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Bulletins Story:
BBC CHARTER REVIEW - WHY AN EXTERNAL COMPETITION REGULATOR IS
(AND ALWAYS WAS) INEVITABLE FOR BBC'S PUBLIC SERVICE BROADCASTING
SERVICES
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Date:
07.02.2005
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With the announcement that Lord Burns' Panel on Charter Review
is in favour of an external competition regulator for the BBC's
public service broadcasting services (rather than the in-house one
which was the Beeb's preference), one act of a classic Whitehall
farce is left to run - namely the government's endorsement of the
Panel's recommendation.
It is a farce because after the publication of the EC's
Communication on state aid in November 2001 (see our early warning
of November 2001), its preference for a truly independent
competition regulator of public service broadcasting services
(confirmed by DG Comp Head Phillip Lowe at last year's Oxford Media
Conference) effectively tied the government's hands if a limited
competition law exemption for services of general economic interest
were to be granted to the BBC. Rather than being seen to
kowtow to Brussels, however, the government has had to be seen to
be putting its own house in order - hence a gold plated
consultation and enquiry exercise led by a "safe pair of hands"
with the outcome essentially decided in advance.
To make it more farcical still, it is even arguable that since
November 2001, Ofcom has actually legally enjoyed regulatory power
over the exercise of the BBC's public service obligations since the
EC Commission's limited exemption for services of general economic
interest is dependent on there being an independent regulator
(which of course there has not been to date). If this is
right, then Lord Burns' exercise was redundant from the start.
Whatever the legal merits of the argument, Burns' key finding
that "the regulation of commercial/competition issues at present
the responsibility of the BBC governors, subject where appropriate
to ... Ofcom should be brought into line with other broadcasters
and regulated by Ofcom" will put the matter to rest eventually.
What this will mean in practice is that commercial competitors
affected by the BBC's activities in areas covered by the public
service remit will not have to exhaust internal "remedies" (i.e. a
complaint to BBC governors) before approaching Ofcom. This
should certainly expedite the handling of complaints in fast moving
markets when any intervention has to be swift to have any chance at
all of being effective.
However, the interval between Act 2 and the denouement may be
rather lengthy with an election in the offing. The Beeb's
competitors really won the argument in 2001 thanks to Brussels: it
seems unsatisfactory (but very British) that they still have to
await government confirmation in 2005.
Stephen Hornsby
242
Links:
For Lord Burns' letter to the Secretary of State of 27 January
2005 and the Independent Panel's final advice to the Secretary of
State see www.bbccharterreview.org.uk
The full text of the EC Communication is available at
www.europa.eu.int
For previous early warning: www.swanturton.com/ebulletins/archive/
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