Latest Headlines Contact About
Latest TV & Radio News
BBC Job Cuts

The BBC has announced it will cut between 1,800 and 2,000 jobs - or almost one in 10 - in an attempt to tackle "significant financial pressures".
The broadcaster needs to make £500m savings over the next two years, and interim director general Rhodri Talfan Davies did not rule out axing entire channels or services.
"We need to look at everything, and at a scale of £500m inevitably there are going to be some big and some difficult choices, but we do need to step through this carefully," he told BBC Radio 4's Media Show.
He said the corporation would give more details later this year about how its services would be affected.
"For audiences, the job in hand now over the next three or four months is to work through how we make those changes without damaging the services that we know are critical to the BBC across radio and television and online," he said.
He also acknowledged that the job cuts would be "really difficult news" for staff.
Philippa Childs, head of broadcasting union Bectu, warned that "cuts of this magnitude" would be "devastating for the workforce and to the BBC as a whole".
The BBC currently has about 21,500 full time equivalent employees.
In an email to staff on Wednesday, Talfan Davies said: "As you know, the BBC is facing significant financial pressures, which we need to respond to with pace.
"Put simply, the gap between our costs and our income is growing. This is being driven by a number of factors: production inflation remains very high; our licence fee and commercial income is under pressure; and the global economy remains turbulent."
He also imposed tighter controls on spending on recruitment, travel, management consultancies, and attendance at conferences, awards and events.
Source: BBC
15 April 2026
Back to the headlines Next Story
Latest Headlines Contact About
Online since 1985
