BEIJING -- Two Chinese government bodies have come up with separate plans to
charge karaoke bars royalty fees, causing a turf war.
On July 18 the Ministry of Culture said it would create a unified karaoke
royalty fee system and charge karaoke bar operators for each song downloaded.
Then on July 20 the National Copyright Administration (NCA) announced its own
karaoke copyright fee system.
The moves are both said to be aimed at protecting copyright holders' rights.
Insiders say the separate proposals, with their different fee mechanisms,
reflect a tussle between the two departments. Collecting copyright fees is a
potentially lucrative business.
The NCA insists that bar operators should pay on the basis of business
volume, while the Ministry wants operators to pay according to the number of
times a song is ordered, said Wang Huapeng, spokesman for the the China
Audio-Video Management Collective, one of the two payees approved by the NCA.
The other approved payee is the Music Copyright Society, a body that acts on
behalf of music composers and writers.
Karaoke bar operators will be able to voluntarily join the Ministry's unified
fee system, which will be trialled in the cities of Wuhan, Zhengzhou and Qingdao
this year. In the NCA scheme, those who refuse to pay will be deemed illegal.
An NCA official who declined to be named said the two departments had not
conferred with each other about the fees, while Ministry official Yang Guangli
said the two departments are likely to cooperate.
As yet no moves seem to have been made to unify the fee system.
Earlier this month, NCA spokesman Wang Ziqiang told a press conference that
the Ministry of Culture is not entitled to charging karaoke operators because
copyright supervision and fee collection is the responsibility of the NCA.
The 10 billion yuan (US$1.25 billion) revenues racked up by China's 100,000
karaoke bars each year should generate 8 million yuan (1 billion U.S. dollars)
of royalties for copyright holders. The two government bodies are competing for
the right to collect these sums.
The attorneys of music companies, including EMI Group PLC and Sony BMG, said
the Ministry of Culture had not informed them of the royalty scheme and it did
not have their authorization, the China Newsweek reported.
"It's a good thing for us," Song Ke, manager of the Taihe Rye Music Co., Ltd,
a leading Chinese audio-video copyright holder, was quoted as saying, adding the
company had no copyright agents when two government agencies declared they would
collect royalties.
As copyright agent for more than 4,000 Chinese composers and writers, the MCS
was still considering its position, MCS head attorney Liu Ping said.
However, he welcomed the news that royalties would be collected for the
entire music industry.
Karaoke has triggered disputes between copyright holders and bar operators
over copyright infringement since it caught on in China in the mid-1980s.
Fifteen domestic and foreign recording companies, including Warner Music,
Global Music and Sony BMG, launched a campaign in 2003 to charge the royalties
from Chinese karaoke operators, who had lost a succession of lawsuits and been
fined thousands of yuan.