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2026
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18911164 |
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| author | Bondarev, Sergei |
| author_facet | Bondarev, Sergei |
| contents | <p>This research note <span>for a Forthcoming Comparative Paper </span>introduces a comparative record of how governments treat national film and cultural production budgets under conditions of severe political, economic, or wartime pressure.</p> <p>Across fourteen documented cases between 1939 and 2025, a consistent pattern emerges. When democratic states confront systemic crises, they have more often expanded film and cultural infrastructure than dismantled it. Major wartime governments created or enlarged national film institutions while resources were at their most constrained. Later crises — the aftermath of 2001, the global financial crisis, and the COVID-19 pandemic — again produced expansion rather than retrenchment. Where cuts did occur, they tended to produce limited fiscal savings but long-lasting institutional damage: weakened production capacity, disrupted co-production networks, talent migration, and reduced international credibility.</p> <p>The immediate analytical trigger for assembling the comparative record was the Finnish film-funding episode of five weeks in 2025. Proposed reductions to audiovisual support were reversed in over a month after industry mobilisation and public scrutiny. Similar episodes in other countries produced very different outcomes. Some systems recovered rapidly. Others experienced institutional losses that took years to rebuild.</p> <p>The note does not present the full study. Instead, it establishes the comparative framework, explains the case-selection logic, and identifies the structural signals that often appear before funding reductions are proposed. A recurring factor across several cases is administrative misclassification: film support treated in budget negotiations as a subsidy rather than as production infrastructure, with decisions shaped by information gaps at the point of policy choice.</p> <p>The historical cases examined in the forthcoming comparative paper are placed alongside a current policy inflection point in Europe. Nordic and Baltic governments are now designing streaming-service levies and investment obligations that will determine how national film sectors are financed during the coming decade. Understanding how earlier governments responded to fiscal pressure is therefore not only a historical exercise, but also a policy question with immediate relevance.</p> <p>This document provides a citable public form of the research while the full comparative paper is being completed. It is intended for readers interested in cultural policy, audiovisual economics, and the institutional resilience of national film industries.</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_18911164 |
| institution | Zenodo |
| language | |
| publishDate | 2026 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
| record_format | zenodo |
| spellingShingle | Film Budgets Under Pressure Bondarev, Sergei <p>This research note <span>for a Forthcoming Comparative Paper </span>introduces a comparative record of how governments treat national film and cultural production budgets under conditions of severe political, economic, or wartime pressure.</p> <p>Across fourteen documented cases between 1939 and 2025, a consistent pattern emerges. When democratic states confront systemic crises, they have more often expanded film and cultural infrastructure than dismantled it. Major wartime governments created or enlarged national film institutions while resources were at their most constrained. Later crises — the aftermath of 2001, the global financial crisis, and the COVID-19 pandemic — again produced expansion rather than retrenchment. Where cuts did occur, they tended to produce limited fiscal savings but long-lasting institutional damage: weakened production capacity, disrupted co-production networks, talent migration, and reduced international credibility.</p> <p>The immediate analytical trigger for assembling the comparative record was the Finnish film-funding episode of five weeks in 2025. Proposed reductions to audiovisual support were reversed in over a month after industry mobilisation and public scrutiny. Similar episodes in other countries produced very different outcomes. Some systems recovered rapidly. Others experienced institutional losses that took years to rebuild.</p> <p>The note does not present the full study. Instead, it establishes the comparative framework, explains the case-selection logic, and identifies the structural signals that often appear before funding reductions are proposed. A recurring factor across several cases is administrative misclassification: film support treated in budget negotiations as a subsidy rather than as production infrastructure, with decisions shaped by information gaps at the point of policy choice.</p> <p>The historical cases examined in the forthcoming comparative paper are placed alongside a current policy inflection point in Europe. Nordic and Baltic governments are now designing streaming-service levies and investment obligations that will determine how national film sectors are financed during the coming decade. Understanding how earlier governments responded to fiscal pressure is therefore not only a historical exercise, but also a policy question with immediate relevance.</p> <p>This document provides a citable public form of the research while the full comparative paper is being completed. It is intended for readers interested in cultural policy, audiovisual economics, and the institutional resilience of national film industries.</p> |
| title | Film Budgets Under Pressure |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18911164 |