Story from Daily Express:
The BBC could face a £85m financial shortfall, prompting discussions on radical measures to secure its future as it contends with declining licence fee revenues.The BBC is staring down a significant financial shortfall, with an estimated £84,750,000 black hole looming as the corporation struggles to maintain its broad public service broadcasting in the face of declining licence fee revenues.With 500,000 households a year cancelling their TV licences, the corporation is reportedly being forced to consider drastic measures to survive. The licence fee currently costs £169.50 a year.Tim Davie, the BBC’s director-general, faces a critical challenge that could define his legacy: securing a sustainable financial future for the BBC.Negotiations over the future of the licence fee, and whether it will be retained in its current form or replaced with a subscription model or funded by a new tax, are reportedly set to begin in January and could last two years.A deal must be reached by the time the current royal charter expires in 2027.While the Labour Party's election victory might have initially suggested a more favourable outlook for the BBC, insiders warn that the situation is far from resolved.One BBC source cautioned: "Don’t count your chickens yet," highlighting that the corporation is not only facing political threats but also an existential risk of irrelevance, with a significant number of households no longer engaging with its content.In response to these challenges, there has been speculation about more radical approaches to secure the BBC's future.One idea that has been floated is a potential merger with Channel 4, The Guardian reports. This merger could combine two publicly controlled broadcasters and add £1 billion of revenue to the BBC’s balance sheet.Phil Redmond, the veteran television executive who created Brookside and Hollyoaks for Channel 4, has supported the idea, stating: "Reforming the BBC has to include reforming Channel 4. The big debate is not about who is sitting in what desk in what building."Another suggestion is to mutualise the BBC, giving all licence fee payers a stake in the corporation, similar to the Co-operative Group or a building society.This proposal was put forward by Lisa Nandy during her 2020 Labour leadership campaign.She argued that this model would allow licence fee payers to "decide the trade-offs that the BBC must make to secure its future" while protecting the organization from political interference.Meanwhile, the BBC could ask the government to resume funding the World Service, a cost that was largely shifted to licence fee payers during the coalition-era cuts.Another tactic includes potentially closing some of its numerous television and radio channels and focusing more on its digital offerings.