In August 2014, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) gave wide-ranging suggestions to transform the country’s media landscape. The aim was to impose restrictions on media ownership and prevent dominance by a few media houses. It was the third time— first in 2008, then in 2012—that the regulator made the effort. For over a decade, four regimes refused to accept or reject them.
The reasons were obvious. Some of the views went against politicians and parties which owned media in several states. Some went against large media companies owned by big business houses, as also media houses that had ventured into non-media areas. Media, thus, was against TRAI. In addition, as media itself became fragmented and polarised, there were not enough voices to push through the decisions.
However, TRAI’s conclusions highlighted negative trends in media, especially those related to ownership. Both political and corporate ownership was up and needed to be curbed. There was a lack of mandatory disclosures. Cross-media ownership had expanded. There were no laws to prevent horizontal integration—across genres like print, TV, cable, digital, etc.
Experts agree with TRAI on political ownership. “Recent research shows examples of major media groups’ connections with politicians and political groups,” says Marius Dragomir, director, Center for Media, Data and Society, Hungary-based Central European University.
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