UK performers and publishers now earn more from broadcasts and legal
downloads than copyright income earned from CD sales, according to the latest
figures.
The MCPS-PRS Alliance, which collects rights on behalf of UK songwriters and
publishers, reported overall growth in income of 2.8 per cent over 2007, despite
an 11 per cent decline in rights earnings from physical sales.
The figures indicate how earnings from broadcasters and online stores are
displacing physical sales of CDs in terms of generating income for musicians and
their publishers.
MCPS-PRS said that income from broadcasting and online sources increased by
seven per cent in 2007 to £155.5m.
"The important thing is to be able to collect [revenue] in new ways and new
places to make up for the obvious decline in CD sales," Steve Porter, MCPS-PRS
Alliance chief executive, told The Financial Times.
The figures also show that just 0.01 per cent of the MCPS-PRS Alliance's
50,000 members, or about five people, earn over £1m a year from song copyrights.
The vast majority (95 per cent) earn less than £10,000 a year.
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