BBC to cut 2,900 jobs
December 07, 2004 19:17 IST
The British Broadcasting Corporation on Tuesday said it would cut about
2,900 jobs, more than 10 per cent of its workforce, as a part of
"transformation" of the world's biggest public broadcaster, aimed at
saving 320 million pounds a year.
Most of the jobs would be cut from the administrative departments, BBC
director general, Mark Thompson was quoted on BBC's website as saying. He
said the savings were needed so that more of the licence fee could be put
into programmes.
About 1,800 workers, including staff of BBC's 24-hour radio news channel
and two children's channels, would be moved from London to Manchester in
the next five years, he said. The BBC World Service had also been asked to
make "significant savings," Thompson said.
The departments hardest hit by the cutbacks are professional services,
including human resources, training, finances and legal services. Thompson
said the job losses would be through redundancies and outsourcing of posts
during the next three years.
The BBC employs about 27,000 people and most departments would be expected
to make 15 per cent cuts in savings.
Thompson said the BBC should "spend less on process and more on content".
The BBC would only survive in the digital world if it invested more in
areas such as journalism, drama, comedy, music, learning, and children's
TV and radio.
He said audiences wanted a "BBC which is totally focused on excellence,
which gives them more quality, more ambition, more depth than they get
from any other broadcaster".

|