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by thu2111
2310 days ago
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Maybe. I'd argue the funding has barely been cut at all. In 2010 excluding the over 75s it was 2.93 billion, in 2018 it was 3.17 billion: https://obr.uk/forecasts-in-depth/tax-by-tax-spend-by-spend/... The over 75s grant has been cut a little bit but the actual gross revenues are higher now than they used to be. Funding isn't the BBCs problem. It is able to tax a growing population - that's the definition of increasing revenues. With billions of pounds to splash around it's really hard for them to plead poverty. The bigger issue is they produce a lot of content but it's increasingly narrowly targeted to, basically, the sort of thing Lib Dem voters in London like (and think other people should like). That's a small minority of the population. |
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I'm also not quite sure on the over 75s licenses being marked as "cut a little bit"
> The compensation paid to the BBC by government for the current 4.55 million free TV licences (introduced in 2000) is being phased out in three steps – falling from £655m in 2017-18 to £468m in 2018-19 and a final £247m payment in 2019-20. At that point, the value of the free licences could be £725m.
https://rts.org.uk/article/tony-hall-calls-increased-funding...
That's huge drop unless those numbers have changed, but even the plan of charging some for the license put the figure at near £250M. Combined with the S4C change that's, what, over 10% of your figure as a cut without converting to real terms.