This is exclusive to Deadline and updates Director Matthew Vaughn Pitches Film Fund That’s “Win/Win For Britain And Hollywood”:
PROPOSAL FOR A UK GOVERNMENT FILM FUND
Introduction
This paper sets out the rationale for creating a UK Government film fund using the proceeds from the film tax credit ceasing to be free and instead becoming recoupable and entitled to a profit share.Background
Film is the flagship of the UK’s creative industries, but suffers from deep rooted market failure due primarily to lack of scale in its home market (only the US, Indian and Chinese markets have sufficient scale to support their film industries). Nevertheless, the UK has two major competitive advantages in its language and the renowned quality of its filmmakers, cast, crew and service providers.Broadly, the film industry consists of two sectors: (a) the service providers such as post production facilities, physical studios, visual effect houses etc. and (b) the independent producer community. The first group is part of a global market competing for work on U.S. studio productions and currently much in demand because of its quality and the film tax credit incentivising the studios to base their films here; the second group is a fragmented cottage industry consisting of producers of vastly differing ability, all competing to find money to finance their individual film projects.
Most of this finance comes from offshore (typically a US studio or other foreign distributor) so any profits arising from exploitation of UK films return to the origin of the finance and are taxed in that jurisdiction – none of the upside remains in the UK. The erstwhile aim of creating a sustainable and thriving home grown production business to sit alongside the buoyant services sector therefore remains illusive.
In section 48 of the Finance Act (No. 2) 1997, the Chancellor introduced the ability for a private investor to deduct the cost of acquiring a British film from his individual tax liability, via a so-called sale and leaseback. A similar piece of legislation (section 42 of the Finance Act (No. 2) 1992) already existed but the deduction could only be claimed on a straight line basis over 3 years. Section 48 however allowed the deduction to be claimed in year one (but only on films below £15m). This stimulated a wave of private investment into the UK film business through partnerships of individuals, but was in fact a false dawn. Notwithstanding the benefit to the services sector from increased levels of production, the sale and leaseback mechanism was inefficient, complex and open to abuse. Moreover, the investors did not take performance risk on the films. Success or failure was irrelevant because investors simply received a tax deferral, to be paid back over the life of the film lease irrespective of film performance, while the producer used his benefit from the transaction to defray the cost of
production. It was a purely financial arrangement which did not achieve the policy aim of creating a sustainable business.It did however set the scene for investors to move further up the risk curve and the next generation of film partnerships did take performance risk, while using sideways loss relief (“SLR”) to protect the downside. The quid pro quo was that the partnerships’ income from film exploitation was taxable in UK, so that in success the Treasury would be better off because the tax paid on income would exceed the initial tax relief. In the long run, this could have made a lasting difference to UK producers, but was also open to abuse and despite Conservative-supported attempts to preserve SLR by introducing a purpose test and a pre-clearance procedure, SLR was eventually restricted to “active” investors. In 2007, the film tax credit was introduced in place of s.42 and s48 and in contrast offered a cleaner, simpler mechanism delivering greater value to producers with fewer professional fees to pay along the way.
Combined with the current $/£ exchange rate and the quality of UK service providers, the tax credit makes the UK an attractive and compelling destination for US productions (for which there is global competition). However the vast majority of UK independent producers continue to struggle, because despite the value of the tax credit, the balance of their film budgets is harder to raise than ever. Therefore the UK remains in essence a glorified service provider, with nothing to fall back on if the US studios shift their business elsewhere.
The Proposal
The film tax credit is currently non-recoupable and non-profit sharing but there is no reason why this should be so. It helps protect the downside for a film’s financiers and leverage their returns – in simple terms, a 16% tax credit means that a film costing £100 only needs to find £84 in risk capital, so its backers are reducing their risk by £16 at no cost (they do not share any upside with the provider of that £16).In the commercial world and in any other walk of life, that £16 would command a return and the project would expect to pay it. There is no convincing reason for film to be any different. Instead, there is an expectation formed by years of habit that government support should be free to the film industry, but this must change.
The US majors have enjoyed the benefit of our tax credit on some hugely successful films. They would argue that in return they have contributed millions of pounds to the UK economy, which is true but the world has changed, for everyone.
The major studios (Fox, Disney, Sony, Warner & Universal) are all part of larger media conglomerates and have corporate parents with a keen eye for fiscal responsibility and the bottom line.
Film production is a hit-driven, capital intensive business with volatile and unpredictable returns. Were it not for the need to feed their distribution networks and keep their libraries refreshed, some studios would happily avoid the risk inherent in production altogether, but the stellar returns from new hits together with library cashflow cover the misses.
These returns (and the perceived glamour of film) have attracted investors from time immemorial but outside investment in studio films went into overdrive in the boom decade as excess liquidity in the market sought a home and investors became sold on film as an attractive alternative investment (it’s recession resistant and uncorrelated to the stock market). For their part, the studios (and in particular their parents) welcomed this influx of co-finance because it allowed them to lay off risk and spread their own capital across a larger number of films, thereby creating more product for their distribution networks and increasing the chances of a hit (the portfolio approach at work).
As a result of the credit crunch however, the studios will not have access to the same level of co-finance going forward, but have become dependent on it and their parents expect it. They have reduced their output but their films are now more expensive than ever, as they seek to deliver a technology driven entertainment experience that audiences cannot find anywhere else (e.g. TV, online, mobile, video games etc).
We are not proposing that the UK Government should position itself alongside professional investors. Rather, the point is that the studios need capital and will pay for it, so the tax credit does not have to be free. The studios will argue that asking for any kind of return will undermine the UK’s appeal as a location. We disagree. Certainly there are other jurisdictions with attractive incentives, but every incentive programme has its limits. Looking at the UK’s position as a production centre, the country has a strong hand and should play to it. In today’s cash-strapped world, “soft equity” is a valuable commodity for studios and producers alike.
For the studios, we would propose recouping the tax credit after the studio has recovered its own outlay and then also receiving a profit share. This type of “second position” deal will still be attractive to the studios and gives HM Treasury a chance of recovering sizeable amounts. A similar arrangement could be applied to independent films although the multiparty nature of their financing structure will generally necessitate last position for recoupment (but still with a profit share). These arrangements should be overseen by a professional investment house.
The Fund
With these returns, UK Government could offer additional support to UK independent producers in the form of a matching fund intended to help producers of successful films grow their businesses and strengthen the creative sector.Simply put, the fund would provide producers of eligible films with matching equity finance on terms that help them both finance their films and participate in a greater share of upside.
By way of example, if the producer of a film costing £100 has a private investor who is willing to invest 30% of the budget in consideration for a recoupment position and profit share, the fund would contribute the same amount of equity on the same terms, such that both parties are treated equally. Once the fund has recouped its investment, it would split its profit share with the producer, thereby providing the producer with additional capital to reinvest in his business.
In order to make sure that the fund is not wasted on films with little or prospect of profit, a strict set of eligibility criteria will be necessary and should include the following in order to direct the fund’s support to British films with commercial appeal:
The film must satisfy the same cultural test as the UK tax credit; . The film must have a UK pre-sale to demonstrate appeal in its home market; and . The film must have international distribution in place either with a US studio, or with a 1st class international sales company who has pre-sold the film to at least two major territories in order to demonstrate appeal to the international market.
No set of criteria will be perfect, so the fund will inevitably require discretion to reject films in certain cases in order to prevent abuse.
As with the recoupability of the tax credit, the fund should be managed by a professional investment house with experience in the sector.
Issues
The UK film industry is hard to please, so despite the economic imperative and the obvious benefits to commercially minded producers, there will be objections, such as:Objection: The previous government’s constant tinkering created uncertainty, prevented confident forward planning and made the UK less attractive as a film-making destination. The tax credit is bedded in and is working well, so why change it?
Answer: we are now in a completely different fiscal environment and the tax credit in its current form does not represent good value for taxpayers. Furthermore the creative industries are a highlight of the UK economy and this innovative additional financial support at no further cost to the taxpayer will help under-resourced UK filmmakers develop their commercial potential and promote further growth in this key sector of our economy.Objection: Managing both the recoupment aspect of the tax credit and a fund of this size is considerable additional work. Who will do it? Are UKFC properly equipped?
Answer: An experienced professional investor would be appointed after a tender process. There will be a cost to this, but it will be covered by the revenues generated from the tax credit and the fund, so as above, there is no additional cost to the taxpayer.Objection: The service providers are heavily dependent on US studios and will suffer if the studios desert the UK as a result of this. Why would they stay?
Answer: Although the tax credit will no longer be free, it is still a cheap source of co-finance compared to the studios’ usual co-investors, who in any case have less appetite today as a result of the downturn. Furthermore, we have to change the dynamic here and wean our film industry off its dependency on the US studios if it is ever to become self-sustaining. The UK has a huge talent base which it currently either exports or rents out to the US. This would change if UK film makers could strengthen their capital base through our proposed fund and sustainability might then become a reality instead of an illusion.


So glad to be able to read this evidence that SOMEONE is thinking of ways to resolve the threat of film-culture annihilation in Britain. This plan could work for Canada too. The market share problem is the same. The dependence on the US is the same. Intelligent sharing of resources is essential to the survival of each. Removing the ‘give’ from the taxpayer is a timely idea, coffers are empty, the politicians have little choice. Informed investment with the potential for return, however risky, is much more palatable. Of course the ‘studios’ big and small. will threaten to take their ball and go home. They always resist sharing the profits. And it always proves out that in the English-speaking film world, we need each other.
GOOD LUCK trying to track down production companies to collect monies due from a system with lots of experience hiding revenues. You’ll have to open an entirely new division for this task force–including but not limited to legal eagles, accountants, auditors and process facilitators.
Yes, Miles – the studios do not have an ‘arcane’ accounting system for nothing; how else could films which make their budget and their marketing costs back still be in the RED?
Vaughn seems like a decent guy, makes a variety of good, if under appreciated films. I wish him well with this effort.
Wow, while the merits of Mathew’s proposal are certainly worthwhile investigating what is most refreshing is to know that someone is hard at work trying to be constructive and forward thinking about creating real sustainability in the British Film Industry rather than bitching, moaning and whining about the UKFC, its leaders and the way things have been done in the past. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
What Mathew suggests in risky, but then that is what this business is all about, taking risk while trying to minimize it. And we all know; no risk, no reward. But hey if it doesn’t work out, he’s still got something lovely at home for him.
Great thinking, if the studios gave a damn about the UK. They don’t. And when they stop, there goes the tax credit.
This is really naive.
“Film is the flagship of the UK’s creative industries…”
I wish that were still the case for us, but the bottom line is that the videogame industry is pulling more money into the UK economy these days, and providing evidence of a far greater breadth of startup successes.
What we really need, first and foremost, is to completely divorce our work from this umbrella term “creative industries”. Its wooliness does us no favours at all, not least given we are no longer its bottom-line flagship.
Beyond that though, a sound proposal with a whole lot to commend. I would love to be shooting in the UK, but find the environment and bureaucracy such that a move to mainland Europe has done more for my career in little over a year than a few years might have yielded on that particular treadmill. It shouldn’t have to be like this.
Thank you Mr Vaughn!
this is very similar to the French model with government money recouped and fed back into the industry. Well done for writing this.
You have the votes of myself and my friends!I hope someone listens.
Let’s get a British film BUSINESS back!
If this were France, sure. It isn’t. Do we have a domestic market? No. What’s wrong with you people?!?!?!
Eady Levy. Does anyone remember that? Everybody’s pretending we’re on some OTEHR PLANET where Vaughn’s suggestion might work.
I wonder how many professionals whose lives depend on this are actually making comments here?
None, I suspect. And now I’ll stop too. Depressing as hell to see these simplistic remarks.
Adnovitam, you mention the Eady Levy and that’s another thing that could be introduced in relation to inward investment.
For an additional penny added on to the ticket price would raise £1m that could be used to support the UK independent film industry. Of course the ideal level would be something like 10p-£1. The British Film Industry failed as soon as the Levy was removed losing all of our Studios.
We should also be introducing quotas for cinemas to show British films in line with France and other growing film nations such as Spain.
And so your suggestion is??? Rather than be a negative nanny why don’t come up with something better or have you destined yourself and the industry to failure?
I think this is but part of a plan not a compelete plan for the UK. It misses some fundamental points and it seems very much a view from Matthew Vaughn’s position not taking into account the rest of the UK film industry
This only takes into consideration the UK film tax credit, he does not mention the UK National lottery grant system still in place and which the DCMS has committed to continue to support as stated by Jeremy Hunt MP in parliament. Also he misses some vital points that should be included if the tax credit system is to change and also the future of finance and distribution currently being developed by companies like Slated who bought B-side recently.
I think if Vaughn’s tax plan is used by the DCMS as he states in the press he has been advising them then it should be part ONE of the PLAN. I reiterate UKGOV and the DCMS have committed to keep the £30M UK national Lottery money going into film and developing new talent as Jeremy Hunt MP stated in parliament
I think it is important that the UK tax credit scheme is developed further like the German DFFF scheme so only 25 percent of the spend has to be UK. This will make it easier to do co-productions with other countries not only with the USA and the studios but Europe and other countries and it will also help us grow our own production.
We operate in a intl/global market where Asia not the US is growing and the BRICS will grow their film markets. Doing this will benefit not only the UK based physically studios, crews and facilities as the Germans did with Inglorious Basterds but it will enable more international co-productions benefiting Indi producers too. It offers a flexible scheme where the UK Treasury can benefit from it’s contribution in a good position. Not only will British producers be able to co-produce their work with other countries finance more readily growing own own talent here it will enable UKGov to benefit from the returns internationally in a changing market place.
Like Germany’s scheme a Two part scheme could be used in the UK very well indeed to boost more internal growth by supporting a national and regional production scheme.
This 2nd National and Regional Production would also have a remit to develop new talent/developing. However this fund should be able to be used with the tax credit more international fund support.
Why regional production too? Not all film are made in London after all are they nor should they be, Regional talent and national talent development is important. Why new and growing talent? It is unlikely they will get funded elsewhere. Who funded Chris Nolan’s first film did it make money?
This fund I’d suggest is supported by the 30M UK National Lottery grant based support but is recoupable by the body much as it is now by UKFC. But the fund’s purpose is less commercial. The fund is supported by UK lottery money. Why?
The National Lottery Acts 1993 and 1998 established six good causes to benefit from the Lottery:
* Sport
* The arts (OF WHICH ONE IS FILM)
* Heritage
* Charities
* Projects to mark the millennium
* Innovative projects in health, education and environment.
One of those ARTs is FILM and it was set up for that reason. Thus this fund should is aimed at making more culturally important creative artistic endeavours and developing new and home grown not established talent.
Is film not both produced and consumed as commercial fare and art? Is Britsh culture not important? Layer Cake has a part of British Culture stamped all over it BIT only part. The UK industry not just involved in producing commercial successes but artistic successess too. Should we not still keep grants as an important part of supporting our culture? Is in not important to build our film culture and talent using this system?
The third fund should be drawn from the UK lottery and should support innovation. More and more cross platform production are being made, films that exist across platforms, and films that are made purely for digital online distribution be they near for i-tunes and the like or interactive. This area is bound to grow as the boundaries between games, VR and film blur.
Innovation has always been part of the UK’s scientific and creative culture lets keep it and fund it.
This scheme should support innovative cross platform story telling and not only innovative digital marketing finance and distribution. The future is not far off already people are telling stories across platform with growing audiences, crowd finance and crowd production. One company will soon be tracking a film right from finance, festival to release be it theatrical, online, DVD, TV sale and it will finance films according to data, data not just from test screenings, sales and BOX data, but data using groups peers, maverns, critics and a crowd of 100,000′s of people online. Data, yes data.
I think ANY PLAN should be debated by the UK Film Industry and the future of the UK Industry should not be in the hands of the few. Given the news, Matthew Vaughn seems to be at present the only person advising the DCMS or the only person who has had the guts to stand up and be counted an say I told the DCMS / Jeremy Hunt MP, Ed Vaizey MP and co to scrap the UKFC. Also he has come up with an plan or idea which the DCMS and UKGOV have not so far. At LEAST EH HAS A PLAN which UK GOV seem not to which I a very small cog in the film industry’s wheel find astounding.
Finally do I want an financial institution mucking around with my film? Not really, will they be able to do the script development work with us or do we do it alone or will trust us so the government are still taking a punt? Will they know anything about what my producer and I are talking about? If someone is going to tell us what to do then I want then to know their beans and have worked in the industry and know it well creatively as well as on the more practical finance, marketing, sales and production sides. Where will their film experience come from to act in the interest of return, accountability and profitability for the DCMS and HM Treasury? Should that not be a civil service or quango type function rather then private enterprise to avoid nepotism and keep accountability to the TAX PAYER?
To sum up I think it can only ever be PART of a plan.
Take a look at how the rst of the world works in terms of tax and grants
http://www.ukfilmcouncil.org.uk/…/International_Support_Systems__-_Appendix_FINAL_2010.pdf
Up until the mid 1980′s Britain had a film industry capable of producing, distributing and exhibiting its own movies. And this was down to a mixture of surprisingly high quotas and the Eady levy which had made film-making viable since the late 1920′s.
But then, in 1985, Maggie Thatcher scrapped all this with the result that the film industry went the same way as the car industry – it became a service sector to Hollywood, which also took control of UK distribution and exhibition. Actual British film-making became a cottage industry: loss-making, dependent on UKFC patronage, and without access to any form of general release – unless acquired by a US major distributor, or maybe Pathe, that is.
Vaughn is quite correct when he says we both have to maintain our service sector, whilst weaning it off it’s current total dependence on a Hollywood which, due to the far greater costs involved in 3D, is increasingly turning to such as India as a services provider.
But those countries which today have successful film industries, such as: Korea, France, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and Argentina, have either cinema and television exhibition quotas, or huge subsidies – or both.
Quotas simply have to be part of the equation.
It’s also the case that since 2000, with the advent of digital, there has been an explosion in ‘no-’ and ‘micro-budget’ film-making. This is the pool from which new talents both are and will be emerging. In the USA, Denmark, Sweden to name but a few, these films can be released as “un-rated 18″, thus saving the film-makers all sorts of bureaucratic expenses. Introducing the same measure here would immediately provide a small but effective subsidy at no cost to anyone at all.
Well said Jon re quotas! I agree but try and convince Jeremy Hunt and the DCMS to do it! Have you see the way some industry people from the US are lambasting Vaughn. interesting reading…by the way your friend Woden does not do himself many favours.
I should have added a number of other hurdles that need to be implemented to buoy the UK’s Film Industry.
1) Remove the British Board of Film Classification’s monopoly of censorship on recordable media. The fact that UK film-makers cannot self release their films on DVD without having to pay the BBFC the better part of £1000 (Potentially several times the films budget in the case of films like Colin which was made for £50). Even if this amounts to a voluntary classification of 18 for any film that is released uncensored.
2) In line with the above remove the Encryption system for the UK’s Digital Projector network. Similar to above having to pay £5000 to get our films encrypted for theatre screening removes nearly all advantage we have over not having to get 35mm prints manufactured. (100 times Colin’s entire shooting budget!)
3) Ensure the Digital Projector network stretches to smaller screens within theatres, at the moment most theatres only have digital projection in the main screen, great for things like Avatar or Harry Potter who will fill a 500 seat screen but useless for indie films that might struggle to fill a 100-200 seat screen. Yet these are the films that the projector system was installed to support.
Going in the right direction but there are some flwas in this logic. Soft money is an important component of where a film is shot. If you stopped making the money soft and made it recoupable less films would come to the UK as it offers less upside to the film financiers who already find it hard to recoup their money in the first place. The other critical issue is that the benefits of tax credit (approx 16%) is that the UK is generally more than 16% more expensive to shoot than anywhere else in the world. Therefore mid level budget films will always chase the tax deals and cheapest places to shoot. The issue is more complex than Mathew states. There almost needs to be a different rules for different budget levels.