
        
         
        The 
          Political Economy of the BBC
         
        Although 
          the BBC was funded by licence fee, it was not the case that the BBC 
          did not operate with commercial imperatives. For a successful contemporary 
          novelist such as Compton Mackenzie, his central involvement in the new 
          medium of storytelling was crucial to the successful marketing of his 
          fictional writing as well as the marketing and hyperbole promotion of 
          his celebrity status. The Radio Times and Listener magazines were crucial 
          in complementing the BBC's income and the degree to which this commercialism 
          was operable is evident in any study of the advertisement content of 
          the Radio Times. It is also symbolic of Britain's economy which was 
          a global imperialist structure predicated more on imperialist protectionism 
          than free trade. Empire and dominions provided raw materials and comestibles 
          such as butter, apples, tea, oranges, and coffee. Britain's manufacturing 
          base returned the electrical and engineering products such as ships, 
          cars, fridges, and machinery. It was so iniquitous that by 1939, India 
          did not have the manufacturing capacity to produce one small metal pin. 
          The following series of adverts commissioned from the Empire Marketing 
          Board to appear in 1929 editions of the Radio Times illustrate the nature 
          of the economy:
         
        
        
        Page 
          583, The Radio Times, June 14, 1929. Page 484, The Radio Times, November 
          15, 1929.
         
        
        
        Page 
          643, The Radio Times, June 21, 1929. Page 197, The Radio Times, July 
          26, 1929.
         
        
        
        Page 
          95, The Radio Times, July 12, 1929. Page 35, The Radio Times, July 5, 
          1929.
         
        
        Page 
          393, The Radio Times, August 23, 1929.
         
        The BBC 
          was not permitted to promote its merchandising, or transmit advertisements 
          'on air' but it did not miss an opportunity of cross-promoting traditional 
          publication products such as books and magazines:
         
        
        Advert 
          on page 949 of the Radio Times for December 27, 1929
         
        Furthermore 
          the BBC enclosed freepost self-addressed postcards for Radio Times readers 
          offering 'gratis, free specimen copy of "The Listener" as 
          a means for cross-promoting its developing magazine division. It cannot 
          be denied that the process of BBC funding had a profit motive in 1929 
          since the Treasury and Post Office took a considerable percentage rake-off 
          from licence fund income as this graph from the BBC's 1933 Yearbook 
          rather graphically shows:
         
        
        The 
          lighter shade represents Post Office and Treasury share which by 1932 
          was rougly 50% and in the region of £1,250,000. (page 87, BBC 
          Yearbook for 1933, London: British Broadcasting Corporation.)
         
        
         
        VAL 
          GIELGUD ARTICLES by TIM CROOK
        IRDP 
          WEB DESIGN by MARJA GIEJGO
         
        