FBI: Most Wanted is making a return very soon.
07.12.2023 - 12:39 / deadline.com
The BBC‘s licence fee will not rise by as much as previously promised, the UK government has confirmed, condemning the corporation to a difficult year that could see more cuts and less shows commissioned. The government has, meanwhile, launched a review into the BBC’s funding model.
Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer announced in parliament in the past few minutes that the annual fee will rise by around £10.50 ($12.50) to £169.50, below the previous £14.50 increase that was tied to a higher rate of inflation. The licence fee has been frozen for the past two years, leading to difficult decisions for the BBC, and the government had initially said it would return to rising with CPI inflation from 2024. The licence fee will rise in April 2024 by 6.7%, the figure of inflation from September 2023 that is the same measure linked with state pensions and benefits.
The news was expected after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said over the weekend that the BBC had to be “realistic” over what people can pay during the cost-of-living crisis. The BBC, however, is facing up to rampant increases in production costs and rival streamers have hiked subscription by far more than the rate of inflation.
Speaking in the commons in the past few minutes, Frazer said licence fee payers will save £37 across two years by the end of 2024 due to the government’s intervention while leaving the BBC with around £3.8B worth of program spend.
She pointed out that licence fee payers are declining and said the government wants to make sure “an exponential rise is not born by a smaller number of licence fee payers.” “Our decision means next year the increase will be kept as low as possible,” she added.
Describing the licence fee as “increasingly anachronistic” in
FBI: Most Wanted is making a return very soon.
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