Michael Geist writes, “Randy Bachman found himself embroiled in a public fight with Prime Minister Stephen Harper last year when Harper used his song ‘Takin’ Care of Business’ as a theme song for a major speech. Bachman said he probably would not have granted permission to use the song, since ‘I don’t think he’s taking care of business for the right people or the right reasons.'”
Bachman was singing a different tune yesterday as the government released its budget and apparently took care of the right people — record companies. Despite no study, no public demands, and the potential cost to the public of millions of dollars, the government announced that it will extend the term of copyright for sound recordings and performances from 50 to 70 years. For that giveaway, Bachman was quoted as saying ‘thanks for the term extension PM Harper, you really are taking care of business.’`
While the government lined up industry supporters to praise the term extension, the decision is unexpected and unnecessary (it also announced that it will accede to the Marrakesh copyright treaty for the blind, but that should not require significant domestic reforms). The music industry did not raise term extension as a key concern during either the 2012 copyright reform bill or the 2014 Canadian Heritage committee study on the industry. Experience elsewhere suggests that the extension is a windfall for record companies, with little benefit to artists or the public. In fact, many countries that have implemented the extension have been forced to do so through trade or political agreements, while signalling their opposition along the way.
Canada will extend term without any public discussion or consultation, yet other studies have found that retroactive extension does not lead to increased creation and that the optimal term length should enable performers and record labels to recoup their investment, not extend into near-unlimited terms to the detriment of the public. For Canadians, the extension could cost millions of dollars as works that were scheduled to come into the public domain will now remain locked down for decades.