Caucus creator launches the Patreon Congress, YouTube | Techcrunch

The representatives of Yvette Clarke (D-NY) and Beth van Duyne (R-TX) launched a Bipartisan congress filmmaker on Thursday, the aim of which is to support the Creator’s economy.

Although it once looked like a dream of a pipeline to make a living on the Internet, this industry was estimated that the Youtube ecosystem in 2022 was driven by the Youtube ecosystem by 2027 by over 390,000 equivalent jobs, while the economy Goldman Sachs could cost half a trillion by 2027.

However, the US government does not have much regulatory supervision or understanding the Creator’s economy as it costs, so the creative companies let them bind.

“Given that the online presence of digital content creators still reaches billions around the world, Congress must work to ensure established resources and protection to support their success in this new era of start -up businesses,” Clarke said in the state.

Matthew Patrick (Matpat) and Stephanie Patrick, who founded the popular digital production studio of the theoretical media, spoke of a press action to start the case. The duo of his husband and his wife spent more than a year lobbying on the hill Capitol to defend the needs of the creators.

“We are trying to educate legislators about what the Creator’s economy is, and that is real work and that we are in fact small companies, and as a result there are certain tax codes and that they are applications,” Matthew Patrick (creator known as Matpat) TechCrunch last year. “Even if you talk to accountants, it’s like, well, but are you? Without the fact that there is no clear indicator of tax forms – like, what is the creative company?”

Patricks were also trying to point out that the Creator’s economy is not an industry limited to the coast, in hotspots of the entertainment industry, such as New York City and Los Angeles – rather an industry that needs support throughout the country. The theoresist media and Mrbeast, the most popular YouTubers in the world, are located in North Carolina. Meanwhile, John and Hank Green used their success on YouTube to start businesses as an educational media company that is based in Indiana and Montana.

Patreon and YouTube, two of the most important companies that help the creators, confirmed their support to the new choir.

As a blog contribution, Patîon explains the creators often building business without the same protection as traditional business such as insurance, disasters and access to loans. Even startups such as Karat Financial have appeared to fill in some of these gaps, provide business credit cards and banking to creators who are often denied these services because older financial institutions do not understand their businesses.

“The creators are too often overlooked in economic policy discussions – to be the owner of small enterprises, employers and cultural tastes in every congress district,” explained Courtney Duffy, the head of Patreon’s external affairs and a strategic commitment. “The Bipartisan Congress Creator is a crucial step towards recognizing their impact and establishing that they have a place in the formation of policies that affect their livelihood.”

(Tagstotranslate) the Creator’s economy

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