The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

TV licence ‘will need reforming’

- BY NAOMI CLARKE

BBC director-general Tim Davie has said he is open to a “more progressiv­e” licence fee and revealed the corporatio­n will launch its “biggest-ever consultati­on process” next year so the public can drive the debate on its future.

The licence fee has been frozen for two years at £159 but in 2023 the government announced it would use a lower rate of inflation to increase the household charge from April to £169.50 a year.

The freeze and rising inflation has driven the broadcaste­r to reassess its priorities as it seeks to make £500 million of savings, with Mr Davie announcing yesterday that a further £200m of savings will need to be made.

Speaking at a Royal Television Society (RTS) event in London to discuss the future direction of the BBC and its role for the UK, Mr Davie said the broadcaste­r is planning to “proactivel­y research” how it will reform the licence fee post 2028, after the current charter agreement ends in December 2027.

In a speech, he said: “There is no doubt that the market has changed hugely since the licence fee was introduced and I think it is right to ask fundamenta­l questions about its longevity in a world that is now full of choice...

“We should not create another commercial walled garden or a narrow BBC that provides a niche service for the most hardcore users. The very wonder of the BBC is that quality news sits next to genres such as drama and sport, thus ensuring widespread engagement.”

He added that the corporatio­n is “not defensive about the future” and believes it “will need reform”.

Mr Davie said that when researchin­g how the broadcaste­r could reapproach the licence fee it will be “looking at its scope, how it could be more progressiv­e and making sure its enforcemen­t is fair and proportion­ate”.

Alongside engagement with the government’s review into the licence fee, he said that starting next year the BBC will open up its “biggest ever consultati­on process so the public can inform and drive the debate on the future of BBC”.

Later answering questions on the future of the licence fee, Mr Davie underlined that he feels it “needs reform” but regards it as “precious”.

The BBC boss noted that those over age 74 who receive pension credit are entitled to apply for a free licence and said he is open to considerin­g who else could receive concession­s.

He also said he feels the corporatio­n should be seeking to make more partnershi­ps with major “tech players” to help fill its funding gaps, like its recent pairing with streaming giant Disney+ for its upcoming Doctor Who series.

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FEE: BBC boss says there will be ‘biggest-ever consultati­on process’.

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