Tax Dollars Being Spent on Junkets for Writers

October 22nd, 20078:50 am @ Josh Hermsmeyer


A question to you, dear readers:

How do you feel about your tax dollars going toward financing California wine country junkets for foreign wine writers?

According to an article today in the Sac Bee, the Wine Institute is organizing trips and funneling public cash to do just that. From the article:

These traveling crews included a reporter, a photographer, a press agent and a coordinator. Total estimated cost for airfare, accommodations, meals, rental cars and fees: $40,000.

Taxpayers and the wine industry pick up the tab. The resulting stories are billed as marketing gold. An eight-page article in the October 2004 issue of GQ Japan, for instance, was considered the equivalent of a $160,000 ad.

Articles further surpass ads, wine industry officials believe, because consumers routinely discount advertising. The articles are presented as “third party” information from writers conveying “what they have seen and how they feel,” Rollo said, as opposed to explicit ad salesmanship.

“These writers are trusted to be objective, and the frequency of their coverage about California will influence consumer purchase decisions,” the Wine Institute said in its 2004-2005 progress report on Canada.

So, are you willing to have your tax dollars go toward marketing for large commercial wineries so that they can export more of their product overseas?

What the Wine Institute is doing is helping to create more demand in these countries, which is good for the industry, but shouldn’t the wine industry be paying its own way? Or, as quasi-farmers, are we going to get a pass on this?

Let me know in the comments.