Marketplace

Search

Monday, July 7, 2008

Listen to the show

Brits debate a free BBC

BBC logo on a building

The BBC funds its programs with a $260 a year license fee that all British citizens with a TV must pay. But new bullying ads on the fee have made some Brits re-evaluate their feelings. Stephen Beard has more.

BBC logo on a building (Reuters)

More on International, Entertainment, Europe

TEXT OF STORY

Renita Jablonski: One of the world's best known public broadcasters will publish its annual report. The BBC will open its books and explain how it's spent its annual revenue of more than $6 billion.

The bulk of the BBC's money comes from a kind of tax called the license fee -- not something every Brit likes to pay for. Stephen Beard reports from London.


Stephen Beard: The BBC has been broadcasting this rather sinister message:

BBC Ad: Your town. Your street. Your home. It's all in our database.

A helicopter hovers. A dog barks. There's a knock on the door. The message: It's a criminal offense to watch TV without buying a license.

BBC Ad: And impossible to hide if you don't. It's all in the database.

The Orwellian tone has infuriated Eamon Butler of the free market think tank The Adam Smith Institute:

Eamon Butler: I think it's absolutely outrageous that public authorities should be able to bully the general public by television adverts which suggest they're all criminals and that they're going to get police helicopters and dogs on them.

It's a fact of life in Britain: If you own a TV, you must buy a license, currently costing $260 a year. That's how the BBC supports itself. But the license fee ad has triggered a fresh debate about this system.

Jonathon Miller: If you were to try to invent a really bad way of financing public broadcasting, you'd come up with a license fee.

Jonathon Miller has waged a long campaign against the license fee. He says this $6 billion a year subsidy for the BBC is unfair.

Miller: Forces people to pay for a service whether they like it or not. It doesn't even matter whether you watch the BBC programs. You have to pay it just to own a TV set.

Show segue: Welcome to The Weakest Link. Any of the nine people in the studio here today could win up to 9,000 pounds.

He says that with brainless quiz shows and lots of other populist fare the BBC shouldn't get a public subsidy. But the BBC has it supporters:

Ben Fenton: It produces some astonishingly good television, some very, very good radio.

Ben Fenton of The Financial Times claims the license fee is a better way of paying for public broadcasting than the American system of telethons, corporate sponsorship and government funding.

Fenton: I think that what is produced on the BBC is of marketably higher quality than one gets, I'm sorry to say this, on public service broadcasting in the United States.

Ouch. But at least the American system is voluntary, and therefore may prove more durable than the British license fee.

In London, this is Stephen Beard for Marketplace.

Comments

  • Comment | Refresh

  • By salem gaylor

    From colorado sp, CO, 06/15/2009

    you have very nices services.

    By James Scott

    From Nashville, TN, 07/07/2008

    Being in the US, I don't really have exposure to the BBC as experienced by the Brits but their productions that do make it here are SO much better than what Hollywood produces. Period.

    NPT is a horrible model. Although we do contribute, what few programs we would normally watch go untouched during the annoyingly whiny telethons. (Same goes for NPR for that matter) You can tell when NPT has a bad telethon. For the next 6 months, old Brit-coms are replaced by even older Lawrence Welk.(ugh)

  • Post a Comment: Please be civil, brief and relevant.

    Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. All comments are moderated. Marketplace reserves the right to edit any comments on this site and to read them on the air if they are extra-interesting. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting.

    * indicates required field

    *
    *
    *
     




     

    You must be 13 or over to submit information to American Public Media. The information entered into this form will not be used to send unsolicited email and will not be sold to a third party. For more information see Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Music From This Show

  • The Story of . . . The Heavenly States
  • The Acid Jazz Test Brooklyn Funk Essentials
  • In Our Nature Jose Gonzales

The Specials

GAME: Budget Hero

Budget Hero

Think you could balance the federal budget? Play the game.

Conversations from the Corner OfficeTM

Conversations From the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Marketplace on iTunes U

iTunes U

Marketplace is on Apple's online education platform, iTunesU. Get free downloads in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

American Public Media © |   Terms and Conditions   |   Privacy Policy