Judging by some reports, for instance this one, the new BBC D-G George Entwistle appears to be pledging to take the knife to the organisation's bureaucracy.
It seems that successive D-Gs react against their predecessors either in favour of or against bureaucracy. Thus we had the ultra-bureaucrat Birt followed by Dyke who was more enthusiastic about producers and programme-makers, then Thompson with his vast layers of highly paid management and now Entwistle. The legacy of Thompson of course is reduced income and the Delivering Quality First programme, which may simply be a cost-cutting exercise. To what extent Entwistle is bound to follow that programme through is unclear and it's to be hoped that the cost-cutting emphasis is on the bureaucratic superstructure (and associated high salaries).
It seems that successive D-Gs react against their predecessors either in favour of or against bureaucracy. Thus we had the ultra-bureaucrat Birt followed by Dyke who was more enthusiastic about producers and programme-makers, then Thompson with his vast layers of highly paid management and now Entwistle. The legacy of Thompson of course is reduced income and the Delivering Quality First programme, which may simply be a cost-cutting exercise. To what extent Entwistle is bound to follow that programme through is unclear and it's to be hoped that the cost-cutting emphasis is on the bureaucratic superstructure (and associated high salaries).
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