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Jul 10 2010

Why should the BBC pay its own way?

BBC Broadcasting House - turned into apartments for the wealthy?

BBC Broadcasting House - turned into apartments for the wealthy?

There’s an idea being floated in the ranks of power that the BBC should be made to pay its own way. The concept is that through its own endeavours, the BBC should fund its activities and perform as a commercial organisation would have to. I disagree and I’ll tell you why.

If the BBC had its 40p a day public funding removed, it would have to fight for revenues in the shrinking market of advertising, it would have to ramp up its commercial output, it would have to cut costs and it would have to change its output to meet the demands of a commerce. Not such a bad thing you might think. You would be wrong.

According the BBC’s 2008-2009 annual report its income is derived from the following sources:

  • £3493.8 million in licence fees
  • £775.9 million from commercial business
  • £294.6 million from government grants
  • £41.1 million from other sources such as overseas sales

Recently, it was reported that Internet Advertising had overtaken television advertising, with a record of £1.75 billion spent in the first six months of 2009. So, we’re talking about a comparable period. Extrapolating from that, making the assumption that advertising spend remains constant at this record level, we can assume that the Internet will generate £3.5 billion in advertising revenues in year. This is roughly the same as the cost of the licence fee and more than the total spend on television advertising. So, for the BBC to replace its licence fee with advertising, it would have to take ALL the advertising revenue from the ITV companies and then find some more.

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Jul 5 2010

If you think economic cuts are necessary, you’re being fooled

Joseph Stiglitz

Prof Joseph Stiglitz says Osbourne has it wrong

The first human casualties of our wonderful government’s war on the deficit have come to my attention. Alison is a friend, she’s the mother of two small children, and a woman whose husband “took one for the company” last year and reduced his hours by 25%. They are the parents in a family who can just about get by, and they have been told her civil service job will not exist in the near future, not because it’s not a necessary job, but because she’s been sacrificed to the ideology of neo-liberal economics.

Think of the country as a work horse. You need it to work hard to help you pay off your debts, so would your first action be to cut its food? That’s what Cameron, Osbourne and Clegg are doing to the economy.

You may have heard of Professor Joseph Stiglitz – he’s the Nobel laureate economist who correctly predicted the global crash. He’s distinctly unimpressed with Osbourne’s budget. This, he predicts, will make Britain’s recovery from recession longer, slower and harder than it needs to be. The rise in VAT could even tip us into a double-dip recession. He took time to offer George Osbourne a bit of advice – which will probably go unheeded, because Osbourne’s objectives aren’t necessarily to improve the economy. They are an ideological attack on the state, with the intention of shrinking it by forty percent.

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Jul 2 2010

A quiet life

Beryl Bainbridge

Beryl Bainbridge

Beryl Margaret Bainbridge was, my favourite English language writer from the second half of the Twentieth Century. Although the great and the good (The Times greatest British writers since 1945) have her at number twenty-six behind such luminaries as Muriel Spark, Martin Amis and Penelope Fitzgerald. Ah well, so much for the great and the good.

Her creative period extends from 1967 to 2005 and includes eighteen novels, four non-fiction books, and two collections of short stories.  She also wrote the screenplay of her novel “Sweet William”. Perhaps she kept the best until last: her final novel, published in 2001: “According to Queeney” is a masterpiece and worth its place on the bookshelf of any discerning reader. A fictionalised account of the life of Samuel Johnson through the eyes of Queeney Thrale, eldest daughter of Henry and Hester Thrale, it received wide acclaim throughout the literary world.

Although nominated five times for the Booker, she never won the award, but collected the Whitbread twice and is rightfully described as a national treasure.

She died from cancer aged 75 on 2nd July 2010. I will miss her words.

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