BBC World Service Cutbacks.
In 2014 the BBC World Service is to lose it's funding from the Foreign Office, a section of the British Government. The whole setup will leave Bush House, it's London home for decades, and be shoehorned into Broadcasting House where it will share studios with the four, non-commercial, national radio services.
There are still millions of people round the world who relay on "short wave" broadcasting for information from overseas, the World Service has already seen a substantial cutback some years ago and now it will be funded by the British TV licence payer.
A licence in the UK allows access to four non-commercial, national, terrestrial TV channels and a host of commercial stations, good and wasted, plus any satellite services (for which the viewer pays extra). Add to this four national, non-commercial radio stations, several non-commercial digital stations, a host of local non-commercial stations and a stack of commercial ones, analogue and digital which are largely playlist transmissions.
This looks like good value for money but I can't help thinking some sacrifices will have to be made. There's already been an uproar about suggested closure of a minority interest digital music station so what's going to be axed?
How does the US overseas broadcasting system work these days, both physically and financially?