The BBC is preparing to cut as many as 2,000 jobs, or roughly 10% of its workforce.
Interim Director General Rhodri Talfan Davies announced the proposed downsizing during a call with employees on Wednesday, followed by a memo outlining the broadcaster’s financial challenges.
“Put simply, the gap between our costs and our income is growing,” Talfan Davies said.
“This is being driven by a number of factors: production inflation remains very high; our license fee and commercial income is under pressure; and the global economy remains turbulent.”
Cost pressures drive restructuring
The planned cuts form part of a broader cost-reduction strategy first outlined earlier this year.
In February, the BBC said it would seek to reduce costs by around 10% over the next three years.
The broadcaster must deliver an additional £500 million ($678 million) in savings from its annual operating budget of approximately £5 billion over the next two years.
A significant portion of these savings is expected to be realised in 2027 and 2028.
The scale of the planned reductions highlights the financial strain facing the BBC as it grapples with rising production costs and constrained revenue streams.
Leadership transition amid legal and strategic challenges
The restructuring comes at a time of leadership transition for the broadcaster.
Former Google executive Matt Brittin is set to take over as director general on May 18.
He will assume leadership as the organisation navigates both financial and legal challenges.
Among these is a defamation lawsuit filed by US President Donald Trump, who is seeking $10 billion in damages over alleged misleading edits in a documentary episode of the BBC’s Panorama program.
The lawsuit centers on claims that a 2021 speech by Trump, ahead of the US Capitol riot, was edited in a way that suggested he explicitly urged supporters to attack Congress.
Funding model under scrutiny
At the core of the BBC’s financial challenges is its long-standing funding structure.
The broadcaster is primarily supported by a flat annual license fee paid by UK households, a model established under a Royal Charter that defines its public service mission.
The current charter is set to expire in 2027. The current Charter began on 1 January 2017.
In a report released in March, the BBC said income from the license fee has declined by 24% in real terms since 2017, reflecting both inflationary pressures and broader changes in media consumption.
“We must reduce our total cost base by a further 10% by March 2029 due to license fee headwinds and other pressures,” the report said, adding that “tough choices may require cuts to content and services.”
The financial strain has prompted policymakers to consider reforms to the BBC’s funding approach.
Lawmakers are exploring options that could see the broadcaster adopt elements of commercial streaming strategies, including a “mixed funding model” that combines license fee income with subscriptions and other commercial revenues.
Such a shift would mark a significant change for the BBC, which has historically operated as a publicly funded institution with a mandate to serve the public interest.
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