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BBC to Cut 550 Jobs to Save Costs, Hits News Division

LONDON, June 17 (Reuters) - Britain's BBC public service broadcaster will cut 550 jobs, including in its news ​and content divisions, it said on Wednesday, as part ‌of plans under new director-general Matt Brittin to save £500 million over the next three years.

The BBC is facing a battle to stay ​relevant as viewers, particularly younger audiences, shift to streamers ​and other digital platforms.

In March, the corporation named ⁠former Google executive Brittin as its new director general. ​At the time, BBC Chair Samir Shah said there was ​a need for radical reform at the publicly funded organisation, and Brittin said it faced a moment of "real risk".

The cuts to its news ​operation will include closing some long-running programmes, merging production ​teams across shows and a review of senior on-air roles.

The BBC, ‌which ⁠had about 21,500 employees as of March last year, said the full package of changes announced on Wednesday would deliver around £160 million of the £500 million target. Further savings, including ​cuts of around ​700 corporate ⁠division jobs, would be announced in the coming months, it said.

Total job losses would be ​around 1,800 to 2,000 over the next ​three years.

Brittin ⁠must negotiate a new funding settlement after the broadcaster's Royal Charter expires at the end of 2027. Options include ⁠retaining the ​licence fee paid by TV-watching ​households or moving to subscriptions or funding from advertising.

Reporting by William James; Writing ​by Sam Tabahriti; Editing by Alison Williams and Alex Richardson

Source: Reuters


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