Audio By Carbonatix
The Director General of the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC), Professor Amin Alhassan, is calling for a national dialogue to find viable solutions to the issue of underpayment of journalists in the country.
According to him, this will help journalists have the honour to serve the country’s democracy and also hold duty bearers accountable.
He expressed that journalists in the country cannot be expected to be instrumental in ensuring that a positive change is achieved when they are underpaid.
“You can’t be paying journalists with the power to speak over a microphone 500 cedis a month and expect them to be instrumental in ensuring that our public sphere is effective for critical public discussions over serious policy issues.”
“We must have a national conversation to see how the private media, the community media, the public media are sustainable financially to ensure that their workers are properly paid so that they can have the honour to serve our democracy,” he said on JoyNews’ Newsfile on Saturday April 22.
Prof. Alhassan expressed that the current low financial muscle of the media in Ghana makes it easily possible for journalists to be influenced by officials.
Meanwhile, Prof Alhassan has lamented the dwindling revenue generation by the traditional media compared to that of social media or online media.
According to him, although the traditional media generate much of the content used by online media, it does not rake in as much revenue as those other avenues.
He noted that despite the country pursuing digital transformation in virtually every sector of the economy, the larger section of Ghana’s population still depend on the traditional media and therefore measures need to be taken in sustaining it financially.
His comments come after a publication, The State of the Ghanaian Media Report 2023 said the Ghanaian media is not financially viable.
According to the report, “the media industry is too heavily plagued by saturation, the cost of doing business in Ghana, dwindling advertising budgets [including capital fight onto social media platforms], the after-effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and fast-evolving technological changes to be considered financially healthy.”
It noted that the financial health of the local media is patchy, at best.
It added that although there are clear signs of healthy indicators of financial potential, there are equally pressing challenges to viability.
“Factors situated within the structure of the local media scene, the COVID-19 pandemic, the state of the local economy and the fast pace of technological evolutions both hurt the financial health of the media in Ghana.
“Like all businesses in the country, media organisations are finding themselves at the mercy of forex rate-induced rising fuel, utility and retooling costs which have become a constant drain on incomes. As these and other costs increase, the capacity for media to adequately resource and remunerate employees to engender professional practice reduces.
“The high cost of doing business also has implications for content diversity. Indeed, as we find, it costs more to generate local content than to import and do voice translation sound inserts. This explains the increasing levels of imported Asian and Southern American telenovelas which are gradually weaning local audience tastes off local films and drama. The long-term implications for financial viability are dire,” the report said.
Latest Stories
-
OSP’s preventive actions saved Ghana millions – Sammy Darko
22 minutes -
Galamsey cuts off cocoa farms in Mfantseman, farmers suffer heavy losses
1 hour -
Ghanaian delegation set for January 20, 2026 trip to Latvia in Nana Agyei case – Ablakwa
2 hours -
Accra turns white as Dîner en Blanc delivers night of elegance and culture
4 hours -
War-torn Myanmar voting in widely criticised ‘sham’ election
6 hours -
Justice by guesswork is dangerous – Constitution Review Chair calls for data-driven court reforms
6 hours -
Justice delayed is justice denied, the system is failing litigants – Constitution Review Chair
7 hours -
Reform without data is a gamble – Constitution Review Chair warns against rushing Supreme Court changes
7 hours -
Rich and voiceless: How Putin has kept Russia’s billionaires on side in the war against Ukraine
8 hours -
Cruise ship hits reef on first trip since leaving passenger on island
8 hours -
UK restricts DR Congo visas over migrant return policy
8 hours -
Attack on Kyiv shows ‘Russia doesn’t want peace’, Zelensky says
8 hours -
Two dead in 50-vehicle pile up on Japan highway
8 hours -
Fearing deportation, Hondurans in the US send more cash home than ever before
8 hours -
New York blanketed in snow, sparking travel chaos
9 hours
