Secretary Pritzker Tours Loud Recording Studios and Speaks With Music and Entertainment Industry Leaders

Secretary Pritzker Tours Loud Recording Studios and Speaks With Music and Entertainment Industry Leaders

Secretary Pritzker Tours Loud Recording Studios and Speaks With Music and Entertainment Industry Leaders
Today, as part of her nationwide listening tour, Secretary Penny Pritzker toured Loud Recording Studios with Cary Sherman, Chairman and CEO of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and Jim Catino, Vice President of A&R for Sony Music Nashville. The music industry is a vibrant part of Nashville’s economy and the American economy as a whole. In fact, entertainment, literary and artistic originals contributed $74 billion to the U.S. economy last year, according to the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis.
According to a report by the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce and the Music City Music Council, the music industry sustains more than 56,000 jobs and contributes both to the local economy and the region’s gross domestic product.
During the roundtable, Secretary Pritzker not only discussed how the music and entertainment industries are contributing to the health of the creative economy, but also the key role the Commerce Department plays in supporting and protecting intellectual property and innovation.

Recently, the Commerce Department’s U.S. Patent and Trademark Office released the green paper on Copyright Policy, Creativity, and Innovation in the Digital Economy. The green paper calls for multi-stakeholder dialogues and roundtables on pressing policy debates including the status of remixes, the reselling of digital copyrighted works, prosecution of individual file-sharers, and the role of government in the online licensing marketplace. The Secretary expressed that the green paper represents Commerce’s ongoing effort to balance intellectual property rights and the need to nurture the free and open Internet as an economic engine and platform for innovation.
Recently Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) revised the way it counts the amount of money businesses invest in the production of such intellectual property as part of gross domestic product (GDP). BEA on July 31 began including the amount of money businesses invest in the production of intellectual property as part of gross domestic product, or GDP. That means money that a recording studio invests in the creation of a new song will be counted in GDP. It’s the same treatment as when a company buys a drill press or invests in a new building. The new expenditures for entertainment, literary, and artistic originals are grouped with expenditures for software into a new investment category called “intellectual property products.”
The music industry is a vibrant part of not just Nashville’s economy, but the nation’s as well. In short, creative Americans create jobs. As Secretary Pritzker continues to travel the country, she will continue to look for ways the federal government can work with this industry to create even more opportunities and even more jobs.

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