Media and companies around the world are generally owned (controlling interest) by citizens of the country they are located. As a US Citizen, I cannot own a Canadian radio station or one in Mexico.
Actually, you can own up to 50% of a station in Mexico, and you can have the Mexican partner be a "silent" one where you own, each, half but own 100% of the marketing rights so you program and sell and manage and pass a fee to the ownership interests.
Emmis owned stations in Argentina. I owned stations in Ecuador. The Spanish group PRISA owns stations outright or via partnerships in Chile, Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica and Mexico.
Clear Channel owned controlling interests in England and Australia as well as a partnership with ACIR in Mexico. Metromedia owned stations in Russia, Bulgaria and several others. Emmis owned in Hungary.
The real issue is not whether you can own them, but whether a highly regulated business in all nations is a good risk with good profit potential.
If I have a controlling interest partner that is a citizen, then that changes, perhaps with media as well. At least here in the USA one can lease their station to whomever they choose. A good point was made about stockholders of publicly traded companies not having to be citizens. This is forcing an issue with the FCC.
Univision now has consent to be over half foreign owned, and they just applied to extend that further.
Minority ownership has not substantially increased over the years even with the various incentives the FCC instituted. Instead of being worried about ownership percentages going to various ethnic groups, perhaps analysis of markets that demonstrate ethnic minorities have access to stations or are already being served through various formats. I contend the issue is resolved not by ownership but content and/or access. That in itself brings on another question, of all the various ethic groups, how many prefer music centered on their ethnic group? My point is ownership does not automatically mean an ethnic group is served by the owner.
Valid point. The African American TV owner who has general market stations is asking for more money to be spent based on ownership, not ratings. This is a radical departure from media sales that have, for centuries been based on circulation, readership, listenership, viewership, or page views as specific metrics.
And even some of the minority serving companies, like SBS and Urban One, are public companies and the shareholders may be, in their majority, "old white guys" or, in any case, not members of the ethnic group the stations they own serve.