35,728 34,953 51,986 18,086 19,437 63,904 72,144 Project Level Data 5

Project level data: 2006-2010 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Project mix Feature Films 7 14 20 13 6 Commercials/Advertising 45 53 86 51 51 Television Series 26 29 28 21 14 Documentaries/Other 17 26 25 12 12 Total projects 95 122 159 97 83 Annual Project Mix Wages ($ amounts in millions) $43.50 $111.10 $304.90 $203.60 $29.10 Wages $1 Million & Over * * $133.60 $82.00 * Wages Under $ 1 Million * * $171.30 $121.60 * Non Wage Spending Set Construction $1.20 $4.70 $23.70 $19.10 $1.50 Location Fees $9.30 $10.50 $42.10 $36.60 $8.40 Unclassified/Other $30.80 $30.10 $109.40 $74.10 $19.30 Total Spending $84.80 $156.50 $480.20 $333.40 $58.30 Annual Spending Mix (wages/nonwages) Of Which Spent on: MA Resident/Busines (%) 35% 30% 32% 33% 63% Non-MA Resident/Business (%) 65% 70% 68% 67% 37% Source: Massachusetts Department of Revenue * Data not presented http://www.mass.gov/dor/docs/dor/news/2011filmincentivereport.pdf Proportion local 6

Annual project mix: 2006-2010 180 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Project mix Feature Films 7 14 20 13 6 Commercials/Advertising 45 53 86 51 51 Television Series 26 29 28 21 14 Documentaries/Other 17 26 25 12 12 Total projects 95 122 159 97 83 Annual Project Mix 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Feature Films Commercials/Advertising Television Series Documentaries/Other 7

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Wages ($ amounts in millions) $43.50 $111.10 $304.90 $203.60 $29.10 Wages $1 Million & Over * * $133.60 $82.00 * Wages Under $ 1 Million * * $171.30 $121.60 * Non Wage Spending Set Construction $1.20 $4.70 $23.70 $19.10 $1.50 Location Fees $9.30 $10.50 $42.10 $36.60 $8.40 Unclassified/Other $30.80 $30.10 $109.40 $74.10 $19.30 Total Spending $84.80 $156.50 $480.20 $333.40 $58.30 Non Wage Spending Unclassified/Other 24% Spending by category: 2006-2010 Annual Spending Mix (wages/non-wages) Wages Wages $1 Million & Over 24% Location Fees 10% Set Construction 4% Wages Under $ 1 Million 38%

Supplier networks for 10 feature films shot in MA in 2008 Clusters of suppliers associated with single films Films Suppliers Dense core of shared suppliers 9

Distribution of non-wage spending for 10 feature films in 2008 Number of Transactions 1-5 6-10 11-35 36-70 71-261 10

Industry Data / Film Office Status: Employment and Wages 1998-2008 Regional film office activity and incentives seem related to macro level employment trends (and perhaps regional project mix) 3,000 New $ cap proposed 2,500 Removal of $ cap 2,000 25% Tax Credit Implemented Annual average employment 1,500 Film and TV production (51211) 1,000 Postproduction (51219) 500 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 MA Film Office Status Open Open Open Open Closed Mixed Mixed Mixed Mixed Open Open Open Closed Tax Incentive (Y/N) N N N N N N N N Y Y Y Y Y 11

Conclusions and future work Extends research on employment in creative industries by focusing on projects Hidden role of regional film offices in the development of film and television production clusters and policy Need to combine industry and project network level data to understand regional dynamics Need for collaborative research and policy making engaging public agencies, private sector and educational institutions 12

Questions and discussion