In any case, my proposal for changing the basis to PSB funding by general taxation would operate under a protected formula whereby funding was guaranteed to be a set percentage of overall spending, averaged over 5 years, so that it would rise (or fall) in line with overall public spending. This spending formula would be underpinned by a Charter which - as with the recent press regulation charter - would require a substantial majority (like 66%) in Parliament to amend. I think this would better protect BBC funding than the current system and be fairer in being linked to ability to pay - as well as resulting in the abolition of the wasteful licence fee collection system and the clogging up of courts with non-payment cases.
Now you are proposing a structure that would guarantee a stable income and the arms-length principle, which you would hope would keep politicians out of the BBC's internal affairs and protect its independence. I am saying that I find it hard to believe that the politicians would go along with that model. It's too easy for them to say that since the tax-payers are coughing up the BBC must be accountable to the government of the day. And it seems unlikely to me that they would agree to the protected funding scenario either. What other part of public spending is ring-fenced by a strong legal framework in that way?
Lastly, we currently have a government that is full of implacable enemies of the BBC and of public service broadcasting. It would be nice if I was wrong but I find the idea that they would move from the licence fee system to an equally benevolent one under general taxation highly implausible.
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