Domain Registration

BBC funding row: the alternatives to a licence fee

  • May 02, 2022
  • Sport

Another likely issue is that “some services – like the vast amount of local television and radio broadcast by the corporation – would be difficult to place behind what would effectively be a paywall”, the news site added.

Advertising

The days of interruption-free television could become a thing of the past if the BBC turns to advertising to fill a funding black hole. 

Currently, no adverts air on the BBC’s domestic television channels and websites, although they do on international channels such as BBC World. 

But while the broacaster could add in ad breaks like those on “fellow public service broadcasters ITV and Channel 4” , the move “could potentially make the BBC more inclined to consider programmes which draw in more viewers and subsequently reduce the diversity of its programming”, said Sky News.

Former BBC chair Michael Grade has dismissed the idea, telling BBC Radio Four that a move towards carrying adverts would “impoverish ITV, Channel Four, Channel Five, etc, etc”.

“The pot of advertising is not going to expand to meet the BBC’s needs,” he told the Today programme.

Government grants

Australia’s national broadcaster, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, is funded primarily by an annual grant from the government.

Introducing a similar grant for the BBC would “cut out the need to collect a sum from each household in the UK and would instead involve the UK government directly giving the corporation a set amount of funding for the year”, said Sky News. 

But it would also leave the broadcaster “at the mercy of the government of the day”, said The Guardian’s media editor Jim Waterson. And “there would also be questions about how to enshrine the BBC’s editorial independence if the broadcaster’s funding was decided alongside other spending commitments in the chancellor’s budget”.

Broadband levy

Another option would be for the BBC to introduce a broadband levy on every connection in the UK that would be used to fund public service media and journalism. 

This move that would “modernise the current approach, whereby the licence fee is levied from a household’s television”, said Sky News. 

But while relatively easy to enforce, with money collected through broadband providers, it could “bump up the price” of broadband for households, the site added.

Despite such fears, the BBC told the government in 2020 that it would be “open to exploring” the broadband levy option.

New tax 

A new tax could be introduced on people’s incomes to fund public service media in the UK. 

Sweden introduced such a tax for all working adults after abolishing the national licence fee in 2019. The Swedish fee amounts to 1% of taxable income for most earners and is capped at around 1,300 kronor (about £105).

The tax is paid into a dedicated funding pot for public service media, “which helps reduce the risk of government interference” and minimises problems around impartiality and editorial independence, said The Guardian’s Waterson.

If the UK were to adopt this model, it would mean “a new tax appearing on payslips next to income tax and national insurance contributions – something that could be politically challenging”, he added.

Abolish the BBC altogether

In a more American-style approach to public service media and journalism, the government could simply “let the free market take control and allow private companies to shape the nation’s media consumption”, said Waterson.

Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/uk-news/955517/licence-fee-threat-how-else-could-the-bbc-be-funded

Related News

Search

Get best offer

Booking.com