Canadian Heritage Minister Melanie Joly heads to UNESCO this week where, according to the Globe and Mail, she will be focused on making the case for a common approach on mandatory cultural contributions from companies such as Netflix. Joly states:

I’ve always said we are ready to have conversations with those companies and those platforms. We are already engaged with them, and will continue to do so. But on a general level, it is obvious that the more we are able to have a concerted approach among countries on this issue, the better we will be able to make sure it is a priority.

Joly’s goal would appear to be to develop a universal position at UNESCO that countries could then leverage to force companies such as Netflix to comply with local content regulations. I’m quoted in the article to the effect that efforts to harmonize sales taxes on digital services makes sense at a global level, but targeting companies like Netflix with new regulations or tinkering with the Internet in violation of fundamental net neutrality principles does not.

I think Joly’s seeming interest in creating a global cultural regulatory framework for digital services is unnecessary at best and harmful at worst. First, the emergence of global digital giants has largely been fuelled by the absence of content regulation. Platforms such as Netflix and Google have grown by providing consumers more choice and flexibility than the regulated system. By responding to market demands, the companies have developed enormously popular, well-priced services that offer great potential for creators to find new markets and call into question the relevance of many legacy regulations.

Second, even if there is a role for domestic regulation, UNESCO, a United Nations agency, is surely not the right venue to address these issues (the U.S. is not even a signatory to the 2005 convention referenced by Joly). There may be value in discussing cross-border issues such as harmonized sales taxes or ensuring that countries do not block access to online video services at a global level (which already takes places in venues such as the OECD), but a U.N. policy on domestic cultural regulation is a poor fit for the issues raised by online video services.

Third, the Netflix response to the government’s consultation on Canadian content provides a compelling argument against the need for domestic regulation in order to attract investment. Despite the absence of regulatory requirements, Netflix has emerged as one of the leading backers of Canadian content, reporting that it commissioned hundreds of millions of dollars in original programming in Canada in 2016 (a Netflix tax comparable to that paid by cable and satellite companies would generate a fraction of that amount). In fact, Netflix says that Canada now ranks as one of its top three locations worldwide for original productions. Given that the company spends billions each year on content, the activity in Canada is likely larger than all but a handful of regulated sources. The Netflix submission provides a full sense of the scope of its support for Canadian content. It includes:

Original Cancon co-productions with Canadian producers and broadcasters in 2016 (Netflix obtains rights outside Canada )

Anne (with CBC)

Alias Grace (with CBC)

Between (with Rogers’ City TV)

Travelers (with Corus Entertainment’s Showcase)

Frontier (with Bell Media’s Discovery Channel)

Degrassi: Next Class (with DHX Media’s Family Channel)

Orphan Black (with Bell Media)

Some Assembly Required (with Corus Entertainment YTV)

Original CanCon that may not qualify as such due to Netflix financing and global distribution

Trailer Park Boys

ARQ

Netflix originals produced in Canada for global distribution making use of Canadian creative and other resources

Special Correspondents

Van Helsing

I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives In the House

Lost in Space

A Series of Unfortunate Events

Altered Carbon

Okja

Death Note

Dirk Gently

Hemlock Grove

Haters Back Off

Netflix original kids titles produced in Canada for global distribution making use of Canadian creative and other resources

Little Prince

Beat Bugs

Lost and Found Music Studios

Inspector Gadget

Hilda, Luna Petunia

True and the Rainbow Kingdom

Project MC2

Justin Time Go!

Magic School Bus 360

Rather than looking for new forms of global Internet regulation, perhaps Joly should be asking why there are still Canadian groups calling for regulation of an entrant that would appear to be one of the leading investors in Canadian content and working on ways to ensure that Canadian content can be exported worldwide.