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Hollywood, Bollywood seek to stamp out piracy together
Showbiz Desk
Washington—The American entertainment industry wants to join hands with
India to eliminate counterfeiting and piracy that costs Bollywood an
estimated loss of $4 billion and 800,000 direct jobs each year. Leading
entertainment companies from Hollywood and Bollywood came together at an
India super-session show organised by the National Association of
Broadcasters (NAB) of America in Las Vegas, Nevada.
“Now that we’ve quantified the losses, we’re working with government and
industry to eliminate counterfeiting and piracy at the source,” said
Greg Kalbaugh, director and counsel at US India Business Council (USIBC),
an advocacy group seeking to advance India-US commercial ties. “The
first step is supporting India’s adoption of sensible legislation which
regulates the production of optical discs. That will have an immediate
impact on the rates of counterfeiting and piracy,” he said.
“The Indian entertainment industry is growing at a combined annual rate
of over 18 percent and companies at the NAB show have shown enormous
interest in collaborating with India,” said Farokh T. Balsara, national
sector leader, Media and Entertainment for Ernst & Young-India. “The
USIBC-FICCI Bollywood-Hollywood Initiative has raised expectations that
the very real concerns over counterfeiting and piracy will be addressed,
leading directly to the generation of additional jobs and revenue,” he
said leading the session “India’s Entertainment Economy: From Emerging
to Surging.”
Kalbaugh said: “Every time we discuss the Bollywood-Hollywood
Initiative, additional stakeholders come out of the woodwork with their
own story about how piracy and counterfeiting have impacted their
business.” “Las Vegas has been no different - I’ve been approached by
content providers, distributors, producers, and financiers, all of whom
have the same story: counterfeiting and piracy are killing our industry
and it’s about time we banded together to put a stop to it.”
“The Hollywood-Bollywood Initiative has really touched a nerve, and
companies in the US and India are lining up to offer their support,”
said Kalbaugh. The discussions the at the show were held in the backdrop
of a USIBC study on ‘The Effects of Counterfeiting and Piracy on India’s
Entertainment Industry’, commissioned as part of the USIBC-FICCI
Bollywood-Hollywood Initiative.
The study, prepared for USIBC by Ernst & Young India, demonstrates that
India’s burgeoning entertainment industry loses as much as 4 billion US
dollars and 800,000 direct jobs each year due to counterfeiting and
piracy. The USIBC-FICCI Bollywood-Hollywood Initiative promotes the
sustainable growth and convergence underway between the entertainment
industries of the US and India. |