The creative industries
refers to a range of economic activities which are concerned with the
generation or exploitation of knowledge and information. They may
variously also be referred to as the cultural industries (especially in Europe (Hesmondhalgh 2002, p. 14) or the creative economy (Howkins 2001), and most recently they have been denominated as the Orange Economy in Latin America and the Caribbean (Buitrago & Duque 2013).
Howkins' creative economy comprises advertising, architecture, art, crafts, design, fashion, film, music, performing arts, publishing, R&D, software, toys and games, TV and radio, and video games (Howkins 2001, pp. 88–117). Some scholars consider that education industry, including public and private services, is forming a part of creative industry. There remain, therefore, different definitions of the sector (Hesmondhalgh 2002, p. 12)(DCMS 2006).
The creative industries have been seen to become increasingly important to economic well-being, proponents suggesting that "human creativity is the ultimate economic resource" (Florida 2002, p. xiii), and that "the industries of the twenty-first century will depend increasingly on the generation of knowledge through creativity and innovation" (Landry & Bianchini 1995, p. 4).
Howkins' creative economy comprises advertising, architecture, art, crafts, design, fashion, film, music, performing arts, publishing, R&D, software, toys and games, TV and radio, and video games (Howkins 2001, pp. 88–117). Some scholars consider that education industry, including public and private services, is forming a part of creative industry. There remain, therefore, different definitions of the sector (Hesmondhalgh 2002, p. 12)(DCMS 2006).
The creative industries have been seen to become increasingly important to economic well-being, proponents suggesting that "human creativity is the ultimate economic resource" (Florida 2002, p. xiii), and that "the industries of the twenty-first century will depend increasingly on the generation of knowledge through creativity and innovation" (Landry & Bianchini 1995, p. 4).
Definitions
Various commentators have provided varying suggestions on what activities to include in the concept of "creative industries" (DCMS 2001, p. 04) (Hesmondhalgh 2 002, p. 12)(Howkins 2001, pp. 88–117)(UNCTAD 2008,
pp. 11–12), and the name itself has become a contested issue – with
significant differences and overlap between the terms "creative
industries", "cultural industries" and "creative economy" (Hesmondhalgh 2002, pp. 11–14)(UNCTAD 2008, p. 12).
Lash and Urry suggest that each of the creative industries has an
"irreducible core" concerned with "the exchange of finance for rights
in intellectual property", (Lash & Urry 1994, p. 117). This echoes the UK Government Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) definition which describes the creative industries as:
- "those 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" (DCMS 2001, p. 04)
As of 2015 the DCMS definition recognizes nine creative sectors, namely:
- Advertising and marketing
- Architecture
- Crafts
- Design: product, graphic and fashion design
- film, TV, video, radio and photography
- IT, software and computer services
- Publishing
- Museums, galleries and libraries
- Music, performing and visual arts
To this list John Howkins would add toys and games, also including the much broader area of research and development in science and technology (Howkins 2001, pp. 88–117). It has also been argued that gastronomy belongs in such a list.
The various fields of engineering
do not appear on this list, that emerged from the DCMS reports. This
was due, probably, to the fact that engineers occupy relevant positions
in "non-cultural" corporations, performing activities of project,
management, operation, maintenance, risk analysis and supervision, among
others. However, historically and presently, several tasks of engineers
can be regarded as highly creative, inventive and innovative. The
contribution of engineering is represented by new products, processes
and services.
Hesmondhalgh reduces the list to what he terms "the core cultural industries" of advertising and marketing, broadcasting, film, internet and music industries, print and electronic publishing, and video and computer games.
His definition only includes those industries that create "texts"' or
"cultural artefacts" and which engage in some form of industrial
reproduction (Hesmondhalgh 2002, pp. 12–14).
The DCMS list has proven influential, and many other nations have formally adopted it. It has also been criticised. It has been argued that the division into sectors obscures a divide between lifestyle business,
non-profits, and larger businesses, and between those who receive state
subsidies (e.g., film) and those who do not (e.g., computer games). The
inclusion of the antiques trade often comes into question, since it
does not generally involve production (except of reproductions and
fakes). The inclusion of all computer services has also been questioned (Hesmondhalgh 2002, p. 13).
Some areas, such as Hong Kong, have preferred to shape their policy around a tighter focus on copyright ownership in the value chain. They adopt the WIPO's
classifications, which divide up the creative industries according to
who owns the copyrights at various stages during the production and
distribution of creative content.
The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) has denominated them for Latin America and the Caribbean as the Orange Economy
which is defined as the "group of linked activities through which ideas
are transformed into cultural goods and services whose value is
determined by intellectual property."
Others
have suggested a distinction between those industries that are open to
mass production and distribution (film and video; videogames;
broadcasting; publishing), and those that are primarily craft-based and
are meant to be consumed in a particular place and moment (visual arts; performing arts; cultural heritage).
How creative workers are counted
The
DCMS classifies enterprises and occupations as creative according to
what the enterprise primarily produces, and what the worker primarily
does. Thus, a company which produces records would be classified as
belonging to the music industrial sector, and a worker who plays piano would be classified as a musician.
The primary purpose of this is to quantify – for example it can
be used to count the number of firms, and the number of workers,
creatively employed in any given location, and hence to identify places
with particularly high concentrations of creative activities.
It leads to some complications which are not immediately obvious.
For example, a security guard working for a music company would be
classified as a creative employee, although not as creatively occupied.
The total number of creative employees is then calculated as the sum of:
- All workers employed in creative industries, whether or not creatively occupied (e.g. all musicians, security guards, cleaners, accountants, managers, etc. working for a record company)
- All workers that are creatively occupied, and are not employed in creative industries (for example, a piano teacher in a school). This includes people whose second job is creative, for example somebody who does weekend gigs, writes books, or produces artwork in their spare time
Properties or characteristics
According to Caves (2000), creative industries are characterized by seven economic properties:
- Nobody knows principle: Demand uncertainty exists because the consumers' reaction to a product are neither known beforehand, nor easily understood afterward.
- Art for art's sake: Workers care about originality, technical professional skill, harmony, etc. of creative goods and are willing to settle for lower wages than offered by 'humdrum' jobs.
- Motley crew principle: For relatively complex creative products (e.g., films), the production requires diversely skilled inputs. Each skilled input must be present and perform at some minimum level to produce a valuable outcome.
- Infinite variety: Products are differentiated by quality and uniqueness; each product is a distinct combination of inputs leading to infinite variety options (e.g., works of creative writing, whether poetry, novel, screenplays or otherwise).
- A list/B list: Skills are vertically differentiated. Artists are ranked on their skills, originality, and proficiency in creative processes and/or products. Small differences in skills and talent may yield huge differences in (financial) success.
- Time flies: When coordinating complex projects with diversely skilled inputs, time is of the essence.
- Ars longa: Some creative products have durability aspects that invoke copyright protection, allowing a creator or performer to collect rents.
The properties described by Caves have been criticized for being too
rigid (Towse, 2000). Not all creative workers are purely driven by 'art
for art's sake'. The 'ars longa' property also holds for certain
noncreative products (i.e., licensed products). The 'time flies'
property also holds for large construction projects. Creative industries
are therefore not unique, but they score generally higher on these
properties relative to non-creative industries.
Difference from the 'cultural industries'
There is often a question about the boundaries between creative industries and the similar term of cultural industries.
Cultural industries are best described as an adjunct-sector of the
creative industries. Cultural industries include industries that focus
on cultural tourism and heritage, museums and libraries, sports and outdoor activities, and a variety of 'way of life' activities that arguably range from local pet shows to a host of hobbyist
concerns. Thus cultural industries are more concerned about delivering
other kinds of value—including cultural wealth and social wealth—rather
than primarily providing monetary value.
The creative class
Some authors, such as the American economist Richard Florida, argue for a wider focus on the products of knowledge workers, and judge the 'creative class' (his own term) to include nearly all those offering professional knowledge-based services.
The creative class and diversity
Florida's focus leads him to pay particular attention to the nature of the creative workforce.
In a study of why particular US cities such as San Francisco seem to
attract creative producers, Florida argues that a high proportion of
workers from the 'creative class'
provide a key input to creative production, which enterprises seek out.
He seeks to quantitatively establish the importance of diversity and multiculturalism
in the cities concerned, for example the existence of a significant
public gay community, ethnic and religious variety, and tolerance. (Florida 2002)
Economic contribution
Globally, Creative Industries excluding software and general scientific research and development
are said to have accounted for around 4% of the world's economic output
in 1999, which is the last year for which comprehensive figures are
currently available. Estimates of the output corresponding to scientific
Research and Development
suggest that an additional 4-9% might be attributable to the sector if
its definition is extended to include such activities, though the
figures vary significantly between different countries.
Taking the UK
as an example, in the context of other sectors, the creative industries
make a far more significant contribution to output than hospitality or utilities and deliver four times the output due to agriculture, fisheries and forestry.
In terms of employment and depending on the definition of activities
included, the sector is a major employer of between 4-6% of the UK's working population, though this is still significantly less than employment due to traditional areas of work such as retail and manufacturing.
Within the creative industries sector and again taking the UK as an example, the three largest sub-sectors are design, publishing, and television and radio. Together these account for around 75% of revenues and 50% of employment.
The complex supply chains in the creative industries sometimes make it challenging to calculate accurate figures for the gross value added by each sub-sector. This is particularly the case for the service-focused sub-sectors such as advertising, whereas it is more straightforward in product-focused sub-sectors such as crafts.
Not surprisingly, perhaps, competition in product-focused areas tends
to be more intense with a tendency to drive the production end of the
supply chain to become a commodity business.
There may be a tendency for publicly funded creative industries
development services to inaccurately estimate the number of creative
businesses during the mapping process. There is also imprecision in
nearly all tax code systems that determine a person's profession, since
many creative people operate simultaneously in multiple roles and jobs.
Both these factors mean that official statistics relating to the
Creative Industries should be treated with caution.
The creative industries in Europe make a significant contribution
to the EU economy, creating about 3% of EU GDP – corresponding to an
annual market value of €500 billion – and employing about 6 million
people. In addition, the sector plays a crucial role in fostering
innovation, in particular for devices and networks. The EU records the
second highest TV viewing figures globally, producing more films than
any other region in the world. In that respect, the newly proposed 'Creative Europe' program (July 2011)
will help preserve cultural heritage while increasing the circulation
of creative works inside and outside the EU. The programme will play a
consequential role in stimulating cross border co-operation, promoting
peer learning and making these sectors more professional. The Commission
will then propose a financial instrument run by the European Investment
Bank to provide debt and equity finance for cultural and creative
industries. The role of the non-state actors within the governance
regarding Medias will not be neglected anymore. Therefore, building a
new approach extolling the crucial importance of a European level
playing field industry may boost the adoption of policies aimed at
developing a conducive environment, enabling European companies as well
as citizens to use their imagination and creativity – both sources of
innovation -, and therefore of competitiveness and sustainability. It
supposes to tailor the regulatory and institutional frameworks in
supporting private-public collaboration, in particular in the Medias
sector.
The EU therefore plans to develop clusters, financing instruments as
well as foresight activities to support this sector. The European
Commission wishes to assist European creators and audiovisual
enterprises to develop new markets through the use of digital
technology, and asks how policy-making can best help achieve this. A
more entrepreneurial culture will have to take hold with a more positive
attitude towards risk-taking, and a capacity to innovate anticipating
future trends. Creativity plays an important role in human resource
management as artists and creative professionals can think laterally.
Moreover, new jobs requiring new skills created in the post-crisis
economy should be supported by labour mobility to ensure that people are
employed wherever their skills are needed.
In the US
In the introduction to a 2013 special issue of Work and Occupations
on artists in the US workforce, the guest editors argue that by
examining the work lives of artists, one can identify characteristics
and actions that help both individual workers and policy makers adapt to
changing economic conditions. Elizabeth Lingo and Steven Tepper cite
multiple sources to suggest artists' skill sets allow them to "work
beyond existing markets and create entirely new opportunities for
themselves and others".
Specifically, Lingo and Tepper suggest artistic workers are "catalysts
of change and innovation" because they "face special challenges managing
ambiguity, developing and sustaining a relative identity, and forming
community in the context of an individually based enterprise economy"
(2013). Because of these adaptive skills, the suggestion is that
"studying how artists cope with uncertainty and the factors that
influence their success should be relevant for understanding these
broader social and economic trends facing today's (and tomorrow's)
workforce."
This view of artist-as-change-agent changes the questions
researchers ask of creative economies. Old research questions would
focus on topics like "skills, work practices, contracts, wage
differentials, employment incentives, formal credentials, employment
pipelines, and labor flows of differentiated occupational categories".
Examples of new questions include:
- How do artists both create changes in the labor market itself and the way cultural work is done?
- What is their process of innovation and enterprise?
- What is the nature of their work and the resources they draw upon?
- How do different network structures produce different opportunity spaces?
- How do artistic workers create and manage planned serendipity—the spaces and exchanges that produce unexpected collaborations and opportunities?
- How do creative workers broker and synthesize across occupational, genre, geographic, and industry boundaries to create new possibilities? (Tepper & Lingo, 2013)
Wider role
As some first world countries struggle to compete in traditional markets such as manufacturing, many now see the creative industry as a key component in a new knowledge economy, capable perhaps of delivering urban regeneration, often through initiatives linked to exploitation of cultural heritage that leads to increased tourism. It is often argued that, in future, the ideas and imagination of countries like the United Kingdom will be their greatest asset; in support of this argument, a number of universities in the UK have started to offer creative entrepreneurship
as a specific area for study and research. Indeed, UK government
figures reveal that the UK's creative industries account for over a
million jobs and brought in £112.5 billion to the UK economy (DCMS Creative Industries Mapping Document 2001), although the data sets underlying these figures are open to question.
In recent years, creative industries have become 'increasingly attractive to governments outside the developed world'. In 2005, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD) XI High Level Panel on Creative Industries and Development
commissioned several studies to identify challenges and opportunities
facing the growth and development of creative industries in developing
industries. As Cunningham et al. (2009) put it, 'the harnessing
of creativity brings with it the potential of new wealth creation, the
cultivation of local talent and the generation of creative capital, the
development of new export markets, significant multiplier effects
throughout the broader economy, the utilisation of information
communication technologies and enhanced competitiveness in an
increasingly global economy'. A key driver of interest in creative
industries and development is the acknowledgement that the value of
creative production resides in ideas and individual creativity, and
developing countries have rich cultural traditions and pools of creative
talent which lay a basic foundation for creative enterprises.
Reflecting the growing interest in the potential of creative industries
in developing countries, in October 2011 a Ministry of Tourism and
Creative Economy was created within the Indonesian government with
well-known economist Dr Mari Pangestu appointed as the first minister to hold the position.