Freelance journalists in the UK are earning 66% less than they did 15 years ago, with average annual earnings now at just £7,000, while facing new threats from generative AI that could further undermine their profession. A recent roundtable convened by the New Statesman and the Authors’ Licensing and Collecting Society (ALCS), a UK organization that collects licensing fees for writers, explored how to create sustainable futures for freelance journalism amid these mounting economic pressures and technological disruptions.
The big picture: The journalism industry is experiencing a perfect storm of declining revenues, increased reliance on freelance labor, and emerging AI competition that threatens to further erode writers’ livelihoods.
- Publications increasingly engage freelancers because “it basically costs less” than employing full-time staff, while freelancers struggle without benefits like sick pay or job security.
- Young journalists face a “perpetual internship culture” that prevents career establishment, while experienced journalists rarely earn enough from journalism alone to make a living.
- Journalism has become increasingly centralized in London, depriving freelancers in other regions of opportunities.
What they’re saying: Industry participants emphasized the systemic challenges facing freelance journalists across all career stages.
- “Good luck if you’re a young person, or if you’re from a diverse community and are trying to break into these professions,” said one attendee. “Unless you’ve got independent wealth or connections, it’s very difficult.”
- “Our rates are not going up, but our costs are up, and [there is a] cost of living crisis, we are stuck, and that’s why we’re seeing so many people just reaching this crunch, where they’re taking that decision to leave the industry.”
- “If you’re an investigative freelance journalist, the infrastructure isn’t really there,” another participant noted about the financial challenges of long-term reporting projects.
The AI challenge: Freelance journalists face particular vulnerabilities as AI companies strike content licensing deals with major publishers while excluding individual creators.
- “There’s not a single publication that has been transparent about the deals that they have struck around AI and what they’re charging for their information in news to be used,” one attendee observed.
- Less than one percent of publishers have struck deals with AI companies to use their content, according to a tech industry representative at the roundtable.
- Current copyright protections leave freelancers with court action as their only recourse, which carries “huge financial risk” if unsuccessful.
Emerging solutions: Several initiatives are developing to help freelancers secure fair compensation from AI companies using their work.
- The ALCS and National Union of Journalists recently created SCOOP to offer collective agreements between freelance journalists and companies using their works for AI training and news scraping.
- Tech companies are developing AI data licensing marketplaces to match rights holders with AI companies seeking to license content.
- One tech representative explained: “What we are creating is an AI data licensing marketplace, matching rights holders with AI companies who wants to license that.”
Policy interventions needed: Attendees identified several regulatory approaches that could protect freelance journalists’ interests.
- Germany, Australia, and New Zealand have enacted laws enabling collective bargaining, while Europe leads on AI and digital content distribution protections.
- Proposed solutions include strengthening copyright laws, implementing taxes on technology companies to fund public service broadcasting, and requiring regulation to support collective bargaining between creators and tech companies.
- “We will struggle if we wait for specific regulation. I think we have to try voluntary measures, but I think we’re going to need regulatory backup,” one participant noted.
Why this matters: The decline of freelance journalism threatens media diversity and democratic discourse, particularly affecting underrepresented communities who rely more heavily on freelance opportunities to enter the industry.
Artificial Intelligence is coming for creatives, the question is how to make it fair