In Focus: The Case for Privatising the BBC

The Case for Privatising the BBC

Business & Finance, Economics, Public Finance, Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science
Cover of the book In Focus: The Case for Privatising the BBC by Ryan Bourne, Tim Congdon, Stephen Davies, Cento Veljanovski, London Publishing Partnership
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Author: Ryan Bourne, Tim Congdon, Stephen Davies, Cento Veljanovski ISBN: 9780255367271
Publisher: London Publishing Partnership Publication: April 28, 2016
Imprint: London Publishing Partnership Language: English
Author: Ryan Bourne, Tim Congdon, Stephen Davies, Cento Veljanovski
ISBN: 9780255367271
Publisher: London Publishing Partnership
Publication: April 28, 2016
Imprint: London Publishing Partnership
Language: English

The BBC holds a special place in the world of broadcasting. It derives its funding from a compulsory levy on people who may not even use the service. The protection it receives is justified on the grounds that it contributes to national welfare because of its role in ‘public service broadcasting’. The authors of this book argue that the BBC’s funding model is becoming untenable as technology changes. Furthermore, technology has also undermined the justification for government support for public service broadcasting. There is also major concern about bias at the BBC. However, the book concludes that bias is not confined to the BBC, but is common to all media providers. The problem is not bias as such, but the link between the BBC and the government, together with the compulsory funding model which does not allow people to not fund content of which they disapprove. Various options for reform are presented, concluding with a proposal for fullblown privatisation. It is concluded that this is the only way to realise the potential of an organisation that should be international in scope and which, under the current funding model, will become marginalised by media players operating worldwide across a range of platforms. This book is essential reading for anybody involved in public policy or the economics of broadcasting.

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The BBC holds a special place in the world of broadcasting. It derives its funding from a compulsory levy on people who may not even use the service. The protection it receives is justified on the grounds that it contributes to national welfare because of its role in ‘public service broadcasting’. The authors of this book argue that the BBC’s funding model is becoming untenable as technology changes. Furthermore, technology has also undermined the justification for government support for public service broadcasting. There is also major concern about bias at the BBC. However, the book concludes that bias is not confined to the BBC, but is common to all media providers. The problem is not bias as such, but the link between the BBC and the government, together with the compulsory funding model which does not allow people to not fund content of which they disapprove. Various options for reform are presented, concluding with a proposal for fullblown privatisation. It is concluded that this is the only way to realise the potential of an organisation that should be international in scope and which, under the current funding model, will become marginalised by media players operating worldwide across a range of platforms. This book is essential reading for anybody involved in public policy or the economics of broadcasting.

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